• Clinical cardiology · Feb 2010

    Comparative Study

    A novel noninvasive ultrasonic cardiac output monitor: comparison with cardiac magnetic resonance.

    • Frederik Trinkmann, Christina Doesch, Theano Papavassiliu, Joerg Weissmann, Dariusch Haghi, Joachim Gruettner, Stefan O Schoenberg, Martin Borggrefe, Jens J Kaden, and Joachim Saur.
    • 1st Department of Medicine, Cardiology, Angiology, Pneumology, Intensive Care, Medical Faculty Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany.
    • Clin Cardiol. 2010 Feb 1;33(2):E8-14.

    BackgroundUSCOM, a novel continuous wave Doppler (CWD) device, has been introduced for noninvasive determination of cardiac output (CO). The present study aimed to compare the accuracy and reproducibility of the new device, using cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) as the noninvasive gold standard.Methods And ResultsThe CO of 56 consecutive patients was prospectively determined by CWD either before or after CMR imaging. The CWD probe was placed in the suprasternal or supraclavicular notch aiming at the aortic valve. Valid CWD signals could be obtained in 45 patients yielding a CO of 5.3+/-1.1 L/min (range, 3.0-7.5 L/min) by CMR and 4.7+/-1.1 L/min by CWD (2.5-8.0 L/min, P = .004), respectively. CWD measurements showed an acceptable agreement with CMR (bias: 0.6+/-1.1 L/min) and a high reproducibility (bias: 0.1+/-0.4 L/min). Higher CO and body mass index (BMI) were identified as sources of inaccuracy in univariate analysis. By multivariate analysis, only CO(CMR) was found to be independently associated with larger variation. Estimated diameters of the left ventricular outflow tract (LVOT), a prerequisite for CO measurement by CWD, correlated only weakly with those measured by CMR.ConclusionsContinuous wave Doppler is a feasible technique for measuring cardiac function. Although the overall agreement with CMR was acceptable, CWD showed a trend to underestimate CO. The estimated LVOT diameter by CWD is likely to be an important source of error. Nevertheless, the CWD device could be of clinical use especially for detection of intraindividual hemodynamic changes since a high reproducibility could be demonstrated.Copyright 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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