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The objective of this observational study is to examine the impact of augmented arterial pressure during the hemostatic phase of elective supratentorial neurosurgery. The primary inquiries it seeks to address are as follows:
Participants will be enrolled during the preoperative evaluation, where their arterial pressure values, medical histories, and medication statuses will be recorded. Throughout the induction and maintenance of anesthesia, we will monitor their blood pressure values and document any instances of hypotension or hypertension. During the hemostatic phase, we will elevate the arterial pressure using noradrenaline by up to 10 mmHg above the recorded pressure measured at the inpatient clinic. Subsequently, we will inquire whether the neurosurgeon had to employ any additional hemostatic maneuvers following the increase in arterial pressure. The arterial pressure values will be recorded at the end of the surgery, and the first postoperative CT scan will be examined to identify any cases of intracranial hemorrhage.
Full description
During surgery to remove intracranial tumors, a patient's blood pressure is kept moderately low to facilitate the procedure. Subsequently, a surgical phase of hemostasis is performed. At this stage, the standard clinical practice requires the anesthesiologist to raise blood pressure to challenge the surgical hemostasis. Although this practice may be considered ubiquitous, it is not currently described in neuroanesthesia texts, and no studies are available that report the effect of this maneuver, either in terms of the optimal level of pressure elevation or in terms of the greater efficacy of a target of systolic arterial pressure (SAP) rather than mean arterial pressure (MAP). The most frequently sought increase in everyday clinical practice is about 10 mmHg higher than the first SAP measured in the patient's operating room. Because of the different profiles of brain autoregulation (Smith, 2015) and individual cardiovascular profiles, anticipatory and context anxiety accompanying the time of surgery, in line with the literature, the present study prefers to select the blood pressure value measured on the ward at the time of admission as the reference (Ackland et al., 2019; Ard & Kendale, 2016). The study aims first to observe the effects on the operative field of this increase.
There are no pharmacological strategies to increase SAP and MAP selectively. However, it can be estimated that the increase mentioned above in SAP, achieved in our institute with an intravenous norepinephrine infusion, is not accompanied by a parallel increase in MAP in about 50 percent of cases (unpublished data).
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Carolina Iaquaniello, Dr; Marco Fabio Gemma, Dr
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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