4.2 Article

Relationships between common carotid artery blood flow and anesthesia, pneumoperitoneum, and head-down tilt position: a linear mixed-effect analysis

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MONITORING AND COMPUTING
Volume 37, Issue 2, Pages 669-677

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10877-022-00940-z

Keywords

Cerebral blood flow; Common carotid artery; Pneumoperitoneum; Head-down tilt; Ultrasonography

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This study investigated the effects of pneumoperitoneum and the head-down tilt position on common carotid artery blood flow in surgical patients. The study found that anesthesia induction significantly decreased CCA blood flow, while pneumoperitoneum with or without the head-down tilt position did not further decrease blood flow if the cardiac index remained unchanged. CCA blood flow was significantly associated with cardiac index and stroke volume index.
This study investigated the effects of pneumoperitoneum and the head-down tilt position on common carotid artery (CCA) blood flow in surgical patients. Methods: This prospective observational study included 20 patients who underwent gynecological surgery. CCA blood flow was measured using Doppler ultrasound at four-time points: awake in the supine position [T1], 3 min after anesthesia induction in the supine position [T2], 3 min after pneumoperitoneum in the supine position [T3], and 3 min after pneumoperitoneum in the head-down tilt position [T4]. Hemodynamic and respiratory parameters were also recorded at each time point. Linear mixed-effect analyses were performed to compare CCA blood flow across the time points and assess its relationship with hemodynamic parameters. Results: Compared with T1, CCA blood flow decreased significantly at T2 (345.4 [288.0-392.9] vs. 293.1 [253.0-342.6], P = 0.048). CCA blood flow were also significantly lower at T3 and T4 compared with T1 (345.4 [288.0-392.9] vs. 283.6 [258.8-307.6] and 287.1 [242.1-321.4], P = 0.005 and 0.016, respectively). CCA blood flow at T3 and T4 did not significantly differ from that at T2. Changes in CCA blood flow were significantly associated with changes in cardiac index and stroke volume index (P = 0.011 and 0.024, respectively). Conclusion: CCA blood flow was significantly decreased by anesthesia induction. Inducing pneumoperitoneum, with or without the head-down tilt position, did not further decrease CCA blood flow if the cardiac index remained unchanged. The cardiac index and stroke volume index were significantly associated with CCA blood flow.

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