RESUMO
BACKGROUND: When critically analyzing our hospital system's rate of hypotension and acute kidney injury (AKI) after total joint arthroplasty, our incidence rates (14.54%, 6.02%) were much higher than our peers (7.17%, 2.03%) and national rates (2.0%, 3.3%). We present a multi-disciplinary management intervention that aimed to decrease overall complication rates. METHOD: A multi-disciplinary team implemented a protocol at our suburban hospital to limit complication rates after joint replacement surgery. Hypotension, AKI, length of stay (LOS), re-admission rates, and mortality rates were compared before the protocol was implemented, after protocol implementation, and after protocol integration into our EMR (electronic medical record). RESULTS: In total, 1233 patients over 36 months were followed. Hypotension rates after protocol implementation into EMR (group 3) were significantly lower than rates before the protocol (group 1) (P = .002), with rates after protocol implementation without EMR (group 2) trending toward a significant decrease from group 1 (P = .064). AKI rates in group 3 were significantly lower than group 1 (P = .000) and group 2 (P = .006). No difference was seen in hypotension rates between group 2 and 3 (P = .792) or AKI rates between group 1 and 2 (P = .533). Finally, no significant difference was seen between groups in LOS (P = .560), re-admission rates (P = .378), and mortality rates (all 0.0%). CONCLUSION: By implementing a comprehensive electronic protocol consisting of pre-operative risk stratification, multi-disciplinary medical optimization, and an evolving post-operative management plan, significant decreases in hypotension and AKI can be seen.