Objective: Unexpected intraoperative movement may be detrimental during delicate surgery. This study tested retrospectively an algorithm based on beat-by-beat circulatory variables (incorporated into a Cardiovascular depth of anesthesia index: CARDEAN in relationship to unexpected movement, and compared its performance to that of the electroencephalogram (EEG)-derived index: BIS-XP 4.0.

Methods: 40 ASA I or II patients presenting for knee surgery had EEG (BIS XP 4.0), beat-by-beat (Finapres) finger non-invasive blood pressure (BP), conventional brachial BP and electrocardiogram (EKG) monitors attached. Anesthesia was induced and maintained with propofol and remifentanil. Before incision, the propofol concentration was set to maintain BIS < 60. From incision to emergence, the anesthesiologist was denied access to BIS or Finapres. Anesthesia adjustment was titrated at the discretion of the anesthesiologist according to conventional signs only: brachial BP, EKG, eyelash reflex, movement. Occurrences of movement and eye signs (divergence of eyeballs, tears, corneal reflex, eyelash reflex) were observed. The CARDEAN algorithm was written retrospectively and tested vs. BIS.

Results: 11 movements occurred in 8 patients. CARDEAN > 60 predicted movement in 30% of the cases, 15 to 274 s before movement (sensitivity: 100%, specificity: 95%; relative operating curve ROC = 0.98; prediction probability pk = 0.98). BIS > 60 predicted movement in 19% of cases (sensitivity: 64%; specificity: 94%, ROC: 0.85, pk: 0.85).

Conclusion: Retrospectively, a cardiovascular index predicted unexpected intraoperative movements. Prospective validation is needed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10877-006-9061-9DOI Listing

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