AI Article Synopsis

  • Bioimpedance spectroscopy (BIS) is a non-invasive technique for assessing fluid volumes, specifically used to compare measurements between heart failure (HF) patients and healthy individuals.
  • In a study of 64 HF patients and 69 healthy controls, significant differences were found in extracellular fluid percentage relative to total body water (ECF%TBW), suggesting altered fluid distribution in HF patients.
  • The findings indicate that BIS can help classify fluid status in HF patients into normal, elevated, or fluid overload categories, aiding in their clinical management and risk assessment.

Article Abstract

Bioimpedance spectroscopy (BIS) is a non-invasive method used to measure fluid volumes. In this report, we compare BIS measurements from patients with heart failure (HF) to those from healthy adults, and describe how these point-of-care fluid volume assessments may be applied to HF management. Fluid volumes were measured in 64 patients with NYHA class II or III HF and 69 healthy control subjects. BIS parameters including extracellular fluid (ECF), intracellular fluid (ICF), total body water (TBW), and ECF as a percentage of TBW (ECF%TBW) were analyzed. ECF%TBW values for the HF and control populations differed significantly (49.2 ± 3.2% vs. 45.2 ± 2.1%, respectively; < 0.001); both distributions satisfied criteria for normality. Interquartile ranges did not overlap (46.7-51.0% vs. 43.8-46.4%, respectively; < 0.001). Subgroup analyses of HF patients who underwent transthoracic echocardiography showed that impedance measurements correlated with inferior vena cava size (Pearson correlation -0.73, < 0.0001). A case study is presented for illustrative purposes. BIS-measured ECF%TBW values were significantly higher in HF patients as compared to adults without HF. We describe three strata of ECF%TBW (normal, elevated, fluid overload) that may aid in clinical risk stratification and fluid volume monitoring of HF patients. COMPARE - www.ClinicalTrials.gov; IMPEL - www.ClinicalTrials.gov; Heart Failure at Home - www.ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier: NCT02939053; NCT02857231; NCT04013373.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8060148PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2021.636718DOI Listing

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