• Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Feb 2019

    Review

    Pulse pressure and perioperative stroke.

    • Abbas Al-Qamari, Ibukunoluwa Adeleke, Adam Kretzer, and Charles W Hogue.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
    • Curr Opin Anaesthesiol. 2019 Feb 1; 32 (1): 576357-63.

    Purpose Of ReviewCentral pulse pressure (PP), a marker of vascular stiffness, is a novel indicator of risk for perioperative morbidity including ischemic stroke. Appreciation for the mechanism by which vascular stiffness leads to organ dysfunction along with understanding its clinical detection may lead to improved patient management.Recent FindingsVascular stiffness is associated with increased mortality and neurologic, cardiac, and renal injury in nonsurgical and surgical patients. Left ventricular hypertrophy and diastolic dysfunction along with microcirculatory changes in the low vascular resistance, high blood flow, cerebral and renal vasculature are seen in patients with vascular stiffness. Pulse wave velocity and the augmentation index have higher sensitivity for detecting of vascular stiffness than peripheral PP as the hemodynamic consequences of vascular stiffness are secondary to alterations in the central vasculature. Vascular stiffness alters cerebral autoregulation, resulting in a high likelihood of having a lower limit of autoregulation more than 65 mmHg during surgery. Vascular stiffness may predispose to cerebral hypoperfusion, increasing vulnerability to ischemic stroke, postoperative delirium, and acute kidney injury.SummaryVascular stiffness leads to alterations in cerebral, cardiac, and renal hemodynamics increasing the risk of perioperative ischemic stroke and neurologic, cardiac, and renal dysfunction.

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