Invasive arterial blood pressure monitoring in an out-of-hospital setting: an observational study
- J Sende1,
- P Jabre1,2,
- B Leroux1,
- C Penet1,
- E Lecarpentier1,
- M Khalid1,
- A Margenet1,
- J Marty1,
- X Combes1
- 1Service d’Anesthésie Réanimation et SAMU 94, Henri Mondor University Hospital (AP-HP), Créteil, France
- 2EA 3409, Avicenne University Hospital (AP-HP), Bobigny, France
- Dr X Combes, SAMU 94, CHU H Mondor (AP-HP), 94000 Créteil, France; xavier.combes{at}hmn.aphp.fr
- Accepted 20 July 2008
Abstract
Background: Non-invasive arterial blood pressure measurement is often inaccurate in emergency unstable patients. A study was undertaken to assess the feasibility of out-of-hospital intra-arterial catheterisation in haemodynamically unstable patients and to evaluate the correlation between invasive and non-invasive arterial pressure values.
Methods: In this prospective 2-year observational study conducted by mobile emergency medical units, the success rate of arterial catheterisation was calculated and blood pressure values measured invasively and non-invasively after successful catheterisation were compared.
Results: 94 patients were included. The success rate for catheterisation (44 radial access, 50 femoral access) was 86% (95% CI 79% to 93%). Bias and precision in invasive versus non-invasive comparisons were −0.1, 38 mm Hg for systolic pressure and 4.2, 27 mm Hg for diastolic pressure. Values differed by more than 20 mm Hg in over 40% of patients. Invasive measurement led to 79 changes in vasoactive treatment in 51 patients.
Conclusion: Emergency out-of-hospital invasive arterial blood pressure monitoring in haemodynamically unstable patients is highly feasible. Discrepancies between invasive and non-invasive measurements are common and highlight the value of early out-of-hospital monitoring.
Footnotes
-
Funding: Support from hospital department sources only.
-
Competing interests: None.
-
Ethics approval: The study was approved by the local ethics committee who waived informed consent because only routine care was given without any randomisation.









