The relationship between preoperative hypertension and intraoperative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with postoperative morbidity

Hypertension is not consistently associated with postoperative cardiovascular morbidity and therefore not considered a major peri-operative risk factor. However, hypertension may predispose to peri-operative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with perioperative morbidity and mortality, such...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Crowther, Marcelle
Other Authors: Roodt, Francois
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Health Sciences 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31496
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-314962020-07-22T05:07:39Z The relationship between preoperative hypertension and intraoperative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with postoperative morbidity Crowther, Marcelle Roodt, Francois Biccard, Bruce Pre-operative hypertension intra-operative hypotension peri-operative morbidity and mortality Hypertension is not consistently associated with postoperative cardiovascular morbidity and therefore not considered a major peri-operative risk factor. However, hypertension may predispose to peri-operative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with perioperative morbidity and mortality, such as intra-operative hypotension and tachycardia. The objective of this study was to determine whether pre-operative hypertension was independently associated with haemodynamic changes known to be associated with adverse peri-operative outcomes. We performed a five-day multicentre, prospective, observational cohort study which included all adult inpatients undergoing elective, noncardiac, non-obstetric surgery. We recruited 343 patients of whom 164 (47.8%) were hypertensive. An intra-operative mean arterial pressure of 100 beats per minute) occurred in 126 (38.9%) patients, of which 61 (48.4%) were hypertensive. Multivariable logistic regression did not show an independent association between the stage of hypertension and either clinically significant hypotension or tachycardia, when controlled for ASA physical status, functional status, major surgery, the duration of surgery or blood transfusion. There was no association between pre-operative hypertension and peri-operative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with major morbidity and mortality. These data therefore support the recommendation of the Joint Guidelines of the Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland (AAGBI) and the British Hypertension Society to proceed with elective surgery if a patient’s blood pressure is < 180/110 mmHg. 2020-03-06T09:43:12Z 2020-03-06T09:43:12Z 2019 2020-03-05T07:06:07Z Masters Thesis Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31496 eng application/pdf Faculty of Health Sciences Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Pre-operative hypertension
intra-operative hypotension
peri-operative morbidity and mortality
spellingShingle Pre-operative hypertension
intra-operative hypotension
peri-operative morbidity and mortality
Crowther, Marcelle
The relationship between preoperative hypertension and intraoperative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with postoperative morbidity
description Hypertension is not consistently associated with postoperative cardiovascular morbidity and therefore not considered a major peri-operative risk factor. However, hypertension may predispose to peri-operative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with perioperative morbidity and mortality, such as intra-operative hypotension and tachycardia. The objective of this study was to determine whether pre-operative hypertension was independently associated with haemodynamic changes known to be associated with adverse peri-operative outcomes. We performed a five-day multicentre, prospective, observational cohort study which included all adult inpatients undergoing elective, noncardiac, non-obstetric surgery. We recruited 343 patients of whom 164 (47.8%) were hypertensive. An intra-operative mean arterial pressure of 100 beats per minute) occurred in 126 (38.9%) patients, of which 61 (48.4%) were hypertensive. Multivariable logistic regression did not show an independent association between the stage of hypertension and either clinically significant hypotension or tachycardia, when controlled for ASA physical status, functional status, major surgery, the duration of surgery or blood transfusion. There was no association between pre-operative hypertension and peri-operative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with major morbidity and mortality. These data therefore support the recommendation of the Joint Guidelines of the Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland (AAGBI) and the British Hypertension Society to proceed with elective surgery if a patient’s blood pressure is < 180/110 mmHg.
author2 Roodt, Francois
author_facet Roodt, Francois
Crowther, Marcelle
author Crowther, Marcelle
author_sort Crowther, Marcelle
title The relationship between preoperative hypertension and intraoperative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with postoperative morbidity
title_short The relationship between preoperative hypertension and intraoperative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with postoperative morbidity
title_full The relationship between preoperative hypertension and intraoperative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with postoperative morbidity
title_fullStr The relationship between preoperative hypertension and intraoperative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with postoperative morbidity
title_full_unstemmed The relationship between preoperative hypertension and intraoperative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with postoperative morbidity
title_sort relationship between preoperative hypertension and intraoperative haemodynamic changes known to be associated with postoperative morbidity
publisher Faculty of Health Sciences
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31496
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