Abstract

BackgroundThe intermittent measurement of blood pressure (BP) remains the standard of care during anesthesia or procedural sedation. To improve the early identification of hemodynamic compromise, various noninvasive BP devices have been developed which provide a continuous BP reading. The current study evaluates the accuracy of a novel continuous BP device, the NICCI system, in adolescents weighing 40 - 80 kg.MethodsDuring intraoperative anesthetic care, BP readings (systolic, diastolic, and mean) were captured from the arterial cannula and the NICCI device every second.ResultsThe study cohort included 44 pediatric patients undergoing major orthopedic, cardiac, and neurosurgical procedures. A total of 383,126 pairs of systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), and mean arterial pressure (MAP) values from the arterial cannula and the NICCI device were analyzed. The absolute difference for SBP, DBP, and MAP values from the NICCI monitor and the arterial cannula were 10 ± 8, 9 ± 7, and 9 ± 7 mm Hg, respectively. The difference between the BP values from the NICCI and the arterial cannula was ≤ 10 mm Hg for 60% of the SBP readings, 67% of the DBP readings, and 56% of the MAP readings. Using Bland-Altman analysis, the bias was 2, 3, and 4 mm Hg for the SBP, DBP, and MAP.ConclusionsAlthough there were technical limitations related to patient size that affected its ability to meet the strict accuracy criteria set by the American National Standards Institute/Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation standards for noninvasive BP measurement (ANSI/AAMI SP10), the NICCI system provided a continuous noninvasive beat-to-beat BP measurement which was clinically relevant during a significant portion of intraoperative care.

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