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This article is part of the supplement: 20th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine

Meeting abstract

Comparison of pulmonary arterial and arterial trans-cardiopulmonary thermodilution cardiac output in porcine septic shock

B Vangerow, M Cobas Meyer, J Ahrens, T Schuerholz, G Marx, M Moeller, M Leuwer and H Rueckoldt

Department of Anaesthesiology, Hannover Medical School, D-30625, Hannover, Germany

from 20th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine
Brussels, Belgium. 21–24 March 2000

Critical Care 2000, 4(Suppl 1):P10doi:10.1186/cc730

Published: 21 March 2000

© 2000 Current Science Ltd

Full text

Introduction

Despite its invasiveness and inherent risks, the pulmonary artery catheter (PAC) is still regarded as the clinical standard for cardiac output (CO) determination. Arterial trans-cardiopulmonary thermodilution is a less invasive method (PAC not necessary) for CO monitoring. The aim of this study was to compare arterial trans-cardiopulmonary thermodilution to conventional pulmonary arterial thermodilution for CO determination during substantial hemodynamic variations in a sepsis model.

Methods

In a prospective study 24 anaesthetized, mechanically ventilated pigs (19.7 ± 1.6 kg) with peritonitis-induced septic shock were investigated. Cardiac output was determined using a 7.5F thermodilution catheter placed in the pulmonary artery and a 4F thermistor tipped catheter (Pulsion Medical Systems, Germany) inserted into the right carotid. Nine sets of corresponding CO determinations were obtained during a period of 8 h in each animal, all measurements were performed in triplicate. Data were analyzed using Bland-Altman analyses, linear regression and correlation.

Results

During the period from induction of peritonitis to profound septic shock, major variations in heart rate (range: 48-310 beats/min) and systemic vascular resistance (range: 7400–1340 dyne×sec×cm-5) were observed. 196 sets of CO determinations were yielded with a mean CO measured by pulmonary arterial thermodilution (PATD) of 2.0 ± 0.7 L/min (range: 0.7–5.2 L/min). Mean CO measured by arterial trans-cardiopulmonary thermodilution (ATPTD) was 2.17 ± 0.6 L/min (range: 1.0–4.4 L/min). Linear regression equation was: ATPTD=0.711×PATD +0.82; r2=0.68. The mean bias was 0.17 L/min (95% confidence interval: 0.125-0.215 L/min), with limits of agreement of -0.61 to 0.95 L/min and a precision of 0.34 L/min.

Conclusion

Arterial trans-cardiopulmonary thermodilution CO correlates acceptably with pulmonary arterial thermodilution CO even during pronounced hemodynamic instability.

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