
Fuchiang (Rich) Tsui
VerifiedUniversity of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine
Active 1996–2024
Research topics
- Internal medicine
- Anesthesia
- Surgery
- Medicine
Selected publications
Preoperative Fluid Fasting Times and Postinduction Low Blood Pressure in Children
Anesthesiology · 2020 · 81 citations
- Medicine
- Anesthesia
- Surgery
BACKGROUND: Children are required to fast before elective general anesthesia. This study hypothesized that prolonged fasting causes volume depletion that manifests as low blood pressure. This study aimed to assess the association between fluid fasting duration and postinduction low blood pressure. METHODS: A retrospective cohort study was performed of 15,543 anesthetized children without preinduction venous access who underwent elective surgery from 2016 to 2017 at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Low blood pressure was defined as systolic blood pressure lower than 2 standard deviations below the mean (approximately the 2.5th percentile) for sex- and age-specific reference values. Two epochs were assessed: epoch 1 was from induction to completion of anesthesia preparation, and epoch 2 was during surgical preparation. RESULTS: In epoch 1, the incidence of low systolic blood pressure was 5.2% (697 of 13,497), and no association was observed with the fluid fasting time groups: less than 4 h (4.6%, 141 of 3,081), 4 to 8 h (6.0%, 219 of 3,652), 8 to 12 h (4.9%, 124 of 2,526), and more than 12 h (5.0%, 213 of 4,238). In epoch 2, the incidence of low systolic blood pressure was 6.9% (889 of 12,917) and varied across the fasting groups: less than 4 h (5.6%, 162 of 2,918), 4 to 8 h (8.1%, 285 of 3,531), 8 to 12 h (5.9%, 143 of 2,423), and more than 12 h (7.4%, 299 of 4,045); after adjusting for confounders, fasting 4 to 8 h (adjusted odds ratio, 1.33; 95% CI, 1.07 to 1.64; P = 0.009) and greater than 12 h (adjusted odds ratio, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.04 to 1.57; P = 0.018) were associated with significantly higher odds of low systolic blood pressure compared with the group who fasted less than 4 h, whereas the increased odds of low systolic blood pressure associated with fasting 8 to 12 h (adjusted odds ratio, 1.11; 95% CI, 0.87 to 1.42; P = 0.391) was nonsignificant. CONCLUSIONS: Longer durations of clear fluid fasting in anesthetized children were associated with increased risk of postinduction low blood pressure during surgical preparation, although this association appeared nonlinear.
Recent grants
I-Corps: Connected Rapid Innovation Software System to meet Medtech Development Needs
NSF · $50k · 2022–2023
Frequent coauthors
- 59 shared
Per H. Gesteland
University of Utah
- 51 shared
Michael M. Wagner
University of Pittsburgh
- 43 shared
Jeremy U. Espino
University of Pittsburgh
- 34 shared
Allan F. Simpao
University of Pennsylvania
- 30 shared
William R. Hogan
Medical College of Wisconsin
- 29 shared
J. Michael Robinson
Carolinas Medical Center
- 27 shared
Wendy W. Chapman
- 26 shared
Robert T. Rolfs
Utah Department of Health
Education
- 1996
PhD, Electrical and Computer Engineering
University of Pittsburgh
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