Given that hemodynamic fluctuations acutely escalate the risk of devastating rebleeding and secondary neurological deficits in unsecured ruptured intracranial aneurysms, this study aimed to synthesize the best available evidence for blood pressure management in this population and to provide an evidence-based foundation for clinical nursing practice.
A systematic search was conducted in domestic and international databases and relevant websites for evidence pertaining to blood pressure management in patients with ruptured intracranial aneurysms, including clinical practices, guidelines, expert consensuses, evidence summaries, and systematic reviews/meta-analyses. The search period covered database inception up to June 2025. Two researchers independently performed literature quality assessments and evidence extraction, with particular attention to nursing-relevant evidence on hemodynamic monitoring, bedside assessment, complication prevention, fluid management, and follow-up coordination.
A total of 17 studies were included, comprising 11 guidelines, 4 expert consensuses, and 2 clinical decision entries. The synthesized evidence yielded 32 recommendations, structured into 6 core clinical domains: personnel and environmental configuration, individualized blood pressure targeting, precision hemodynamic monitoring, complication prevention, fluid therapy strategy, and longitudinal follow-up protocols. These recommendations further clarified key nursing responsibilities in triage coordination, continuous blood pressure surveillance, neurological assessment, delayed cerebral ischemia surveillance, fluid balance monitoring, and long-term follow-up.
Blood pressure management in patients with ruptured intracranial aneurysms should be individualized and multidisciplinary. The synthesized evidence highlights key nursing priorities in hemodynamic monitoring, delayed cerebral ischemia surveillance, fluid management, and follow-up coordination, and may inform standardized clinical nursing protocols.
Full article