New research presented at this year's Euroanaesthesia congress in Berlin, Germany, suggests that, before an operation, low blood pressure (hypotension) rather than high blood pressure (hypertension) is an independent risk factor for death. The study is by Assistant Professor Dr Robert Sanders, Anesthesiology & Critical Care Trials & Interdisciplinary Outcomes Network (ACTION), Department of Anesthesiology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA, and Drs Puja Myles and Sudhir Venkatesan, University of Nottingham, UK, together with collaborators from the University of Southampton,
Oxford1 University and University College London (all UK). Despite numerous years of study, the influence of preoperative blood pressure (BP) on perioperative risk
remains2 controversial. In this new research, the authors investigated the relationship between preoperative BP and thirty-day mortality following non-cardiac surgery.
They used data from 252,278 patients from the United Kingdom Clinical Practice Research Datalink to perform their analysis. A number of models of varying
complexities3 were used to account for 29 perioperative risk factors including age,
gender4, race, comorbidities, medications, and
surgical5 risk score. After risk factor adjustment, the effect of systolic and diastolic hypertension (high blood pressure) was no longer associated with increased
odds6 of perioperative mortality.
However preoperative hypotension (low blood pressure) was associated with
statistically7 significant increases in the odds of perioperative mortality. For patients with a systolic BP of below 100 mmHg, the likelihood of death increased by 40%. For those with a diastolic BP of under 40mmHg, the likelihood of death increased by 2.5 times. While the risk from hypotension was present in patients with low systolic or low diastolic pressure, values below 100/40 were of greatest risk. Hence the likelihood of death further increased as either or both systolic or diastolic BP decreased further.