| Literature DB >> 27256288 |
Javier Urbano1,2,3,4, Jorge López1,2,3,4, Rafael González1,2,3,4, Sarah N Fernández1,2,3,4, María José Solana1,2,3,4, Blanca Toledo1,2,3,4, Ángel Carrillo1,2,3,4, Jesús López-Herce5,6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The pressure-recording analytical method is a new semi-invasive method for cardiac output measurement (PRAM). There are no studies comparing this technique with femoral artery thermodilution (FATD) in an infant animal model.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac arrest; Cardiac index; Cardiac output; Children; Infant animal model; Pressure recording analytical method
Year: 2016 PMID: 27256288 PMCID: PMC4891310 DOI: 10.1186/s40635-016-0087-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med Exp ISSN: 2197-425X
Fig. 1Evolution of cardiac index (a), stroke volume index (b), systemic vascular resistance index (c), and stroke volume variation (d) throughout the experiment, measured by femoral artery thermodilution (FATD), and the pressure-recording analytical method (PRAM). *p value <0.05
Fig. 2Bland and Altman plot differences between the cardiac index (a), stroke volume index (b), systemic vascular resistance index (c), and stroke volume variation (d) values obtained with femoral artery thermodilution (FATD) and the pressure-recording analytical method (PRAM)
Cardiac index measurements agreement analyzed by Bland-Altman’s approach at each study moment
| Cardiac index FATD-PRAM (L/min/m2) |
| Bias | 95 % CI | LoA high (%) | LoA low (%) | % error |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | 24 | −0.4 | −1.1 to 0.3 | 2.9 (67.4) | −3.7 (−97.7) | 89.2 |
| ROSC15’ | 11 | 1.8 | 1.2 to 2.4 | 3.9 (78.8) | −0.3 (−3.6) | 48.3 |
| ROSC30’ | 11 | 1.0 | 0.4 to 1.6 | 2.9 (63.5) | −0.9 (−19.6) | 45.3 |
| ROSC60’ | 12 | 0.9 | −0.2 to 1.9 | 4.7 (82.7) | −2.9 (−58.9) | 87.3 |
FATD femoral arterial thermodilution, PRAM pressure recording analytical method, N sample size, Bias mean of the differences between both methods, 95 % CI 95 % confidence interval, LoA (%) limit of agreement expressed as absolute value and as the percentage of the reference method (FATD), % error percentage error, ROSC recovery of spontaneous circulation
Bland-Altman’s analysis of the agreement of hemodynamic measurements at each study moment
| FATD-PRAM |
| Bias | 95 % CI | LoA high (%) | LoA low (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SVI baseline (mL/m2) | 24 | −6.8 | −12.4 to −1.2 | 20.8 (70.7) | −34.4 (−111) |
| SVI ROSC15’ (mL/m2) | 11 | 4.7 | −0.2 to 9.5 | 20.8 (80.9) | −11.3 (−52.1) |
| SVI ROSC30’ (mL/m2) | 11 | 5.9 | 1.6 to 10.2 | 20.2 (69.9) | −8.5 (−30.9) |
| SVI ROSC60’ (mL/m2) | 12 | −0.2 | −7.39 to 6.9 | 24.6 (92.3) | −25.0 (−97.7) |
| SVRI baseline (dyn*s*cm−5*m−2) | 24 | 163 | −132 to 459 | 1610 (86.0) | −1283 (−77.6) |
| SVRI ROSC15’ (dyn*s*cm−5*m−2) | 11 | −919 | −1880 to 41 | 2266 (148) | −4104 (−315) |
| SVRI ROSC30’ (dyn*s*cm−5*m−2) | 11 | −565 | −912 to −220 | 582 (62.7) | −1714 (−178) |
| SVRI ROSC60’ (dyn*s*cm−5*m−2) | 12 | −310 | −633 to 13 | 808 (70.1) | −1428 (−137) |
| SVV baseline (%) | 24 | 3.8 | 0.9 to 6.6 | 17.6 (104) | −10.1 (−62) |
| SVV ROSC15’ (%) | 11 | 2.8 | −5.8 to 11.4 | 31.3 (250) | −25.7 (−289) |
| SVV ROSC30’ (%) | 11 | −2.2 | −10.1 to 5.7 | 24.0 (109) | −28.3 (−143) |
| SVV ROSC60’ (%) | 12 | 2.0 | −2.3 to 6.3 | 16.9 (93.5) | −12.9 (−68) |
FATD femoral arterial thermodilution, PRAM pressure recording analytical method, N sample size, Bias mean of the differences, 95 % CI 95 % confidence interval of the Bias, LoA (%) limit of agreement expressed as absolute value and as the percentage of the reference method (FATD), SVI stroke volume index, ROSC recovery of spontaneous circulation, SVRI systemic vascular resistance index, SVV stroke volume variation
Fig. 3Polar plot to analyze the agreement between femoral artery thermodilution (FATD) and the pressure-recording analytical method (PRAM) for tracking changes in CI. Good agreement was measured by the proportion of data points (bold dots) falling within the polar limits of ±30° from the polar axis. Points lower than 0.45 L/min/m2 were disregarded for the analysis