AI Article Synopsis

  • A new ultrasound dilution (UD) system called COstatus measures cardiac output (CO) in pediatric patients using arterial and central venous catheters.
  • A study tested the validity of CO measurements from UD against those from pulmonary artery thermodilution (COTD) in anesthetized pigs, using saline injections for both methods.
  • Results showed a strong correlation (r = 0.96) between COUD and COTD, with minimal bias, indicating that COUD is a reliable alternative for measuring cardiac output in pediatric swine models.

Article Abstract

Novel COstatus system (Transonic Systems, Inc., NY), based on ultrasound dilution (UD), works off in situ arterial and central venous catheters in pediatric patients to measure cardiac output (CO). The purpose of the present study was to validate CO measurement by UD (COUD) with pulmonary artery (PA) thermodilution (COTD) in a prospective animal study. Ten anesthetized pigs (16-45 kg) were instrumented with pediatric PA, central venous, and peripheral artery catheters. For COUD measurements, normothermic saline (0.5-1.0 ml/kg body weight, up to a maximum of 30 ml) was injected into the venous limb of an arteriovenous loop that was connected between in situ catheters. For COTD measurements, 5-10 ml cold saline was injected into the PA catheter. Sixty-four averaged sets were obtained for comparison. COTD mean was 2.98 ± 1.21 l/min (range 1.33-6.29), and COUD mean was 2.68 ± 1.16 l/min (range 1.33-5.85). This study yielded a correlation r = 0.96, COUD = 0.91*(COTD) - 0.04 l/min; bias was 0.3 l/min with limits of agreement as -0.39 to 0.99 l/min; and the percentage error was 23.73% between the methods. CO measurements by UD agreed well with thermodilution measurements in the pediatric swine model.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3108493PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00246-011-9915-xDOI Listing

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