Center for Critical Care, Department of Outcomes Research, Anesthesiology Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH.
Department of Anesthesiology, Section on Critical Care Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, Winston-Salem, NC.
Crit Care Med. 2019 Jul;47(7):910-917. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000003763.
Hypotension thresholds that provoke renal injury, myocardial injury, and mortality in critical care patients remain unknown. We primarily sought to determine the relationship between hypotension and a composite of myocardial injury (troponin T ≥ 0.03 ng/mL without nonischemic cause) and death up to 7 postoperative days. Secondarily, we considered acute kidney injury (creatinine concentration ≥ 0.3 mg/dL or 1.5 times baseline).
Retrospective cohort.
Surgical ICU at an academic medical center.
Two-thousand eight-hundred thirty-three postoperative patients admitted to the surgical ICU.
A Cox proportional hazard survival model was used to assess the association between lowest mean arterial pressure on each intensive care day, considered as a time-varying covariate, and outcomes. In sensitivity analyses hypotension defined as pressures less than 80 mm Hg and 70 mm Hg were also considered.
There was a strong nonlinear (quadratic) association between the lowest mean arterial pressure and the primary outcome of myocardial injury after noncardiac surgery or mortality, with estimated risk increasing at lower pressures. The risk of myocardial injury after noncardiac surgery or mortality was an estimated 23% higher at the 25th percentile (78 mm Hg) of lowest mean arterial pressure compared with at the median of 87 mm Hg, with adjusted hazard ratio (95% CI) of 1.23 (1.12-1.355; p < 0.001). Overall results were generally similar in sensitivity analyses based on every hour of mean arterial pressure less than 80 mm Hg and any mean arterial pressure less than 70 mm Hg. Post hoc analyses showed that the relationship between ICU hypotension and outcomes depended on the amount of intraoperative hypotension. The risk of acute kidney injury increased over a range of minimum daily pressures from 110 mm Hg to 50 mm Hg, with an adjusted hazard ratio of 1.27 (95% CI, 1.18-1.37; p < 0.001).
Increasing amounts of hypotension (defined by lowest mean arterial pressures per day) were strongly associated with myocardial injury, mortality, and renal injury in postoperative critical care patients.
目前仍不清楚会引起危重症患者肾损伤、心肌损伤和死亡的低血压阈值。我们主要旨在确定低血压与心肌损伤(非缺血原因导致的肌钙蛋白 T ≥ 0.03ng/mL)和术后 7 天内死亡的复合终点之间的关系。其次,我们考虑了急性肾损伤(肌酐浓度≥0.3mg/dL 或比基线高 1.5 倍)。
回顾性队列研究。
学术医疗中心的外科重症监护病房。
2833 名术后入住外科重症监护病房的患者。
使用 Cox 比例风险生存模型评估每个重症监护日的最低平均动脉压作为时变协变量与结局之间的关联。在敏感性分析中,还考虑了低血压定义为压力低于 80mmHg 和 70mmHg。
在非心脏手术后的心肌损伤或死亡率这一主要结局与最低平均动脉压之间存在很强的非线性(二次)关系,在较低的压力下,风险增加。与中位数为 87mmHg 相比,最低平均动脉压的第 25 百分位数(78mmHg)时非心脏手术后的心肌损伤或死亡率风险估计增加了 23%,调整后的危险比(95%CI)为 1.23(1.12-1.355;p<0.001)。在基于每小时平均动脉压低于 80mmHg 和任何平均动脉压低于 70mmHg 的敏感性分析中,总体结果大致相似。事后分析表明,重症监护室低血压与结局之间的关系取决于术中低血压的程度。在从 110mmHg 到 50mmHg 的最低每日压力范围内,急性肾损伤的风险增加,调整后的危险比为 1.27(95%CI,1.18-1.37;p<0.001)。
每天(定义为最低平均动脉压)的低血压程度增加与术后危重症患者的心肌损伤、死亡率和肾损伤密切相关。