• Critical care medicine · May 2007

    Effect of lower limb compression devices on thermodilution cardiac output measurement.

    • Keith Killu, John M Oropello, Anthony R Manasia, Roopa Kohli-Seth, Adel Bassily-Marcus, Andrew Leibowitz, Rosanna DelGiudice, Victor Murgolo, and Ernest Benjamin.
    • Department of Surgery, The Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
    • Crit. Care Med. 2007 May 1;35(5):1307-11.

    ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to determine whether lower limb (calf) sequential compression devices (SCDs) have a significant effect on thermodilution cardiac output measurements using a pulmonary artery catheter.DesignProspective clinical investigation.SettingSurgical and neurosurgical intensive care units in a university hospital.PatientsA total of 43 patients with pulmonary artery catheters and bilateral lower limb SCDs.Measurements And Main ResultsCardiac output was measured (average of three) when the SCDs were off (T1), during the first 2-4 secs of the inflation cycle (T2), during seconds 4-8 of the inflation cycle (T3), and when the SCDs were off again (T4). Cardiac output measurements were consistently lower when measured during the SCD inflation cycle. The decrease in cardiac output ranged from 7.58% to 49.5%, with a mean reduction of 24.51% in the first 2-4 seconds and 20.61% during seconds 4-8 (p < .001). Two patients displayed an increase in cardiac output during the inflation cycle; one patient had an increase of 2.78% and the other an increase of 13.5%. In 11 patients, measurements were also made using a pulse contour-analysis cardiac output device, but no changes in pulse contour-analysis cardiac output were observed during the same time period.ConclusionsThermodilution cardiac output measurements via a pulmonary artery catheter should not be done during the inflation cycle of lower limb SCDs because they produce a falsely low cardiac output.

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