| Literature DB >> 11094478 |
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Abstract
INTRODUCTION: In this review, we compare the spectrum of currently available methods for quantifying pulmonary edema in patients. REVIEW: Imaging and indicator dilution techniques comprise the most common strategies for measuring lung water at the bedside. The most accurate (within 10% of the gravimetric gold standard) and most reproducible (< 5% between-test variation) are also, unfortunately, the most expensive and most difficult to implement for purposes of large-scale clinical trials or for routine clinical practice.Entities:
Year: 1999 PMID: 11094478 PMCID: PMC137228 DOI: 10.1186/cc342
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Clinically appropriate methods to quantify pulmonary edema
| Measures | Quantitation | Accuracy* | Reproducibility (COV) | Sensitivity† | |
| CXR | LD | Poor | Unknown | Unknown | Moderate |
| CT | LD | Excellent | Unknown‡ | Unknown‡ | High |
| NMR | TLW | Fair | Underestimates by -40%§ | 5-10% | Poor¶ |
| PET | EVLW | Excellent | Underestimates by 10-15% | < 5% | High |
| ID | EVLW | Good-excellent | Overestimates by 10-20%# | 4-8% | Moderate |
*None of the methods can distinguish whether an increase in extravascular lung water (EVLW) represents non-cellular pulmonary edema or cellular water from an inflammatory infiltrate. †Sensitivity to change. ‡Presumably excellent, but formal studies never performed. §The underestimates are primarily in normal or mildly edematous lungs. ¶The poor sensitivity is primarily in normal or mildly edematous lungs. #The overestimation is primarily in normal or mildly edematous lungs. TLW, total lung water (of a region on an image); LD, lung density; COV, coefficient of variation; CXR, chest X-ray; CT, computed tomography; NMR, nuclear magnetic resonance; PET, positron emission tomography; ID, indicator dilution methods.