Indian Journal of Anaesthesia (Jan 2024)

Comparison between perfusion index, pleth variability index, and pulse pressure variability for prediction of hypotension during major abdominal surgery under general anaesthesia: A prospective observational study

  • Satheesh Gunashekar,
  • Ashutosh Kaushal,
  • Ajit Kumar,
  • Priyanka Gupta,
  • Namrata Gupta,
  • C S Pooja

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/ija.ija_706_23
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 68, no. 4
pp. 360 – 365

Abstract

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Background and Aims: Short-term hypotension after general anaesthesia can negatively impact surgical outcomes. This study compared the predictive potential of the pleth variability index (PVI), pulse pressure variability (PPV), and perfusion index (PI) for anaesthesia-induced hypotension. This study's primary objective was to evaluate the predictive potential of PI, PVI, and PPV for hypotension. Methods: This observational study included 140 adult patients undergoing major abdominal surgery under general anaesthesia. Mean arterial pressure, heart rate, PVI, PPV, and PI were collected at 1-min intervals up to 20 min post anaesthesia induction. Hypotension was assessed at 5-min and 15-min intervals. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were plotted to determine the diagnostic performance and best cut-off for continuous variables in predicting a dichotomous outcome. Statistical significance was kept at P 11.5, while PPV's AUROC was 0.742 (P = 0.001) at cut-off >12.5. At 15 min, PVI's AUROC was 0.615 (95% confidence interval 0.521–0.708, P = 0.020), with 54.9% positive predictive value and 65.2% negative predictive value. Conclusion: PVI, PPV, and PI predicted hypotension within 5 min after general anaesthesia induction. PVI had comparatively higher accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and positive predictive value than PI and PPV when predicting hypotension at 15 min.

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