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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · May 1996
Continuous non-invasive monitoring of energy expenditure, oxygen consumption and alveolar ventilation during controlled ventilation: validation in an oxygen consuming lung model.
- K Holk, S G Einarsson, K L Svensson, J P Bengtson, and O Stenqvist.
- Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Göteborg University, Sweden.
- Acta Anaesthesiol Scand. 1996 May 1; 40 (5): 530-7.
BackgroundWe have developed a combined indirect calorimetric and breath-by-breath capnographic device (GEM) for respiratory monitoring: oxygen consumption (VO2), carbon dioxide excretion (VCO2), respiratory quotient (RQ), energy expenditure (EE), alveolar ventilation (VA) and dead space/total ventilation (VD/VT).MethodsThe device was tested in a lung model in which VO2 was achieved by combustion of hydrogen. VCO2 was achieved by delivering CO2 into the single alveolus combustion chamber. VO2, VCO2, compliance, and anatomical dead space could be varied independently.ResultsMeasured VO2 was 101 +/- 3% (SD) of set value at a F1O2 < 0.6 and 101 +/- 7% at a F1O2 > 0.6 during 15 hours of testing. The corresponding VCO2 values were 99 +/- 2% and 102 +/- 7%. The GEM could with good accuracy measure accumulated energy expenditure (EE) during simulated unstable patient conditions up to a F1O2 of 0.8. At F1O2 above 0.8 VCO2 and VO2 could be estimated using a default RQ value of 0.85. On-line estimated VA and VD/VT values could be obtained at any F1O2 up to 1.0. In a test sequence with stable VO2 and VCO2 the GEM adequately followed changes in VA, induced by changes in anatomical dead space, breathing frequency and compliance.ConclusionThe overall performance of the device is satisfactory and well comparable with any equipment tested. It allows near-continuous non-invasive monitoring of EE, VO2, VCO2, VA, VD/VT in ventilated, critically ill patients, providing a rationale for ventilator settings and nutritional support.
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