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INVASIVE MONITORING Direct (invasive) measurement of pressure and flow 1. Pressure 2. Flow - Electromagnetic flow meters - Ultrasonic flow meters - Fick method - Indicator-dilution method 3. Calculated parameters Sensor / transducer A sensor / transducer is a device that converts energy from some other form (e.g. heat, light, sound, pressure, motion, flow), into electrical energy for the purposes of measurement or control o Sensitivity is the minimum input parameter that creates a detectable output change o Range is the difference between maximum and minimum values of the applied parameter that can be measured. o Precision is the degree of reproducibility of the measurements o Resolution is the smallest detectable incremental input parameter that can be detected in the output signal Direct (invasive) measurement of pressure Technique • Insert catheter/transducer in: – Antecubital vein vena cava, right atrium, right ventricle, pulmonary artery – Brachial/femoral artery aorta, left, ventricle, left atrium • Directly through pressure transducer Indications of direct (invasive) pressure measurements • • • • direct measurement of blood pressure accurate technique continuous haemodynamic information blood gas measurement Invasive Pressures Values are nearly the same Invasive Pressures - limitations Damping = removal of energy from a resonant system Invasive measurement: Flow • • Laminar: the flow is orderly and streamlined Turbulent: disorderly flow with vortices Turbulent Flow • Noisy • Produces sound • The murmur heard (narrowed heart valve) • Can be calculated whether flow is laminar or turbulent: Reynolds Number (R) R = Velocity * Diameter * Density / Viscosity VD R • Values below 2000 define laminar flow Sounds of the circulation Sound Origin 1st sound Closure of mitral and tricuspid valves 2nd sound Closure of aortic and pulmonary valves Rapid ventricular filling in early diastole Ventricular filling due to atrial 4th sound contraction The heart sounds. The 1st and 2nd heart sounds are most prominent. 3rd sound QUANTIFICATION OF FLOW Electromagnetic flow probes Ultrasound flowmetry Laser-Doppler flowmetry Echocardiography Flow measurements + B B l S N e = Blu e u Principle of an electromagnetic flowmeter Ultrasonic flow measurements Oscillator Scan head Image plane Skin surface Blood vessel Doppler angle Computer RF amplifier Detector AF amplifier F/V converter Ultrasonic flowmeter. The sensor at the scan head transmits the signal from the oscillator and receives the reflected wave from the blood cells. Complications / Swan Ganz catheter • • • • • • 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Blood loss due to disconnection Arterial thrombosis Infection Haematoma formation True and false aneurysm formation Distal and central embolisation Laser-Doppler Flowmetry Doppler shift on the red blood cells. Bernoulli equation: velocity-pressure relationship • the total energy of the fluid at any point is constant Energy = [V2/2g] + [P/r] + H = constant • In an arterial stenosis, the increase in velocity causes a fall in pressure Poiseuille equation: flow-radius relationship pR Q 8L 4 Q = Flow ∆p = Pressure drop across a length of vessel R = Radius L = Length of Vessel Since BP is constant most of the time, flow is controlled by small changes in ‘R’ -the vessel radius. This is most effective in the arterioles CLINICAL APPLICATIONS Invasive cardiovascular monitoring a. b. c. Arterial line Central venous pressure Pulmonary artery catheter Indications What is being measured Technique- positioning, sites Complications Arterial line • • • • direct measurement of blood pressure accurate technique continuous haemodynamic information blood gas measurement How accurate? Use correct tubing Bubbles free (tips) Tight connections Level of transducer Invasive pressure measurements: Indications Patient factors • Patient with severe sepsis or shock • Cardiac diseases: unstable angina, recent AMI, current congestive heart failure or cardiac arrhythmias, pacemaker Anaesthetic considerations – Controlled hypotensive techniques – Inability to measure blood pressure non-invasively – Frequent blood sampling required during and after operation Surgical considerations • Cardiac surgery • Major surgery on aorta or carotid artery • Neurosurgery: craniotomy or aneurysm clipping • Major surgery with expected high blood loss. Sites Setting up an arterial line Equipment • Pressure bag • Collapsible 0.9% 500cc normal saline bag with air expelled • Pressure transducer and infusion set • Cannula • +- heparin (1-2 units /ml) Measurement of central venous BP Int. jugular vein V. subclavia Value: 2-6 mmHg - quick, large volume load, - hypertonic solutions, - serial blood samples. Saldinger Technique 1. Introduce a Braunüle into a periferal vein 2. Remove the needle 3. Insert a flexible guide-wire to the central vein 4. Remove the Braunüle cannula 5. Insert – then remove a dilator cannula 6. Insert the central venous cannula 7. Remove of guide-wire Monitoring of central venous pressure • • One lumen – long angiocath (16G,14G), – catafix (375mm, 475mm), – percutan (7F, 8.5F) – Swan (8.5F) Multiple lumen – 2- 3 lumen Measurement of cardiac output • Principle of the Fick Method adding 10 beads per minute