Abstract :
The increasingly recognized inability of the current generation of pneumatic tourniquets to control pressure with adequate accuracy, reliability, and stability has been associated with continuing reports of tourniquet-related injuries, incidents, and hazards. Moreover, the labor-intensiveness and operating costs associated with the use of current types of pneumatic tourniquets have significant cost implications for hospitals. To a large extent, the recent development of a microprocessor-based tourniquet capable of safely and accurately maintaining a desired pressure, and capable of simultaneously performing other functions such as detection of alarm conditions, has reduced these hazards and operating-cost implications. Furthermore, the availability of a microprocessor-based tourniquet has facilitated the development of the adaptive tourniquet described in this paper, in which the pressure in a tourniquet cuff is changed throughout a surgical procedure as a function of the patient´s changing intraoperative systolic pressure, thus approximating the minimum safe pressure necessary to maintain a bloodless field for surgery. While the use of an adaptive tourniquet, rather than just a microprocessor-based tourniquet set at a constant pressure may not be necessary in most cases, it promises to have significant value in certain surgical procedures and for patients who may be at greater risk of tourniquet-induced complications. Also, the lower average pressures possible through the use of an adaptive tourniquet may permit the evolution of surgical techniques of longer duration without a concomitant increase in the risk of tourniquet-induced complications.
Keywords :
Availability; Costs; Hazards; Hospitals; Injuries; Orthopedic surgery; Pressure control; Pressure gauges; Safety; Stability; Blood Pressure; Blood Pressure Determination; Humans; Pressure; Surgical Procedures, Operative; Systole; Tourniquets;