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Intra-Operative Hypotension is an Important Modifiable Risk Factor for Major Complications in Spinal Fusion Surgery.

Spine 2024 May 9
STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective observational cohort.

OBJECTIVES: This study explores the impact of Intraoperative hypotension (IOH)on post-op complications for major thoracolumbar spine fusion procedures.

SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: IOH with mean arterial pressure (MAP) < 65 mmHg is associated with post-op acute kidney injury (AKI) in general surgery. In spinal deformity surgery, IOH is a contributing factor to MEP changes and spinal cord dysfunction with deformity correction.

METHODS: 539 thoracolumbar fusion cases, > 6 surgical levels and > 3 hours duration were identified. Anesthetic/surgical data included OR time, fluid volume, blood loss, blood product replacement and use of vasopressors. Arterial-line based MAP data was collected at 1 min intervals. Cummulative duration of MAP < 65 mmHg was recorded. IOH within the first hour of surgery vs. the entire case was determined. Post-op course and complications including SSI, GI complications, pulmonary complications, MI, DVT, PE, AKI and encephalopathy were noted. Cumulative complications were grouped as none, 1-2 complications, or >3 complications.

RESULTS: There was a significant association between occurrence of complications and duration of IOH within the first hour of surgery (8.2 vs. 5.6 min, P<0.001) and across the entire procedure (28.1 vs. 19.3 min, P=0.008). This association persisted for individual major complications including SSI, acute respiratory failure, PE, ileus requiring NGT and post-operative cognitive dysfunction. Comparison of patients with 0 vs. 1-2 vs. 3 or more complications demonstrated that patients with 3 or more complications had a longer duration of IOH in the first hour of the surgery and that patients who had no complications received less vasopressor than patients who had 1-2 or 3 or more complications.

CONCLUSION: This study identifies duration of IOH during the first hour of surgery as a previously unrecognized modifiable risk associated with major complications for multi-level lumbar fusion surgery.

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