C J C Trepte1, C Phillips2, J Solà3, A Adler4, B Saugel5, S Haas5, S H Bohm6, D A Reuter5. 1. Department of Anaesthesiology, Centre for Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Medical Centre Hamburg-Eppendorf, Martinistr. 52, Hamburg D-20246, Germany c.trepte@uke.de. 2. Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR, USA. 3. Centre Suisse d'Electronique et de Microtechnique, Neuchatel, Switzerland. 4. Department of Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada. 5. Department of Anaesthesiology, Centre for Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Medical Centre Hamburg-Eppendorf, Martinistr. 52, Hamburg D-20246, Germany. 6. Swisstom AG, Landquart, Switzerland.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Functional imaging by thoracic electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is a non-invasive approach to continuously assess central stroke volume variation (SVV) for guiding fluid therapy. The early available data were from healthy lungs without injury-related changes in thoracic impedance as a potentially influencing factor. The aim of this study was to evaluate SVV measured by EIT (SVVEIT) against SVV from pulse contour analysis (SVVPC) in an experimental animal model of acute lung injury at different lung volumes. METHODS: We conducted a randomized controlled trial in 30 anaesthetized domestic pigs. SVVEIT was calculated automatically analysing heart-lung interactions in a set of pixels representing the aorta. Each initial analysis was performed automatically and unsupervised using predefined frequency domain algorithms that had not previously been used in the study population. After baseline measurements in normal lung conditions, lung injury was induced either by repeated broncho-alveolar lavage (n=15) or by intravenous administration of oleic acid (n=15) and SVVEIT was remeasured. RESULTS: The protocol was completed in 28 animals. A total of 123 pairs of SVV measurements were acquired. Correlation coefficients (r) between SVVEIT and SVVPC were 0.77 in healthy lungs, 0.84 after broncho-alveolar lavage, and 0.48 after lung injury from oleic acid. CONCLUSIONS: EIT provides automated calculation of a dynamic preload index of fluid responsiveness (SVVEIT) that is non-invasively derived from a central haemodynamic signal. However, alterations in thoracic impedance induced by lung injury influence this method.
BACKGROUND: Functional imaging by thoracic electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is a non-invasive approach to continuously assess central stroke volume variation (SVV) for guiding fluid therapy. The early available data were from healthy lungs without injury-related changes in thoracic impedance as a potentially influencing factor. The aim of this study was to evaluate SVV measured by EIT (SVVEIT) against SVV from pulse contour analysis (SVVPC) in an experimental animal model of acute lung injury at different lung volumes. METHODS: We conducted a randomized controlled trial in 30 anaesthetized domestic pigs. SVVEIT was calculated automatically analysing heart-lung interactions in a set of pixels representing the aorta. Each initial analysis was performed automatically and unsupervised using predefined frequency domain algorithms that had not previously been used in the study population. After baseline measurements in normal lung conditions, lung injury was induced either by repeated broncho-alveolar lavage (n=15) or by intravenous administration of oleic acid (n=15) and SVVEIT was remeasured. RESULTS: The protocol was completed in 28 animals. A total of 123 pairs of SVV measurements were acquired. Correlation coefficients (r) between SVVEIT and SVVPC were 0.77 in healthy lungs, 0.84 after broncho-alveolar lavage, and 0.48 after lung injury from oleic acid. CONCLUSIONS: EIT provides automated calculation of a dynamic preload index of fluid responsiveness (SVVEIT) that is non-invasively derived from a central haemodynamic signal. However, alterations in thoracic impedance induced by lung injury influence this method.