viernes, 15 de marzo de 2019

Emergency department non-invasive cardiac output study (EDNICO): a feasibility and repeatability study | Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine | Full Text

Emergency department non-invasive cardiac output study (EDNICO): a feasibility and repeatability study | Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine | Full Text

Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine

Emergency department non-invasive cardiac output study (EDNICO): a feasibility and repeatability study

Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine201927:30
  • Received: 31 July 2018
  • Accepted: 4 January 2019
  • Published: 

Abstract

Background

There is little published data investigating non-invasive cardiac output monitoring in the emergency department (ED). We assessed six non-invasive fluid responsiveness monitoring methods which measure cardiac output directly or indirectly for their feasibility and repeatability of measurements in the ED: (1) left ventricular outflow tract echocardiography derived velocity time integral, (2) common carotid artery blood flow, (3) suprasternal aortic Doppler, (4) bioreactance, (5) plethysmography with digital vascular unloading method, and (6) inferior vena cava collapsibility index.

Methods

This is a prospective observational study of non-invasive methods of assessing fluid responsiveness in the ED. Participants were non-ventilated ED adult patients requiring intravenous fluid resuscitation. Feasibility of each method was determined by the proportion of clinically interpretable measurements from the number of measurement attempts. Repeatability was determined by comparing the mean difference of two paired measurements in a fluid steady state (after participants received an intravenous fluid bolus).

Results

76 patients were recruited in the study. A total of 207 fluid responsiveness measurement sets were analysed. Feasibility rates were 97.6% for bioreactance, 91.3% for vascular unloading method with plethysmography, 87.4% for common carotid artery blood flow, 84.1% for inferior vena cava collapsibility index, 78.7% for LVOT VTI, and 76.8% for suprasternal aortic Doppler. The feasibility rates difference between bioreactance and all other methods was statistically significant.

Conclusion

Our study shows that non-invasive fluid responsiveness monitoring in the emergency department may be feasible with selected methods. Higher repeatability of measurements were observed in non-ultrasound methods. These findings have implications for further studies specifically assessing the accuracy of such non-invasive cardiac output methods and their effect on patient outcome in the ED in fluid depleted states such as sepsis.

Keywords

  • Fluid responsiveness
  • Stroke volume
  • Ultrasound
  • Bioreactance
  • Plethysmography
  • Sepsis

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