The relationship between preoperative blood pressure during anesthetic examinations and pre-intubation blood pressure

Author:

Koibuchi Ikuya1,Kadoi Yuji2,Asou Chizu1,Saito Shigeru1

Affiliation:

1. Gunma University

2. Gunma University Hospital

Abstract

Abstract Background There have been few reports showing the relationship between blood pressure (BP) measured at clinics preoperatively and BP measured immediately before intubation. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between BP measured at different times and settings preoperatively and BP measured before intubation. Methods A total of 182 patients who underwent general anesthesia between March 2021 and April 2022 in a university hospital were examined. In addition to self-reported BP asked on an anesthetic examination sheet completed by each patient, BPs were measured three times, before, during, and after preoperative examination by the anesthesiologist. The derived parameter was compared with BP measured immediately before intubation at the time of general anesthesia induction. Results The systolic BP in the intra-examination period had the most significant correlation with pre-intubation systolic BP (r = 0.5230, p < 0.0001, 95% CI = 0.4050 to 0.6238). On Bland-Altman analysis, the intra-examination systolic BP seemed to be similar and showed better agreement with pre-intubation systolic BP than other measured BPs, with a mean bias of 2.2 mmHg and the narrowest 95% limits of agreement (-33.7 to + 38.1 mmHg). Conclusions The preoperative systolic BP value measured during the examination by the anesthesiologist was found to be closely related to pre-intubation systolic BP measured in the operating room. Higher BP during the preoperative examination may be a result of anxiety-induced stress or white-coat hypertension. Measuring BP during the anesthesiologist’s examination may be useful for predicting hypertension in the pre-intubation period.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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