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- Robert A De Lorenzo, John A Ward, Bryan S Jordan, and Chris E Hanson.
- U.S. Army Institute for Surgical Research, Tactical Combat Casualty Care Research Program, Fort Sam Houston, TX.
- Acad Emerg Med. 2014 Aug 1;21(8):899-904.
BackgroundDespite some focus on the use of intraosseous (IO) catheters to obtain laboratory samples, very little is known about the potential for obtaining other forms of clinical data. Largely unstudied is the relationship between IO pressures (IOPs) and systemic hemodynamic pressures such as mean arterial pressure (MAP) and central venous pressures (CVP).ObjectivesThe objective was to explore the relationship between hemodynamic parameters (blood pressures) measured through an IO catheter and intravascular catheters placed in the arterial and central venous circulation.MethodsEight pigs (Sus scrofa) weighing 30 to 45 kg were sedated with a short-acting agent, intubated with a cuffed endotracheal tube, and anesthetized with 2% to 3% isoflurane. Intravascular catheters were placed into the femoral or carotid artery and the femoral or jugular vein for MAP and CVP measurements. IO catheters, 15 mm for the sternum and 25 mm for the long bones, were placed percutaneously into the proximal tibia, proximal femur, proximal humerus, right proximal ulna, and/or sternum. Pressures were recorded during normotension, hypotension, and hypertension.ResultsAveraged across all eight animals, the means (ranges) for baseline systemic pressures were as follows: MAP = 66.5 (55.6 to 76.7) mm Hg, tibia IOP = 17.4 (9.3 to 34.5) mm Hg, femur IOP =18.4 (3.3 to 33.1) mm Hg, humerus IOP = 15.7 (2.8 to 28.9) mm Hg, ulna IOP = 16.0 (7.9 to 25.6) mm Hg, sternum IOP = 5.7 (-0.5 to 47.9) mm Hg, and CVP = 2.7 mm Hg (-3.3 to 7.9) mm Hg. The best median correlation occurred between femur IOP and mean MAP (r = 0.65). The four highest correlations between IOP and MAP were associated with mean femur IOP. Only one IO site had a correlation coefficient over 0.50 for CVP. The long bones tended to correlate better with the MAP and the sternum tended to correlate better with the CVP. Nonlinearity was observed in the actively rising pressure phases, which can be explained by a hysteresis model.ConclusionsThe relationship between IOP and MAP or CVP is variable by site, with the MAP and CVP tending to be estimated by the femur and sternum, respectively. The relationship to actively rising pressures is nonlinear and a hysteresis model is proposed to explain the phase change. Further experimentation is needed to refine the IOP relationship to the MAP and CVP and assess the potential of these measurements to provide clinically relevant information.© 2014 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.
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