Laboratory animals
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A comparison of two techniques for measuring cardiac output, thermodilution (TD) and thoracic electrical bioimpedance (TEB), was undertaken in a porcine model. Eight anaesthetized large white pigs were studied. A total of 436 paired measurements were performed over a range of cardiac outputs from 1.7 to 15.1 l/min as measured by thermodilution. ⋯ Analysis by Bland and Altman statistics revealed a mean difference (bias) of -0.02 l/min and the limits of agreement were +/- 1.6 l/min, similar to figures found in human comparative studies. These results confirm that thoracic electrical bioimpedance is a valid method of measuring cardiac output in pigs. It has significant advantages compared to thermodilution, in particular it is cheap, simple to use, non-invasive and provides continuous data.