articleAnesthesiologyOct 28, 2016Closed access

Relationship between Intraoperative Hypotension, Defined by Either Reduction from Baseline or Absolute Thresholds, and Acute Kidney and Myocardial Injury after Noncardiac Surgery

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Abstract

Background

How best to characterize intraoperative hypotension remains unclear. Thus, the authors assessed the relationship between myocardial and kidney injury and intraoperative absolute (mean arterial pressure [MAP]) and relative (reduction from preoperative pressure) MAP thresholds.

Methods

The authors characterized hypotension by the lowest MAP below various absolute and relative thresholds for cumulative 1, 3, 5, or 10 min and also time-weighted average below various absolute or relative MAP thresholds. The authors modeled each relationship using logistic regression. The authors further evaluated whether the relationships between intraoperative hypotension and either myocardial or kidney injury depended on baseline MAP. Finally, the authors compared the strength of associations between absolute and relative thresholds on myocardial and kidney injury using C statistics.

Citation impact

1,084
total citations
FWCI
55.73
Percentile
100%
References
21
Citations per year

Authors

7

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Acute kidney injury
  • Mean arterial pressure
  • Blood pressure
  • Relative risk
  • Anesthesia
  • Cardiology
  • Absolute risk reduction
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Reduced inequalities
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