New generation continuous cardiac output monitoring from carbon dioxide elimination

Abstract Background There is continuing interest among clinicians in the potential for advanced hemodynamic monitoring and “goal directed” intravenous fluid administration guided by minimally-invasive cardiac output measurement to reduce complication rates in high risk patients undergoing major surg...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Philip J. Peyton, Mats Wallin, Magnus Hallbäck
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-02-01
Series:BMC Anesthesiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12871-019-0699-5
id doaj-9b7c45779e2844899a9f5b7e2bf11c44
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9b7c45779e2844899a9f5b7e2bf11c442020-11-25T02:49:52ZengBMCBMC Anesthesiology1471-22532019-02-0119111010.1186/s12871-019-0699-5New generation continuous cardiac output monitoring from carbon dioxide eliminationPhilip J. Peyton0Mats Wallin1Magnus Hallbäck2Anaesthesia, Perioperative and Pain Medicine Unit, Melbourne Medical School, University of Melbourne; Department of Anaesthesia, Austin HealthMaquet Critical Care, ABMaquet Critical Care, ABAbstract Background There is continuing interest among clinicians in the potential for advanced hemodynamic monitoring and “goal directed” intravenous fluid administration guided by minimally-invasive cardiac output measurement to reduce complication rates in high risk patients undergoing major surgery. However, the adoption of the available technologies has been limited, due to cost, complexity and reliability of measurements provided. We review progress in the development of new generation methods for continuous non-invasive monitoring of cardiac output from measurement of carbon dioxide elimination in ventilated patients using the Differential Fick method. Main text The history and underlying theoretical basis are described, and its recent further development and implementation using modern generation anesthesia monitoring and delivery systems by two separate but parallel methods, termed “Capnotracking” and “Capnodynamics”. Both methods generate breath-by-breath hands-free cardiac output monitoring from changes in carbon dioxide elimination produced by automatic computerized modulation of respiratory rate delivered by an electronic ventilator. Extensive preclinical validation in animal models of hemodynamic instability, with implanted ultrasonic flow probes for gold standard reference measurements, shows this approach delivers reliable, continuous cardiac output measurement in real time. The accuracy and precision of measurement by the Capnodynamic method were maintained under a wide range of both hemodynamic and respiratory conditions, including inotropic stimulation, vasodilatation, hemorrhage, caval compression, alveolar lavage, changes in tidal volume and positive end-expiratory pressure, and hypercapnia, with only brief derangement observed in a model of lower body ischemia involving release of prolonged aortic occlusion by an intra-aortic balloon. Phase 2 testing of a Capnotracking system in patients undergoing cardiac surgery and liver transplantation has achieved a percentage error of agreement with thermodilution of +/− 38.7% across a wide range of hemodynamic states. Conclusions Progress in development of these technologies suggest that a robust, automated and reliable method of non-invasive cardiac output monitoring from capnography is close at hand for use in major surgery and critical care. The great advantage of this approach is that it can be fully integrated into the anesthesia machine and ventilator, using components that are already standard in modern anesthesia and intensive care workstations, and should be virtually hands-free and automatic.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12871-019-0699-5MonitoringCarbon dioxideCardiac outputPerioperative
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Philip J. Peyton
Mats Wallin
Magnus Hallbäck
spellingShingle Philip J. Peyton
Mats Wallin
Magnus Hallbäck
New generation continuous cardiac output monitoring from carbon dioxide elimination
BMC Anesthesiology
Monitoring
Carbon dioxide
Cardiac output
Perioperative
author_facet Philip J. Peyton
Mats Wallin
Magnus Hallbäck
author_sort Philip J. Peyton
title New generation continuous cardiac output monitoring from carbon dioxide elimination
title_short New generation continuous cardiac output monitoring from carbon dioxide elimination
title_full New generation continuous cardiac output monitoring from carbon dioxide elimination
title_fullStr New generation continuous cardiac output monitoring from carbon dioxide elimination
title_full_unstemmed New generation continuous cardiac output monitoring from carbon dioxide elimination
title_sort new generation continuous cardiac output monitoring from carbon dioxide elimination
publisher BMC
series BMC Anesthesiology
issn 1471-2253
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Abstract Background There is continuing interest among clinicians in the potential for advanced hemodynamic monitoring and “goal directed” intravenous fluid administration guided by minimally-invasive cardiac output measurement to reduce complication rates in high risk patients undergoing major surgery. However, the adoption of the available technologies has been limited, due to cost, complexity and reliability of measurements provided. We review progress in the development of new generation methods for continuous non-invasive monitoring of cardiac output from measurement of carbon dioxide elimination in ventilated patients using the Differential Fick method. Main text The history and underlying theoretical basis are described, and its recent further development and implementation using modern generation anesthesia monitoring and delivery systems by two separate but parallel methods, termed “Capnotracking” and “Capnodynamics”. Both methods generate breath-by-breath hands-free cardiac output monitoring from changes in carbon dioxide elimination produced by automatic computerized modulation of respiratory rate delivered by an electronic ventilator. Extensive preclinical validation in animal models of hemodynamic instability, with implanted ultrasonic flow probes for gold standard reference measurements, shows this approach delivers reliable, continuous cardiac output measurement in real time. The accuracy and precision of measurement by the Capnodynamic method were maintained under a wide range of both hemodynamic and respiratory conditions, including inotropic stimulation, vasodilatation, hemorrhage, caval compression, alveolar lavage, changes in tidal volume and positive end-expiratory pressure, and hypercapnia, with only brief derangement observed in a model of lower body ischemia involving release of prolonged aortic occlusion by an intra-aortic balloon. Phase 2 testing of a Capnotracking system in patients undergoing cardiac surgery and liver transplantation has achieved a percentage error of agreement with thermodilution of +/− 38.7% across a wide range of hemodynamic states. Conclusions Progress in development of these technologies suggest that a robust, automated and reliable method of non-invasive cardiac output monitoring from capnography is close at hand for use in major surgery and critical care. The great advantage of this approach is that it can be fully integrated into the anesthesia machine and ventilator, using components that are already standard in modern anesthesia and intensive care workstations, and should be virtually hands-free and automatic.
topic Monitoring
Carbon dioxide
Cardiac output
Perioperative
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12871-019-0699-5
work_keys_str_mv AT philipjpeyton newgenerationcontinuouscardiacoutputmonitoringfromcarbondioxideelimination
AT matswallin newgenerationcontinuouscardiacoutputmonitoringfromcarbondioxideelimination
AT magnushallback newgenerationcontinuouscardiacoutputmonitoringfromcarbondioxideelimination
_version_ 1724741793733410816