Is the temporal variability of Doppler echocardiographic estimation of cardiac output sufficiently small to be useful in serial hemodynamic studies?
Doppler echocardiography provides reproducible estimates of cardiac output with low temporal variability, supporting its utility for non-invasive serial hemodynamic monitoring.
The temporal variability of combined cross-sectional and Doppler echocardiographic estimates of cardiac output was studied in 14 normal subjects. In each subject cross-sectional echocardiographs and Doppler velocities were recorded from the aortic, pulmonary and mitral valves. Recordings were repeated after 30-60 min and after 1-3 months to allow estimation of short-term and long-term temporal variability. A components of variance analysis showed that between-subject variability was significantly larger than within-subject variability for all measured and calculated variables. Long-term variability was larger than short-term variability for all variables except the mitral valve area. Calculation of flows from the three measurement sites were equally reproducible and the mean percentage error for CO measurements performed 1-3 months apart ranged from 6.4% to 7.4%. The 95% confidence intervals for Doppler measurements of CO at the three sites ranged from +/- 0.49 l min-1 to +/- 0.56 l min-1, suggesting that the temporal variability of flow measurements using the non-invasive Doppler method is sufficiently small for the method to be useful in serial haemodynamic studies.
Robson et al. (Tue,) studied this question.