Journal of clinical monitoring and computing
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J Clin Monit Comput · Jun 2012
Pulse oximeter plethysmograph variation and its relationship to the arterial waveform in mechanically ventilated children.
The variations induced by mechanical ventilation in the arterial pulse pressure and pulse oximeter plethysmograph waveforms have been shown to correlate closely and be effective in adults as markers of volume responsiveness. The aims of our study were to investigate: (1) the feasibility of recording plethysmograph indices; and (2) the relationship between pulse pressure variation (ΔPP), plethysmograph variation (ΔPOP) and plethysmograph variability index (PVI) in a diverse group of mechanically ventilated children. A prospective, observational study was performed. ⋯ PVI was found to correlate strongly with ΔPP (r = 0.7049, P < 0.0001) and ΔPOP (r = 0.715, P < 0.0001). This study demonstrates the feasibility of obtaining plethysmographic variability indices in children under various physiological stresses. These data show a similarly strong correlation to that described in adults, between the variations induced by mechanical ventilation in arterial pulse pressure and the pulse oximeter plethysmograph.
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J Clin Monit Comput · Jun 2012
Intraoperative MRI electrical noise and monitor ECG filters affect arrhythmia detection and identification.
Most electrical equipment in the modern operating room (OR) radiates electrical noise (EN) that can interfere with patient monitors. We have described the EN that an intraoperative magnetic resonance imaging (iMRI) system emits and have shown that this high-energy EN diminishes the quality of the ECG waveform during iMRI scans in our neurosurgical OR. We have also shown that the ECG signal filters in our iMRI-compatible patient monitor reduce this interference but, in the process, disturb the true morphology of the displayed waveform. ⋯ Depending on the OR design, the patient may be out of the anesthetist's direct view during a scan procedure. The anesthetist must rely on monitored physiologic parameters to assess patient status during this time. He/she should be familiar with his/her monitor's filtering capabilities and routinely adjust the ECG filters to achieve the best compromise between minimized EN effects and maximized displayed ECG signal quality.
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J Clin Monit Comput · Apr 2012
Comparative StudyContinuous minimally invasive peri-operative monitoring of cardiac output by pulmonary capnotracking: comparison with thermodilution and transesophageal echocardiography.
A number of technologies are available for minimally-invasive cardiac output measurement in patients during surgery but remain little used. A system has been developed based on CO(2) elimination (VCO(2)) by the lungs for use in ventilated patients, which can be fully integrated into a modern anesthesia/monitoring platform, and provides semi-automated, continuous breath-by-breath cardiac output monitoring. A prototype measurement system was constructed to measure VCO(2) and end-tidal CO(2) concentration with each breath. ⋯ The method followed sudden changes in cardiac output due to arrythmias and run onto cardiopulmonary bypass in real time. The accuracy and precision were comparable to other clinical techniques. The method is relatively seamless and largely automated and has potential for continuous, cardiac output monitoring in ventilated patients during anesthesia and critical care.