Literature DB >> 31802708

Sharp systolic blood pressure elevation at extubation is a risk factor for symptomatic epidural hematoma after spine surgery.

Sintaro Tsuge1, Akihito Wada1, Yasuaki Iida1, Yasuhiro Inoue1, Katsunori Fukutake1, Yuji Nishiwaki2, Hiroshi Takahashi1.   

Abstract

STUDY
DESIGN: The present study is a single-center retrospective cohort study.
OBJECTIVE: The objective of the study is to verify the hypothesis that sharp elevation of systolic blood pressure at extubation is a risk factor for development of symptomatic epidural hematoma after spinal surgery. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Postoperative symptomatic epidural hematoma (she) after spine surgery is a rare but potentially serious complication that may result in paralysis unless removed at an early stage.
METHODS: The subjects were 2611 patients treated with decompression and decompression/fusion of the cervical, thoracic, and lumbar vertebrae at our hospital. Twelve of these patients developed postoperative SEH and removal of hematoma was performed. To investigate the risk factors in these patients, data were analyzed for age at the time of surgery, sex, preoperative complications, medical history, body mass index, preoperative platelet count, surgical procedure, microscope use, operative time, blood loss, surgical site, systolic blood pressure (SBP) at extubation, difference between resting and extubation SBP, ratio of SBP at extubation to that at rest, blood pressure at discharge from the operating room, and use of a drain.
RESULTS: There was a significantly higher rate of SBP ratio (extubation/rest) ≥1.3 in patients with SEH (p = 0.021, Fisher's exact test). Among the preoperative complications and medical histories, the frequency of cerebrovascular disorder tended to be higher in SEH cases than in non-SEH cases (p = 0.073). There was no significant difference for all other parameters listed above. In multivariate logistic analysis, the odds ratios were 3.98 (p = 0.018) for an SBP ratio (extubation/rest) ≥1.3 and 4.75 (p = 0.055) for cerebrovascular disorder, suggesting effects of these two items. With simultaneous input into a multivariate model, SBP ratio ≥1.3 had a significant independent association with postoperative SEH (p = 0.021) and cerebrovascular disorder showed a tendency for this association (p = 0.072).
CONCLUSION: The risk for symptomatic epidural hematoma is significant in patients with SBP at extubation that is more than 1.3 times that of SBP at rest.

Entities:  

Keywords:  blood pressure; risk factor; spine surgery; symptomatic epidural hematoma

Year:  2019        PMID: 31802708     DOI: 10.1177/2309499019885449

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Orthop Surg (Hong Kong)        ISSN: 1022-5536            Impact factor:   1.118


  2 in total

1.  The Influence of High Blood Pressure on Developing Symptomatic Lumbar Epidural Hematoma after Posterior Lumbar Spinal Fusion Surgery: Clinical Data Warehouse Analysis.

Authors:  Jin-Seo Yang; Young-Suk Kwon; Jong-Ho Kim; Jae-Jun Lee; Eun-Min Seo
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2022-08-03       Impact factor: 4.964

2.  Factors Affecting Postoperative Spinal Epidural Hematoma and the Optimal Order of Vertebral Body Decompression in Multivertebral Microendoscopic Laminectomy.

Authors:  Yu Soejima; Takeshi Arizono; Hirofumi Bekki; Akihiko Inokuchi; Teiyu Izumi; Ryuta Imamura; Takahiro Hamada; Kimitaka Nakamura; Mamiko Sakai; Masakazu Yoshimoto; Masatoshi Yamamoto
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2022-05-27
  2 in total

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