Cardiac output (CO) is an important diagnostic and prognostic tool for patients with ventricular dysfunction. Pulmonary hypertension patients undergo invasive right heart catheterization to determine pulmonary vascular and cardiac hemodynamics. Thermodilution (TD) and direct Fick method are the most common methods of CO determination but are costly and may be associated with complications. The latest generation of impedance cardiography (ICG) provides noninvasive estimation of CO and is now validated. The purpose of this study was to compare ICG measurement of CO to TD and direct Fick in pulmonary hypertension patients. Thirty-nine enrolled patients were analyzed: 44% were male and average age was 50.8+/-17.4 years. Results for bias and precision of cardiac index were as follows: ICG vs. Fick (-0.13 L/min/m2 and 0.46 L/min/m2), TD vs. Fick (0.10 L/min/m2 and 0.41 L/min/m2), ICG vs. TD (respectively, with a 95% level of agreement between -0.72 and 0.92 L/min/m2; CO correlation of ICG vs. Fick, TD vs. Fick, and ICG vs. TD was 0.84, 0.89, and 0.80, respectively). ICG provides an accurate, useful, and cost-effective method for determining CO in pulmonary hypertension patients, and is a potential tool for following responses to therapeutic interventions.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1527-5299.2004.03406.xDOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Many clinicians doubt the reliability of thermodilution (TD) for measuring cardiac output (CO) in patients with tricuspid regurgitation (TR), but this study aims to reassess that belief.
  • A systematic review analyzed 1064 studies, ultimately using 4 for meta-analysis, and found that the presence of TR did not significantly impact the correlation between CO measurements from TD and the direct Fick (DF) method.
  • The study concludes that TD's accuracy in measuring CO might not be significantly influenced by moderate-to-severe TR, but calls for further research due to the biases and variability in the included studies.
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