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Can We Trust the Direct Radial Artery Pressure Immediately Following Cardiopulmonary Bypass?

Authors :
Frederick B. Parker
Forrest B. Allen
John I. Gerson
David H. Stern
Source :
Anesthesiology. 62:557-561
Publication Year :
1985
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 1985.

Abstract

Reversal of the usual relationship between aortic and radial artery pressure can occur in patients following cardiopulmonary bypass. Radial systolic (and often radial mean) pressures were lower, relative to aortic pressure, after cardiopulmonary bypass than before bypass in all 18 patients studied. The systolic pressure difference (aortic minus radial) was large enough to be of clinical concern (12-32 mmHg) in 13 patients. The change persisted for 10-60 min, gradually returning toward normal. The change temporally was associated with warming at the end of cardiopulmonary bypass and lowered forearm vascular resistance. Relative forearm vascular resistance (x) predicted the systolic aortic minus radial pressure difference (y) by the equation y = -0.34x + 17 for all patients (r = -0.49, P less than 0.001). The authors conclude that radial artery pressure does not accurately reflect central aortic pressure in the immediate postbypass period.

Details

ISSN :
00033022
Volume :
62
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Anesthesiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6b9d8d1dba74c11dad757007ed7aef01
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-198505000-00002