Tissue perfusion pressure enables continuous hemodynamic evaluation and risk prediction in the intensive care unit.
Anand ChandrasekharRaimon Padrós-VallsRoger Pallarès-LópezEric Palanques-TostNicholas HoustisThoralf M SundtHae-Seung LeeCharles G SodiniAaron D AguirrePublished in: Nature medicine (2023)
Treatment of circulatory shock in critically ill patients requires management of blood pressure using invasive monitoring, but uncertainty remains as to optimal individual blood pressure targets. Critical closing pressure, which refers to the arterial pressure when blood flow stops, can provide a fundamental measure of vascular tone in response to disease and therapy, but it has not previously been possible to measure this parameter routinely in clinical care. Here we describe a method to continuously measure critical closing pressure in the systemic circulation using readily available blood pressure monitors and then show that tissue perfusion pressure (TPP), defined as the difference between mean arterial pressure and critical closing pressure, provides unique information compared to other hemodynamic parameters. Using analyses of 5,988 admissions to a modern cardiac intensive care unit, and externally validated with 864 admissions to another institution, we show that TPP can predict the risk of mortality, length of hospital stay and peak blood lactate levels. These results indicate that TPP may provide an additional target for blood pressure optimization in patients with circulatory shock.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- intensive care unit
- blood flow
- heart rate
- healthcare
- hypertensive patients
- type diabetes
- magnetic resonance imaging
- heart failure
- blood glucose
- bone marrow
- quality improvement
- cardiovascular events
- magnetic resonance
- coronary artery disease
- chronic pain
- contrast enhanced
- insulin resistance
- skeletal muscle
- pain management
- combination therapy