Association between intraoperative blood pressure and postoperative delirium in elderly hip fracture patients.

BACKGROUND:One possible area of intervention to prevent postoperative delirium (PD) is intraoperative blood pressure management. However, the relationship between intraoperative blood pressure and PD is unclear. A secondary analysis of a RCT study examining the PD risk over the range of absolute int...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nae-Yuh Wang, Ai Hirao, Frederick Sieber
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4393126?pdf=render
id doaj-9ec3516e17bf4ea3aa9d94cdabf64aa1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9ec3516e17bf4ea3aa9d94cdabf64aa12020-11-24T21:10:45ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01104e012389210.1371/journal.pone.0123892Association between intraoperative blood pressure and postoperative delirium in elderly hip fracture patients.Nae-Yuh WangAi HiraoFrederick SieberBACKGROUND:One possible area of intervention to prevent postoperative delirium (PD) is intraoperative blood pressure management. However, the relationship between intraoperative blood pressure and PD is unclear. A secondary analysis of a RCT study examining the PD risk over the range of absolute intraoperative mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) readings and the corresponding relative changes from preoperative baseline level was performed to determine the role of MAP on PD. METHODS:Nonparametric locally weighted quadratic polynomial smoothing (LOESS) regression explored the pattern of PD risk at postoperative day 2 as a function of mean surgery MAP (msMAP) and percent change of msMAP from baseline in 103 elderly hip fracture patients. Segment-linear logistic regression models were then constructed to determine the odds ratios (OR) of PD over the observed range of these msMAP measures, adjusting for potential confounds. RESULTS:Twenty-three patients (22%) developed PD on day 2. LOESS regression revealed a j-shaped association between absolute levels of msMAP and PD risk. When msMAP was ≥80 mmHg, higher msMAP imparted greater PD risk (OR = 2.28 per 10 mmHg msMAP increase; 95% CI: 1.11-4.70), while higher msMAP was associated with lower PD risk (OR = 0.19 per 10 mmHg increase; CI: 0.05-0.76) if msMAP was <80 mmHg. There was no statistically significant relationship between PD risk and average percent change from baseline in these msMAP measures. CONCLUSION:In elderly hip fracture patients, both very high and very low levels of msMAP were associated with significantly increased risk of PD.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4393126?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nae-Yuh Wang
Ai Hirao
Frederick Sieber
spellingShingle Nae-Yuh Wang
Ai Hirao
Frederick Sieber
Association between intraoperative blood pressure and postoperative delirium in elderly hip fracture patients.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Nae-Yuh Wang
Ai Hirao
Frederick Sieber
author_sort Nae-Yuh Wang
title Association between intraoperative blood pressure and postoperative delirium in elderly hip fracture patients.
title_short Association between intraoperative blood pressure and postoperative delirium in elderly hip fracture patients.
title_full Association between intraoperative blood pressure and postoperative delirium in elderly hip fracture patients.
title_fullStr Association between intraoperative blood pressure and postoperative delirium in elderly hip fracture patients.
title_full_unstemmed Association between intraoperative blood pressure and postoperative delirium in elderly hip fracture patients.
title_sort association between intraoperative blood pressure and postoperative delirium in elderly hip fracture patients.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description BACKGROUND:One possible area of intervention to prevent postoperative delirium (PD) is intraoperative blood pressure management. However, the relationship between intraoperative blood pressure and PD is unclear. A secondary analysis of a RCT study examining the PD risk over the range of absolute intraoperative mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) readings and the corresponding relative changes from preoperative baseline level was performed to determine the role of MAP on PD. METHODS:Nonparametric locally weighted quadratic polynomial smoothing (LOESS) regression explored the pattern of PD risk at postoperative day 2 as a function of mean surgery MAP (msMAP) and percent change of msMAP from baseline in 103 elderly hip fracture patients. Segment-linear logistic regression models were then constructed to determine the odds ratios (OR) of PD over the observed range of these msMAP measures, adjusting for potential confounds. RESULTS:Twenty-three patients (22%) developed PD on day 2. LOESS regression revealed a j-shaped association between absolute levels of msMAP and PD risk. When msMAP was ≥80 mmHg, higher msMAP imparted greater PD risk (OR = 2.28 per 10 mmHg msMAP increase; 95% CI: 1.11-4.70), while higher msMAP was associated with lower PD risk (OR = 0.19 per 10 mmHg increase; CI: 0.05-0.76) if msMAP was <80 mmHg. There was no statistically significant relationship between PD risk and average percent change from baseline in these msMAP measures. CONCLUSION:In elderly hip fracture patients, both very high and very low levels of msMAP were associated with significantly increased risk of PD.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4393126?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT naeyuhwang associationbetweenintraoperativebloodpressureandpostoperativedeliriuminelderlyhipfracturepatients
AT aihirao associationbetweenintraoperativebloodpressureandpostoperativedeliriuminelderlyhipfracturepatients
AT fredericksieber associationbetweenintraoperativebloodpressureandpostoperativedeliriuminelderlyhipfracturepatients
_version_ 1716755350688890880