Does a nonlinear, three-element model accurately compute aortic flow from radial arterial pressure compared to thermodilution in open heart surgical patients?
8 open heart surgical patients
Computation of aortic flow pulsations from radial arterial pressure using a nonlinear, time-varying three-element model of aortic input impedance
Thermodilution cardiac output estimations
Mean difference and standard deviation between model mean flow and thermodilution cardiac outputsurrogate
A nonlinear, three-element model can accurately and continuously estimate cardiac output from radial arterial pressure after an initial calibration.
We computed aortic flow pulsations from arterial pressure by simulating a nonlinear, time-varying three-element model of aortic input impedance. The model elements represent aortic characteristic impedance, arterial compliance, and systemic vascular resistance. Parameter values for the first two elements were computed from a published, age-dependent, aortic pressure-area relationship (G. J. Langewouters et al. J. Biomech. 17:425-435, 1984). Peripheral resistance was predicted from mean pressure and model mean flow. Model flow pulsations from aortic pressure showed the visual aspects of an aortic flow curve. For evaluation we compared model mean flow from radial arterial pressure with thermodilution cardiac output estimations, 76 times, in eight open heart surgical patients. The pooled mean difference was +7%, the SD 22%. After using one comparison per patient to calibrate the model, however, we followed quantitative changes in cardiac output that occurred either during changes in the state of the patient or subsequent to vasoactive drugs. The mean deviation from thermodilution cardiac output was +2%, the SD 8%. Given these small errors the method could monitor cardiac output continuously.
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Karel H. Wesseling
General Cardiology
J. R. C. Jansen
Maastricht University
J. J. Settels
Agrico (Netherlands)
Journal of Applied Physiology
Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research
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Wesseling et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d56de175589c71d767d17a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1993.74.5.2566
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