Influence of drugs on the response characteristics of the LiDCO sensor: an in vitro study.

Br J Anaesth

Anaesthesiology and perioperative Intensive-Care Medicine, Department for Companion Animals and Horses, University of Veterinary Medicine, Veterinärplatz 1, A-1210 Vienna, Austria.

Published: February 2013

Background: In a previous study, the authors found a large bias (50%) for lithium (LiDCO) compared with thermodilution cardiac output measurement methods in ponies receiving i.v. infusions of xylazine, ketamine, and midazolam. This prompted the authors to examine the effect of drugs on the LiDCO sensor.

Methods: Drugs and lithium were dissolved in 0.9% saline to produce the following solutions: saline, saline-lithium, saline-drug, and saline-drug-lithium. The drug concentrations were overlapping the range of clinical interest as estimated from the published literature. These 38°C solutions were pumped through the LiDCO sensor in predetermined order. Sensor voltages were measured. Differences between lithium-induced voltage changes in the absence and presence of drugs indicated erroneous lithium detections that, if they occurred in vivo, may cause biases in LiDCO measurements.

Results: Clonidine, detomidine, dexmedetomidine, medetomidine, romifidine, xylazine, ketamine, S-ketamine, lidocaine, and rocuronium caused concentration-dependent increases in sensor voltages and negative biases in lithium detection that were mathematically equivalent to greater than +10% biases in LiDCO. The drug-induced voltage changes correlated with calculated biases in LiDCO (r(2)=0.91). Atipamezole, acepromazine, butorphanol, diazepam, midazolam, and guaifenesin caused minimal or no interaction in this study.

Conclusions: A number of drugs influenced the accuracy of the LiDCO sensor in vitro but, based on published pharmacokinetic data, only xylazine, ketamine, lidocaine, and rocuronium may cause biases at clinically relevant concentrations. These findings need to be confirmed in vivo. Relevant (>3 mV) changes in sensor voltages due to the presence of drugs may indicate possible interactions with the LiDCO sensor.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bja/aes380DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

lidco sensor
16
xylazine ketamine
12
sensor voltages
12
biases lidco
12
lidco
9
sensor vitro
8
voltage changes
8
presence drugs
8
lidocaine rocuronium
8
sensor
7

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!