Continuous cardiac index monitoring: A prospective observational study of agreement between a pulmonary artery catheter and a calibrated minimally invasive technique.

Publication/Presentation Date

8-1-2009

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Continuous cardiac index (CCI) monitoring can provide information to assist in hemodynamic support. However, pulmonary artery catheters (PAC) pose logistic challenges in acute care settings. We hypothesized that CCI measured with a calibrated minimally invasive technique (LiDCO/PulseCO, UK) would have good agreement with the PAC.

METHODS: We performed a prospective observational study in post-operative cardiac surgery patients. All patients had a PAC with CCI monitoring capability. We connected the LiDCO apparatus to a radial artery line and performed a one-time calibration with a lithium dilution indicator. In order to test the least invasive method possible, we used a peripheral intravenous (IV) line for indicator delivery rather than the conventional central line technique. We recorded paired PAC/LiDCO-PulseCO CCI measurements every minute for 3h. We blinded investigators and clinicians to minimally invasive data with an opaque shield over the monitor. We assessed agreement with Bland-Altman analysis.

RESULTS: We obtained 1485 paired measurements in 8 subjects. The mean CI was 2.9L/min/m(2). By Bland-Altman plot, PAC and LiDCO measurements showed minimal bias (-0.01), but the 95% limits of agreement (+/-2SD) of+/-1.3L/min/m(2) were relatively wide with respect to the mean.

CONCLUSIONS: This calibrated minimally invasive (i.e. radial arterial line and peripheral IV) technique demonstrated low bias compared with CCI measured by PAC. However, the relatively wide confidence limits indicate that differences in the two measurements could still be clinically significant.

Volume

80

Issue

8

First Page

893

Last Page

897

ISSN

1873-1570

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

19520480

Department(s)

Department of Medicine

Document Type

Article

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