Abstract
Background: Personalized arterial blood pressure management based on cerebral autoregulation has shown clinical relevance in cardiac surgery. Here we explore the associations between lower limit of cerebral autoregulation (LLA) metrics and postoperative outcomes in a heterogenous and high-acuity population of patients undergoing high-risk cardiovascular surgery. Methods: Autoregulation parameters were determined retrospectively in 686 patients undergoing cardiac surgery at UAB Hospital. Cerebral oximetry index (COx) and hemoglobin volume reactivity index (HVx) determine a patient’s unique LLA by examining the correlation between mean arterial pressure (MAP) and near-infrared spectroscopy signals. Logistic regression analyses explored associations of area under the time-pressure curve and duration below LLA with stroke, acute kidney injury, operative mortality, low cardiac output syndrome, and mechanical ventilation lasting more than 48 hours. Any incidence of these outcomes was considered as the primary outcome of interest: major morbidity or operative mortality (MMOM). Results: We explored the association of Area under the time-pressure curve for pressures less than patient-specific Lower Limits of Autoregulation (AUCABP<LLA: and MMOM. Results are reported with odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI). AUCABP<LLA was not significantly associated with MMOM incidence (HVx: Odds Ratio 1.000, 95% CI 0.970-1.030, p=0.979; COx: OR 1.006, 95% CI 0.990-1.023, p=0.456). However, for components of MMOM, specifically operative mortality (HVx: OR 1.063, 95% CI 1.013-1.115, p=0.013; COx: OR 1.027, 95% CI 1.001-1.052, p=0.038) and low cardiac output syndrome (HVx: OR 1.036, 95% CI 1.004-1.068, p=0.025), there were statistically significant relationships with AUCABP<LLA when controlling for logistic Euroscore and preoperative hemoglobin levels. Conclusions: Area under the time-pressure curve for pressures less than patient-specific LLA was not significantly associated with MMOM incidence. However, we found significant associations between components of MMOM, specifically operative mortality and low cardiac output syndrome, with an AUCABP<LLA and time under LLA. These results suggest that LLA metrics might have utility in predicting specific postoperative outcomes, but their role in predicting overall MMOM may be limited in heterogenous and high-acuity patient populations. This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.
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