1. Feasibility of continuous non-invasive finger blood pressure monitoring in adult patients admitted to an intensive care unit
- Author
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Schuurmans, Jaap, van Nieuw Amerongen, Arthur Rutger, Terwindt, Lotte Elisabeth, Schenk, Jimmy, Veelo, Denise Petra, Vlaar, Alexander Petrus Johannes, van der Ster, Björn Jacob Petrus, Graduate School, Intensive Care Medicine, ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences, Nursing, ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias, APH - Methodology, APH - Quality of Care, Anesthesiology, ACS - Diabetes & metabolism, APH - Digital Health, APH - Personalized Medicine, ACS - Microcirculation, and AII - Inflammatory diseases
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Monitoring ,Blood pressure ,Non-invasive ,Hypotension ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Cardiovascular - Abstract
Background: Arterial catheters are often used for blood pressure monitoring in the intensive care unit (ICU), but they can cause complications. Non-invasive continuous finger blood pressure monitors could serve as an alternative. However, failure to obtain finger blood pressure signals is reported in up to 12% of ICU patients. Objectives: Our primary objective was to identify the success rate of finger blood pressure monitoring in ICU patients. Secondary objectives were to assess whether patient admission characteristics could be used to identify patients unsuitable for non-invasive blood pressure monitoring and to determine the quality of non-invasive blood pressure waveforms. Methods: Retrospective observational study conducted in a cohort of 499 ICU patients. When available, the signal quality of the first hour of finger measurement was determined using an open-source waveform algorithm. Results: Finger blood pressure signals were obtained in 94% of patients. These patients had a high quality blood pressure waveform for 84% of the measurement time. Patients without a finger blood pressure signal significantly more frequently had a history of kidney and vascular disease, were more often treated with inotropic agents, had lower hemoglobin levels, and had higher arterial lactate levels. Conclusions: Finger blood pressure signals were obtained in nearly all ICU patients. Significant differences in baseline characteristics between patients with and without finger blood pressure signals were found, but they were not clinically relevant. The characteristics studied could therefore not be used to identify patients unsuitable for finger blood pressure monitoring.
- Published
- 2023