The Journal of cardiovascular nursing
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A new catheter developed by Edwards Critical-Care Division measures right ventricular ejection fraction and calculates right ventricular stroke volume, end-systolic volume, and end-diastolic volume. The nurse can thus assess a patient's right ventricular function curves using the relationship between stroke volume and end-diastolic volume. This article critiques a study that used this new technology and discusses implications for clinical practice and nursing research.
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Alterations in right ventricular (RV) performance are critical to the cardiac dysfunction witnessed in adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), septic shock (SS), and as a consequence of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) administration during mechanical ventilation. The authors review evidence for right heart dysfunction in these circumstances. In ARDS, an increase in RV afterload with the onset of pulmonary artery hypertension is the predominant factor promoting RV dysfunction. ⋯ The application of PEEP during mechanical ventilation can potentiate alterations in RV preload, afterload, and/or contractility, all of which promote RV dysfunction and compromise left ventricular filling. As RV dysfunction may seriously affect global myocardial performance in all of these settings, the clinician must identify that RV function is impaired, discern the contributing mechanism, and select an appropriate therapeutic regimen targeted at addressing this predominant mechanism. Assessment and management strategies are described.