A new continuous noninvasive blood pressure measurement device, the T-Line Tensymeter TL100 (Tensys Medical Inc., San Diego, CA, USA) which enables avoidance of arterial cannulation has been developed. We compared the values obtained using the T-Line values to simultaneous arterial line measurements in patients undergoing general anaesthesia with induced hypotension. Twenty-five patients, aged 18-70 years, were studied. The T-Line and arterial line were positioned on the contralateral wrists. Intra-operative, real-time, blood pressure data were electronically captured and stored on a computer. Bland-Altman plots and 95% limits of agreement show that the majority of T-Line data points were within 5 mmHg of the arterial line measurements (67%) and agreement was within 15 mmHg in 94.6% or more of all measurements. There was virtually no distinguishable error over the course of surgery using the device. In conclusion, the T-Line measurements correlate with arterial measurements during anaesthesia in which there were periods of both normotensive and hypotensive anaesthesia. The T-Line Tensymeter represents a noninvasive alternative to an arterial line in cases when arterial blood sampling is not required.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2044.2007.05369.xDOI Listing

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A new continuous noninvasive blood pressure measurement device, the T-Line Tensymeter TL100 (Tensys Medical Inc., San Diego, CA, USA) which enables avoidance of arterial cannulation has been developed. We compared the values obtained using the T-Line values to simultaneous arterial line measurements in patients undergoing general anaesthesia with induced hypotension.

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Continuous beat-to-beat arterial blood pressure (BP) monitoring with a simultaneous arterial waveform display is typically achieved with an invasive arterial catheter. We evaluated a noninvasive device, the T-Line Tensymeter, that provides a calibrated arterial pressure waveform from which continuous BP measurements and heart rate may be computed by either a bedside host monitor or the tensymeter device itself. In 25 patients given general anesthesia, we measured systolic, mean, and diastolic BPs via the tensymeter and compared these measurements with those obtained from the contralateral radial artery catheter.

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