| Literature DB >> 23935710 |
Xianghu Meng1, Guanghui Zang, Longchang Fan, Lei Zheng, Jinzhen Dai, Xueren Wang, Wei Xia, Jihong Liu, Chuanhan Zhang.
Abstract
The Philips Intellivue MP50 monitor provides a method for non-invasive, near-continuous blood pressure (BP) monitoring and is designed to be an alternative to direct intra-arterial BP (IABP) measurement. However, no studies have specifically compared non-invasive and invasive BP measurements using the monitor. The present retrospective study observed 515 patients undergoing surgery with general anesthesia, whose invasive (intra-radial, femoral or dorsalis pedis artery) and non-invasive (oscillometric) BP (NIBP) were monitored simultaneously using the monitor. These data were analyzed using correlations, regressions and Bland-Altman plots. The patients were placed in a supine position during surgery. The correlation data for invasive BP and NIBP measurements were: for intra-radial measurements, r2=0.51 (bias and precision, 11.04±15.22 and 14.76±11.64 mmHg, respectively) for systolic BP (SBP) and r2=0.27 (6.17±11.95 and 9.77±9.25 mmHg, respectively) for diastolic BP (DBP); for intra-femoral measurements: r2=0.57 (14.79±14.55 and 17.15±11.68 mmHg, respectively) for SBP and r2=0.45 (4.12±9.70 and 7.49±7.40 mmHg, respectively) for DBP; and for intra-dorsalis pedis measurements: r2=0.33 (13.00±16.81 and 17.34±12.28 mmHg, respectively) for SBP and r2=0.30 (0.17±11.27 and 8.44±7.46 mmHg, respectively) for DBP. According to this data, the NIBP measured by the Philips Intellivue MP50 monitor showed low positive correlations and poor agreement with the IABP, as calculated by Bland-Altman analysis. Therefore, the use of oscillometric BP measured by the monitor in surgery patients under general anesthesia is not generally recommended.Entities:
Keywords: Bland-Altman; agreement; correlation; intra-arterial blood pressure; oscillometric blood pressure
Year: 2013 PMID: 23935710 PMCID: PMC3735910 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2013.1121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Patient characteristics.
| Factors | Location of IABP monitoring
| ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Intra-radial artery | Intra-femoral artery | Intra-dorsalis pedis artery | |
| Male | 85 | 96 | 86 |
| Female | 80 | 83 | 85 |
| Age (years) | 55±16 | 57±14 | 42±16 |
| Weight (kg) | 62±12 | 58±11 | 59±12 |
| Head and neck surgery (n) | - | - | 160 |
| Chest surgery (n) | 59 | 82 | 6 |
| Abdominal surgery (n) | 83 | 97 | 5 |
| Pelvic surgery (n) | 19 | - | - |
| Limb surgery (n) | 4 | - | - |
| Number of patients | 165 | 179 | 171 |
Age and weight values are expressed as mean ± standard deviation. IABP, intra-arterial blood pressure.
Figure 1.Comparison between intra-radial and oscillometric blood pressure (BP) measurements. Correlations between (A) SBP and (B) DBP estimated using the intra-radial and oscillometric methods. Bland-Altman plots of the same data for (C) SBP and (D) DBP. Solid line, mean; dashed lines, ±1.96 standard deviation; SBP, systolic blood pressure; DBP diastolic blood pressure.
Bias, limits of agreement and precision between IABP and NIBP for SBP and DBP.
| Group | Mean bias (mmHg) | Upper/lower limit of agreement (mmHg) | Precision (mmHg) | Measurements, n |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intra-radial BP | ||||
| SBP | 11.04±15.22 | 40.87/−18.79 | 14.76±11.64 | 1849 |
| DBP | 6.17±11.95 | 29.59/−17.25 | 9.77±9.25 | 1849 |
| Intra-femoral BP | ||||
| SBP | 14.79±14.55 | 43.31/−13.73 | 17.15±11.68 | 3413 |
| DBP | 4.12±9.70 | 23.13/−14.89 | 7.49±7.40 | 3413 |
| Intra-dorsalis pedis BP | ||||
| SBP | 13.00±16.81 | 45.95/−19.95 | 17.34±12.28 | 5726 |
| DBP | 0.17±11.27 | 22.26/−21.92 | 8.44±7.46 | 5726 |
Bias and precision values are expressed as mean ± standard deviation. Bias for each pair of measurements was calculated using IABP-NIBP, and precision was calculated using the absolute difference. BP, blood pressure; IABP, intra-arterial BP; NIBP, non-invasive BP; SBP, systolic BP; DBP, diastolic BP.
Figure 2.Comparison between the intra-femoral and oscillometric blood pressure (BP) measurements. Correlations between (A) SBP and (B) DBP estimated using the intra-femoral and oscillometric methods. Bland-Altman plots of the same data for (C) SBP and (D) DBP. Solid line, mean; dashed lines, ±1.96 standard deviation; SBP, systolic BP; DBP, diastolic BP.
Figure 3.Comparison between the intra-dorsalis pedis and oscillometric blood pressure (BP) measurements. Correlations between (A) SBP and (B) DBP estimated using intra-dorsalis pedis and oscillometric method. Bland-Altman plot of the same data for (C) SBP and (D) DBP. Solid line, mean; dashed lines, ±1.96 standard deviation; SBP; systolic BP; DBP, diastolic BP.