concentration is 2 beads per litre Flow = Rate added Concentration = 10 beads/min 2 beads/litre = 5 litres/min Measurement of cardiac output with oxygen content Adolf Fick (1829-1901) Blood samples from a peripheral artery and the PA as room air is inspired. The difference between the oxygen content of inspired air and that measured in the expired air can then be used to calculate oxygen uptake at the lungs per minute. West JB: Best and Taylor's Physiological Basis of Medical Practice, 12th edition. Baltimore, Williams and Wilkins, 1990, , 140 Section 2, Chapter 13, p 245.) Measurement of cardiac output Indicator dilution method Sample dye concentration inject bolus of dye C o nc en tr at io n (g /L ) 0 Time (min) 0.5 Measurement of cardiac output Sample dye concentration inject bolus of dye C o nc en tr at io n (g /L ) 0 Time (min) 0.5 High and Low Cardiac Output Measurement of cardiac output with dyes • Practical considerations – Dye recirculates in the CVS – Dye must be non-toxic and not immediately absorbed eg indocyanine green – Injected into pulmonary artery (difficult) – Measured in brachial artery – Like the Fick method, is invasive, & discontinuous • Same principle with heat – Measure thermodilution of cold saline The relationship of the temperature gradient and time. Adapted from Baker, P. D., Orr, J., Westenskow, D. R. and Johnson, R. W. Method and apparatus for producing thermodilution cardiac output measurements utilizing a neural network, US Patent, 5,579,778. When pulmonary artery pressure and cardiac output are measured simultenaously Positioning of Swan Ganz catheter Pulmonary artery and wedge pressures Indications - Swan Ganz catheter 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Ischaemic heart disease with recent myocardial infarction Symptomatic valvular heart disease Cardiomyopathy Congestive heart failure and low ejection faction Shock- septic or hypovolaemic Pulmonary hypertension Cardiac surgery with poor ventricular function What can be measured? (Swan Ganz catheter) 1. Central venous pressure 2. Pulmonary artery systolic and diastolic pressure 3. Pulmonary capillary wedge pressure 4. Cardiac output 5. Mixed venous oxygen saturation 6. Derived values such as stroke volume, cardiac index, ventricular stroke work, systemic and pulmonary vascular resistance Both thermodilution methods Simply requires the central venous injection of a cold (< 8°C) or room-tempered (< 24°C) saline bolus Lungs CVP catheter Femoral aretery catheter catheter Right Heart RA RV EVLW PBV EVLW Advantages of the transpulmonary thermodilution method Less risk factors and complications Provides: • Hemodynamic • Volumetric: preload parameters (lung water) • Estimates cardiac contractility* • On line venous blood gases** dP/dtmax of arterial pressure curve P [mm Hg] t [s] Left Heart LA LV Parameters derived from cardiac output • • • Cardiac index: CO / body surface area Stroke volume: CO / frequency Total vascular resistance: MAP-CVP • Pulmonary vascular resistance: CO PAP-LAP CO • • Oxygen delivery Oxygen consumption Calculated parameters: Oxygen delivery (DO2) and consumption (VO2 ) DO2 [ml/min] = C.O. x [(1,38 x Hb x SaO2) + (0,003 x paO2)] Oxygen content = [(1,38 x Hb x SaO2) + (0,003 x paO2)] VO2 [ml/min] = C.O. x [artrial oxygen content] – [venous oxygen content] Doppler echocardiography • • • • Pulsed ultrasound waves emitted Wavelength of sound is altered as it is reflects off moving red blood cells Change in pitch indicates velocity of red blood cells Estimate of aortic cross-section gives blood flow ie. cardiac output Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) Analysis of vetricular wall movements and volume changes Indications: • Ischemic states, changes in regional ventricular wall • movements and thickness • Measuerents of ejection fraction, • Valve function • Intracardiac air, thrombi, tumor • Assessing efficacy of surgical repairs • Can confirm effectiveness of medications Patient Insertion of TEE probe • • Probe lubricated with water soluble Jell Insertion in Patients esophagus Axis of Interrogation Three Main “Views” 1. Short axis basal view 2. Long axis, (4 chamber) view 3. Transgastric View Short axis basal View Long Axis (4-Chamber) View 2-D echocardiography of the long axis view of the right ventrical (RV): (a) the ultrasonic beam angle through the heart, (b) the cross-sectional diagram of the image and (c) the actual 2-D image. TV = tricuspid valve, AML = anterior mitral leaflet. Adapted from Rafferty, T. 1992. Transesophageal Two -Dimensional Echocardiography http://www.gasnet.org/reference/echomanual/html/2-d_echo..html Transgastric View Assessment of Wall Motion • • • Normal – All wall segments contract equally Hypo kinesis – Global – Segmental A kinesis – Segmental Intra-Cardiac Air • • Possible with open heart surgery Most serious on the left side of the heart – Lungs usually clear right sided air Assessment of the Aorta • • • Rotated from the Basal View Appears Round Look for – Plaque – Dissections Complications / TEE Less severe • • • • Esophagus perforation GI bleeding Esophageal burn injury Temporary vocal cord edema Application of Color Doppler Flow • • • • Mitral Valve Regurgitation (MR) Tricuspid Valve Regurgitation (TR) Aortic Insufficiency (AI) Pulmonary Valve Insufficiency (PI)