Oxy-hemodynamic effects during positioning of patients with myocardial acute infarction: a clinical trial

Abstract

Aim: To analyze the effects of oxygen consumption and myocardial contractility during positioning in bed for patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) compared to non-cardiac hospitalized individuals. Method: clinical trial, controlled, randomized, parallel, blind. Randomization: position order in different decubiti; sizing: finite populations based on the prevalence of AMI, totaling 30 heart attack patients; Controls: hospitalized individuals matched for age and sex with blood pressure of less than 50 mm/Hg. Inclusion criteria for heart patients: Killip class I and II, up to 72 hours after the event. Data processing: SPSS®; statistical analysis: mean, mode, median; variance, standard deviation and coefficient of variation, Pearson coefficient, hypothesis testing, confidence intervals and ANOVA. 5% significance level. Preliminary results: significant difference (p=0.04) was found after comparing the cardiac index between decubitus positions. The left lateral position presented the smallest score.

https://doi.org/10.17665/1676-4285.20155283
HTML (Português (Brasil))
EPUB (Português (Brasil))
PDF (Português (Brasil))
HTML
HTML (Español (España))
PDF (Español (España))
PDF
EPUB
EPUB (Español (España))

References

Delgado MF, Frazão CMFQ, Fernandes MICD, Medeiros ABA, Lúcio KDB, Lira ALBC. Fatores associados às doenças cardiovasculares em crianças e adolescentes: estudo transversal. Online braz j nurs [Internet]. 2015 June [Cited 2015 Aug 6]; 14 (2): 168-77. Available from: http://www.objnursing.uff.br/index.php/nursing/article/view/5126. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.17665/1676-4285.20155126

Villela PB, Oliveira GMM, Klein CH, Silva NAS. Síndrome Coronariana Aguda na Prática Clínica em Hospital Universitário do Rio de Janeiro. Rev Bras Cardiol. 2012;25(3):167-176.

Vollman KM. Hemodynamic instability: is it really a barrier to turning critically ill patients? Crit Care Nurse. 2012 Feb;32(1):70-5. doi:10.4037/ccn2012765. PubMed PMID: 22298720.