Souto Moura T, Aguiar Rosa S, Germano N, Cavaco R, Sequeira T, Alves M, Papoila A L, Bento L
Medicine Department 1, 4 São José's Hospital, Central Lisbon Hospitalar Centre, Portugal.
Cardiology Department, Santa Marta's Hospital, Central Lisbon Hospitalar Centre, Portugal.
Med Intensiva (Engl Ed). 2018 Mar;42(2):92-98. doi: 10.1016/j.medin.2017.03.007. Epub 2017 May 25.
Invasive cardiac monitoring using thermodilution methods such as PiCCO® is widely used in critically ill patients and provides a wide range of hemodynamic variables, including cardiac output (CO). However, in post-cardiac arrest patients subjected to therapeutic hypothermia, the low body temperature possibly could interfere with the technique. Transthoracic Doppler echocardiography (ECHO) has long proved its accuracy in estimating CO, and is not influenced by temperature changes.
To assess the accuracy of PiCCO® in measuring CO in patients under therapeutic hypothermia, compared with ECHO.
Thirty paired COECHO/COPiCCO measurements were analyzed in 15 patients subjected to hypothermia after cardiac arrest. Eighteen paired measurements were obtained at under 36°C and 12 at ≥36°C. A value of 0.5l/min was considered the maximum accepted difference between the COECHO and COPiCCO values.
Under conditions of normothermia (≥36°C), the mean difference between COECHO and COPiCCO was 0.030 l/min, with limits of agreement (-0.22, 0.28) - all of the measurements differing by less than 0.5 l/min. In situations of hypothermia (<36°C), the mean difference in CO measurements was -0.426 l/min, with limits of agreement (-1.60, 0.75), and only 44% (8/18) of the paired measurements fell within the interval (-0.5, 0.5). The calculated temperature cut-off point maximizing specificity was 35.95°C: above this temperature, specificity was 100%, with a false-positive rate of 0%.
The results clearly show clinically relevant discordance between COECHO and COPiCCO at temperatures of <36°C, demonstrating the inaccuracy of PiCCO® for cardiac output measurements in hypothermic patients.
使用热稀释法(如脉波指示连续心输出量监测仪PiCCO®)进行有创心脏监测在危重症患者中广泛应用,可提供包括心输出量(CO)在内的多种血流动力学变量。然而,在接受治疗性低温的心脏骤停后患者中,低体温可能会干扰该技术。经胸多普勒超声心动图(ECHO)长期以来已证明其在估算心输出量方面的准确性,且不受温度变化影响。
与ECHO相比,评估PiCCO®在测量接受治疗性低温患者心输出量时的准确性。
对15例心脏骤停后接受低温治疗的患者进行了30组COECHO/COPiCCO配对测量分析。在体温低于36°C时获得18组配对测量值,在体温≥36°C时获得12组配对测量值。COECHO和COPiCCO值之间的最大可接受差值为0.5升/分钟。
在正常体温(≥36°C)条件下,COECHO和COPiCCO之间的平均差值为0.030升/分钟,一致性界限为(-0.22,0.28)——所有测量值的差值均小于0.5升/分钟。在低温(<36°C)情况下,心输出量测量的平均差值为-0.426升/分钟,一致性界限为(-1.60,0.75),只有44%(8/18)的配对测量值落在区间(-0.5,0.5)内。计算得出使特异性最大化的温度截止点为35.95°C:高于此温度,特异性为100%,假阳性率为0%。
结果清楚地表明,在体温<36°C时,COECHO和COPiCCO之间存在临床相关的不一致,这表明PiCCO®在测量低温患者心输出量时不准确。