| Literature DB >> 19727365 |
Peter S Stawicki1, Benjamin Braslow, Vicente H Gracias.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Esophageal Doppler monitoring (EDM) is utilized in numerous clinical settings. This study examines the relationship between pulmonary artery catheter (PAC) and EDM-derived hemodynamic parameters, concentrating on gender- and age-related EDM measurement biases.Entities:
Keywords: Critically ill patients; esophageal echo-Doppler; measurement bias; ventilated patients
Year: 2007 PMID: 19727365 PMCID: PMC2732095 DOI: 10.4103/1817-1737.36548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Thorac Med ISSN: 1998-3557 Impact factor: 2.219
Figure 1Bias plot comparing cardiac output measurements from continuous cardiac output PAC and EDM in the overall patient sample. The mean of the two methods can be seen on the X-axis. The difference between the two methods can be seen on the Y-axis. The shaded area indicates the 95% confidence interval (CI). Note that the overall bias is −1.42 ± 2.08, 95% CI −5.58 to 2.74.
Figure 2Bias plot comparing cardiac output measurements from continuous cardiac output PAC and EDM in women (left) and men (right). The mean of the two methods can be seen on the X-axis. The difference between the two methods can be seen on the Y-axis. The shaded area indicates the 95% confidence interval (CI). Note the significantly greater negative measurement bias noted in women - Table 1 for exact values.
Patient gender- and age-based comparisons of esophageal Doppler monitoring versus pulmonary artery catheter bias characteristics
| Patient group | N | Number of measurements | Bias ± S.D. | 95% C.I. | S.E.M. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men (M) C.O. | 11 | 115 | -1.01 ± 1.89 | -4.79 to 2.77 | 0.177 |
| Women (F) C.O. | 4 | 40 | -2.63 ± 2.16 | -6.94 to 1.68 | 0.341 |
| Difference (F vs M) | -1.61 | -2.33 to −0.902 | |||
| Men (M) S.V. | 11 | 115 | -9.12 ± 15.5 | -40.1 to 21.9 | 1.52 |
| Women (F) S.V. | 4 | 40 | -31.3 ± 20.7 | -72.7 to 10.1 | 3.44 |
| Difference (F vs M) | -22.2 | -15.7 to −28.6 | |||
| Age <40 y/o | 5 | 92 | -1.30 ± 1.86 | -5.02 to 2.42 | 0.194 |
| Age 40 y/o | 10 | 63 | -1.63 ± 2.37 | -6.37 to 3.11 | 0.298 |
| Difference (<40 y/o vs 40 y/o) | 0.332 | -0.340 to 1.00 |
S.D. = Standard deviation,
C.I. = Confidence interval,
S.E.M. = Standard error of the mean,
C.O. = Cardiac output,
S.V. = Stroke volume,
Student's t-test
Figure 3Bias plot comparing stroke volume measurements from continuous cardiac output PAC and EDM in women (left) and men (right). The mean of the two methods can be seen on the X-axis. The difference between the two methods can be seen on the Y-axis. The shaded area indicates the 95% confidence interval (CI). Note the significantly greater negative measurement bias noted in women - Table 1 for exact values.
Resuscitation parameters related to esophageal Doppler monitoring use
| Duration of esophageal Doppler monitoring use (n = 15) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12.4 ± 6.84 hours | ||||
| Median 12.5 hours | ||||
| Range 3 to 21.5 hours | ||||
| Serum lactic acid level (n = 15) | 3.89 ± 1.31 | 2.09 ± 0.946 | ||
| Use of neosynephrine (n = 4) | 145 ± 103 | 56.8 ± 75.7 | ||
| Use of norepinephrine (n = 8) | 6.13 ± 4.32 | 3.46 ± 3.69 | ||
Wilcoxon signed ranks test,
Indicates statistical significance
Comparisons of esophageal Doppler monitoring-associated bias with pulmonary artery catheter cardiac output measurements in other published studies
| Author (Reference) | Year (population) | Type of study of patients | Number | Population | Bias ± SD | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Freund[ | 1987 | Elective surgery patients under general anesthesia (versus PAC) | 23 | 23 men | 0.16 ± 0.82 L/min | Correlation between thermodiltion and EDM increased with operator experience. |
| Lefrant | 1998 | Critically ill ICU | 60 | 45 men | Showed that 12 insertions are needed for a trainee to become proficient in EDM placement. Bias tended to decrease with operator experience. | |
| 15 women | ||||||
| Trainee-performed | -1.2 ± 3.2 | |||||
| Non-trainee | -0.1 ± 2.2 | |||||
| Penny | 2000 | Women with preeclampsia (versus PAC) | 17 | 17 women | -2.0 ± 3.0 L/min | EDM more accurate in women >40 y/o. |
| Leather | 2001 | Men undergoing lumbar epidural anesthesia (versus PAC) | 14 | Men pre epidural | -0.89 ± 0.89 L/min | Overestimatino of CO during lumbar epidural anesthesia as compared to PAC. |
| Men post epidural | 0.55 ± 1.88 L/min | |||||
| Lafanechere | 2006 | Infrarenal aortic surgery (versus PAC) | 22 | 18 men | Bias between both methods was clinically acceptable, and limits of agreement were not significantly affected by aortic clamping. | |
| 4 women | ||||||
| Pre aortic clamp | 0.10 ± 0.73 L/min | |||||
| During clamp | 0.54 ± 1.05 L/min | |||||
| Post clamp | 0.18 ± 1.00 L/min | |||||
| Stawicki | 2007 | Critically ill SICU | 39 | 26 men | 0.02 ± 0.94 L/min | EDM tends to underestimate CO in the lower range, and tends to overestimate in the upper range of CO values relative to PAC. Note the minimal bias associated with extensive EDM operator experience. |
| 13 women | ||||||
| Current study | 2007 | Critically ill study SICU | 15 | 11 men | -1.01 ± 1.89 L/min | EDM demonstrated significantly more measurement bias in women than in men when compared to CCO-PAC. |
| 4 women | -2.63 ± 2.16 L/min |
PAC = Pulmonary artery catheter,
ICU = Intensive care unit,
SICU = Surgical intensive care unit,
CCO-PAC = Continuous cardiac output pulmonary artery catheter, EDM = Esophageal Doppler monitoring