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This Perioperative Cardiovascular Rounds article features a common cause of perceived hemodynamic instability resulting from abnormal aortic-to-radial arterial pressure gradients. The possible mechanisms and the diagnostic criteria are considered. Permission was obtained from the Research Ethics Board of the Montreal Heart Institute to archive this article into a databank for educational purposes and to reproduce the anonymized echocardiographic images for publication.
A 69-year-old patient with no clinical evidence of subclavian steal underwent uneventful open replacement of the mitral and aortic valves. Following the bivalvular replacement, it was difficult to wean the patient from cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Despite normal filling pressures and an infusion of noradrenaline 30 μg · min−1, the mean arterial pressure at the end of CPB was only 75 mmHg. A transesophageal echocardiographic examination was performed to establish the cause of the perceived hemodynamic instability. The examination revealed preserved left and right ventricular systolic function, no valvular abnormalities, and no reason for the apparent hypotension. With assistance from the surgeon, a new cannula was transduced into the aortic root, and a large aortic-to-radial arterial pressure gradient was identified. The radial artery pressure was 86/77/69 mmHg (systolic, mean, diastolic) while the aortic root pressure was 132/107/92 mmHg (Fig. 1). In light of the 46 mmHg systolic pressure gradient, the patient was rapidly weaned from vasoactive support using the aortic root pressure as a guide, followed by easy separation from CPB.
This scenario can be commonly observed in the cardiac operating room (Fig. 1) and in the intensive care unit (Fig. 2, Supplementary Video #1) in patients who are thought to be hemodynamically unstable. Despite previous descriptions of these observations,1,2 the mechanisms responsible for this abnormal pressure gradient remain poorly understood3 and its occurrence is not routinely recognized. The pressure gradient between the aortic root and the radial artery is normally <20 mmHg, being higher in the distal arteries.4 In our clinical experience, an aortic root-to-radial artery systolic pressure gradient >25 mmHg occurs in approximately 30–50% of cardiac procedures. Such pressure gradients typically manifest during the course of CPB. Maximum pressure gradients are usually observed just after separation from CPB (Fig. 3, Supplementary Video #2). In some patients, these gradients resolve towards the end of the procedure; however, there is limited predictability regarding their dynamic variability with respect to time. Due to the difficulty in predicting elevated aortic-to-radial arterial pressure gradients, our routine practice is to monitor both radial and femoral arterial pressures in all patients undergoing cardiac surgery. The femoral line serves as the primary guide for monitoring systemic blood pressure, while the radial line remains the easiest conduit for blood sampling for point-of-care laboratory tests. Using dual arterial lines has the added advantage of permitting blood sampling without causing transient interruptions in the key blood pressure waveform.
Also, we apply an ultrasound-guided approach for inserting the femoral artery catheter before surgery, particularly in patients at increased risk of hemodynamic instability. Transesophageal echocardiography and transthoracic echocardiography can also be used to detect abnormal arterial pressure gradients when clinically significant mitral regurgitation is present. By using continuous wave Doppler interrogation of the mitral valve in the presence of mitral regurgitation, a pressure gradient can be calculated across the mitral valve. This gradient represents the difference between the left ventricular end-systolic pressure (LVESP) and the left atrial pressure (LAP). With a normal aortic valve, the LVESP is similar to the systolic arterial pressure. Consequently, by adding the pressure gradient estimated through Doppler measurement and the LAP estimate using the pulmonary artery occlusion pressure, the LVESP and systolic pressure can be calculated. This pressure should be similar to the radial artery pressure if no gradient is present. Continuous Doppler imaging is used through the mitral valve (Fig. 4). This is the same approach used routinely by cardiologist to estimate the systolic pulmonary artery pressure using the pressure gradient across the tricuspid valve in patients with tricuspid regurgitation.5
Early recognition of an abnormally extensive aortic-to-radial arterial pressure gradient is the first and most important step in excluding intraoperative hemodynamic instability as a cause of persistent hypotension in cardiac surgery. A differential diagnosis of peripheral to central pressure gradients includes: (1) unilateral or bilateral vascular disease; (2) over or under-damping of the transducer signal; (3) inadequate zeroing of transducers; (4) a defective transducer; and (5) idiopathic causes, such as in cardiac surgery and in hemodynamically unstable patients.
References
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Denault AY, Couture P, Buithieu J, Tardif JC. Transesophageal echocardiography multimedia manual: a perioperative transdisciplinary approach. Marcel Dekker; 2005.
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Denault, A., Deschamps, A. Abnormal aortic-to-radial arterial pressure gradients resulting in misdiagnosis of hemodynamic instability. Can J Anesth/J Can Anesth 56, 534–536 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12630-009-9088-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12630-009-9088-8