1 May 2023Article
Effects of pneumoperitoneum on hemodynamics evaluated by continuous noninvasive arterial pressure monitoring. A single-center observational study
Luigi Via 1Gaetano Palumbo 2Gloria Guccione 2Carlotta Continella 3Giulia Cirica 3Simona Tutino 3Tiziana Nicosia 2Marinella Astuto 1Filippo Sanfilippo 4
Affiliations
Article Info
1 Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care, A.O.U. “Policlinico-San Marco”, Catania, Italy
2 School of Specialization in Anesthesia and Intensive Care, University of Catania, Catania, Italy
3 School of Specialization in Anesthesia and Intensive Care, University “Magna Graecia”, Catanzaro, Italy
4 Department of General Surgery and Medical-Surgical Specialties, Section of Anesthesia and Intensive Care, University of Catania, Catania, Italy
Ann. Ital. Chir., 2023, 94(3), 281-288;
Published: 1 May 2023
Copyright © 2023 Annali Italiani di Chirurgia
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The induction of pneumoperitoneum (PP) during laparoscopy may cause hemodynamic alterations, especially in patients with unknown cardiovascular diseases. While invasive arterial monitoring could be considered excessive, continuous noninvasive arterial pressure (CNAP) monitoring may allow careful evaluation of hemodynamic variations during laparoscopy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The objective of this single center observational study was to evaluate hemodynamic changes after insufflation and after deflation of PP with CNAP monitoring. Patients included where adults undergoing elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy (American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status classification II and III). The Hemodynamic data (blood-pressure, cardiac-index, heart-rate, stroke-volume index, stoke-volume variation and arterialelastance) were collected 30 seconds before pneumoperitoneum (t1), and compared to values at 2 (t2), 10 (t3) and 20 (t4) minutes after pneumoperitoneum insufflation. We also compared data 30 seconds before and 2 minutes after release of pneumoperitoneum. RESULTS: 65 patients were included. Compared with reference values at t1, blood-pressure values increased at all timepoints (t2-t 3-t4); cardiac-index augmented at t3 and t4 (p<0.05); heart-rate increased at t3 (p<0.005); stroke-volume index decreased at t2 (p<0.005) and was higher at t4 (p<0.005). While stoke-volume variation remained always stable after pneumoperitoneum induction, arterial-elastance increased significantly at all time-points (t2-t 3-t4). The only difference at pneumoperitoneum deflation was a reduction in stoke-volume variation (p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: In patients undergoing elective cholecystectomy, CNAP monitoring showed significant hemodynamic changes that would have been underappreciated with standard non-invasive monitoring with increase in arterial elastance under stable preload conditions. Whether this effect is due to unknown cardiovascular diseases facilitating ventriculo-arterial decoupling remains to be determined.
Keywords
- Arterial Elastance
- Cardiac Outp
- Pneumoperitoneum
- Stroke Volume
- Stroke Volume Variation