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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 93, 658-664, Copyright © 1987 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
BA Keagy, BR Wilcox, CL Lucas, HS Hsiao, GW Henry, M Baudino and G Bornzin
A new method has been developed that permits constant postoperative
monitoring of mean and phasic cardiac output in patients after correction
of congenital heart defects. A miniature ultrasound probe is attached to
the adventitia of the ascending aorta at the conclusion of the operative
procedure. This is connected to the monitoring equipment by means of
polyurethane-covered wires that exit the chest wall through a small stab
wound. The probe can easily be removed by gentle traction when the
patient's condition is stable. The technique was developed, validated, and
refined in extensive animal studies, and this report describes the first
series of 20 consecutive human implants, performed between August 1984 and
September 1985, in which the absolute cardiac output determination obtained
with the ultrasound probe at the time of its application was correlated
with cardiac output as measured with a standard electromagnetic flow probe.
Fourteen male and six female patients (mean age 5.5 years) were studied.
Operations performed included eight atrial septal defect repairs, four
procedures for tetralogy of Fallot, three ventricular septal defect
repairs, three stenotic valve corrections, and two Senning operations. One
operative death occurred, but no complications were related to probe
application or removal. The average cardiac output in the 20 patients as
measured with the ultrasound probe was 2.2 +/- 1.1 L/min (range 0.67 to
5.27 L/min). This is nearly identical to the results noted with the
electromagnetic flow probe, where the mean cardiac output was 2.3 +/- 1.2
L/min (range 0.7 to 6 L/min). Regression analysis revealed a high linear
correlation (r = 0.9) between the two techniques. A monitor can display the
cardiac output trend with 1 minute updates, which greatly enhance
management of intravenous drug therapy and volume administration. In
conclusion, this new extraluminal removable probe allows virtually
continuous monitoring of the postoperative cardiac output after correction
of congenital heart defects and should become a standard technique in the
postoperative care of these patients.
ARTICLES
Constant postoperative monitoring of cardiac output after correction of congenital heart defects
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