rss
Emerg Med J 2009;26:210-212 doi:10.1136/emj.2008.060608
  • Prehospital care

Invasive arterial blood pressure monitoring in an out-of-hospital setting: an observational study

  1. J Sende1,
  2. P Jabre1,2,
  3. B Leroux1,
  4. C Penet1,
  5. E Lecarpentier1,
  6. M Khalid1,
  7. A Margenet1,
  8. J Marty1,
  9. X Combes1
  1. 1
    Service d’Anesthésie Réanimation et SAMU 94, Henri Mondor University Hospital (AP-HP), Créteil, France
  2. 2
    EA 3409, Avicenne University Hospital (AP-HP), Bobigny, France
  1. 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.

This Article

Services

  1. Request permissions

Responses

  1. Submit a response
  2. No responses published

Social bookmarking

Register for free content


Free sample
This recent issue is free to all users to allow everyone the opportunity to see the full scope and typical content of EMJ.
View free sample issue >>

Free archive
The full back archive is now available for EMJ. Institutional subscribers may access the entire archive as part of their subscription. Personal subscribers will also have access to all content when logged in. Non-subscribers who register have free access to all articles published before 2006, back to volume 1 issue 1.
Register to access the free archive >>

Don't forget to sign up for content alerts so you keep up to date with all the articles as they are published.