Continuous measurements of cardiac output in the perioperative period

Management of critically ill patients is based on knowledge of fundamental physiological variables. Automatized and continuous measurement of these variables is preferable. A new system based upon the thermodilution method has been developed to measure cardiac output automatically and continuously....

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Bibliographic Details
Published inUgeskrift for læger Vol. 159; no. 8; p. 1094
Main Authors Andresen, E B, Jakobsen, C J, Melsen, N C
Format Journal Article
LanguageDanish
Published Denmark 17.02.1997
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Summary:Management of critically ill patients is based on knowledge of fundamental physiological variables. Automatized and continuous measurement of these variables is preferable. A new system based upon the thermodilution method has been developed to measure cardiac output automatically and continuously. We evaluated the system in the potentially unstable perioperative period with possible great and rapid changes in cardiac output. Twenty patients, scheduled for open heart or abdominal aortic aneurysm surgery, were included into the study, which was approved by the local ethical committee. The patients were monitored for up to 30 hours. At random intervals five iced bolus thermodilution cardiac output (BCO) determinations were made and compared to the continuous measurements (CCO). Two hundred and thirty-one pairs of data were obtained. The cardiac outputs ranged from 2.5-14.9 l/min. The absolute bias was 0.31 l/min (95% limits of agreement -1.4 l/min to 2.0 l/min). The mean relative error was 4.7% with a standard deviation of the relative error of 15.4%. The linear regression was represented by: CCO = 11.352 x BCO - 0.36. The correlation coefficient R was 0.90 (p < 0.001). In conclusion, the CCO measurement technique is a promising clinical method. The method is straightforward, requires no calibration, is independent of vascular geometry and measures with its limitations volumetric flow. Finally automatic and continuous patient monitoring provides more information and has potential to reveal previously undetected haemodynamic events.
ISSN:0041-5782