Non-invasive assessment of fluid responsiveness using CNAP™ technology is interchangeable with invasive arterial measurements during major open abdominal.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Paravertebral block in paediatric abdominal surgery'a systematic review and meta- analysis of randomized trials  E.A. Page, K.L. Taylor  British Journal.
Advertisements

Change in end-tidal carbon dioxide outperforms other surrogates for change in cardiac output during fluid challenge  K Lakhal, M.A. Nay, T Kamel, B Lortat-Jacob,
Prediction of fluid responsiveness by a continuous non-invasive assessment of arterial pressure in critically ill patients: comparison with four other.
Evaluation of the pulse pressure variation index as a predictor of fluid responsiveness during orthotopic liver transplantation  G. Gouvêa, R. Diaz, L.
Detection of hypotension during Caesarean section with continuous non-invasive arterial pressure device or intermittent oscillometric arterial pressure.
Non-opioid analgesics in adults after major surgery: systematic review with network meta-analysis of randomized trials  V Martinez, H Beloeil, E Marret,
Precision and accuracy of a new device (CNAP™) for continuous non-invasive arterial pressure monitoring: assessment during general anaesthesia  C Jeleazcov,
Comparison of positive end-expiratory pressure–induced increase in central venous pressure and passive leg raising to predict fluid responsiveness in.
W. Habre, T. Asztalos, P.D. Sly, F. Petak 
Cost-effectiveness of a systematic e-assessed follow-up of postoperative recovery after day surgery: a multicentre randomized trial  K. Dahlberg, A. Philipsson,
Non-invasive continuous arterial pressure and cardiac index monitoring with Nexfin after cardiac surgery  M.O. Fischer, R. Avram, I. Cârjaliu, M. Massetti,
Predicting arterial blood gas and lactate from central venous blood analysis in critically ill patients: a multicentre, prospective, diagnostic accuracy.
Uncalibrated pulse contour-derived stroke volume variation predicts fluid responsiveness in mechanically ventilated patients undergoing liver transplantation 
T. Ledowski, J. Burke, J. Hruby  British Journal of Anaesthesia 
E. Weiss, E. Gayat, V. Dumans-Nizard, M. Le Guen, M. Fischler 
Comparison of oxygen uptake during arm or leg cardiopulmonary exercise testing in vascular surgery patients and control subjects  L. Loughney, M. West,
Preoperative platelet function predicts perioperative bleeding complications in ticagrelor- treated cardiac surgery patients: a prospective observational.
Global patient outcomes after elective surgery: prospective cohort study in 27 low-, middle- and high-income countries    British Journal of Anaesthesia 
Validation of cardiac output monitoring based on uncalibrated pulse contour analysis vs transpulmonary thermodilution during off-pump coronary artery.
The trend interchangeability method
Stroke volume variation and indexed stroke volume measured using bioreactance predict fluid responsiveness in postoperative children†  E. Vergnaud, C.
Assessing fluid responsiveness during open chest conditions
Accuracy of non-invasive measurement of haemoglobin concentration by pulse co- oximetry during steady-state and dynamic conditions in liver surgery  J.J.
Does the plethysmographic variability index predict fluid responsiveness in mechanically ventilated children? A meta-analysis  F.-P. Desgranges, J.-N.
Analgesia nociception index for the assessment of pain in critically ill patients: a diagnostic accuracy study  G. Chanques, T. Tarri, A. Ride, A. Prades,
Continuous non-invasive cardiac output monitoring during exercise: validation of electrical cardiometry with Fick and thermodilution methods  Y.H. Liu,
Correction to the paper ‘Delivery of tidal volume from four anaesthesia ventilators during volume-controlled ventilation: a bench study’  M Hallbäck,
Safety culture and the 5 steps to safer surgery: an intervention study
Stroke volume optimization in elective bowel surgery: a comparison between pulse power wave analysis (LiDCOrapid) and oesophageal Doppler (CardioQ)  J.
Validation of pulse pressure variation and corrected flow time as predictors of fluid responsiveness in patients in the prone position  S.-Y. Yang, J.-K.
R Kruisselbrink, C Arzola, T Jackson, A Okrainec, V Chan, A Perlas 
Predicting fluid responsiveness in mechanically ventilated children under general anaesthesia using dynamic parameters and transthoracic echocardiography 
Predicting cardiac output responses to passive leg raising by a PEEP-induced increase in central venous pressure, in cardiac surgery patients  B.F. Geerts,
Predicting fluid responsiveness in patients undergoing cardiac surgery: functional haemodynamic parameters including the Respiratory Systolic Variation.
Troponin elevations after non-cardiac, non-vascular surgery are predictive of major adverse cardiac events and mortality: a systematic review and meta-analysis 
Non-invasive continuous arterial pressure measurement based on radial artery tonometry in the intensive care unit: a method comparison study using the.
Bioreactance is not reliable for estimating cardiac output and the effects of passive leg raising in critically ill patients  E. Kupersztych-Hagege, J.-L.
S.G. Sakka, K. Reinhart, A. Meier-Hellmann 
E. Saraceni, S. Rossi, P. Persona, M. Dan, S. Rizzi, M. Meroni, C. Ori 
Delta down compared with delta pulse pressure as an indicator of volaemia during intracranial surgery  E. Deflandre, V. Bonhomme, P. Hans  British Journal.
Risk prediction models for delirium in the intensive care unit after cardiac surgery: a systematic review and independent external validation  A Lee,
Ability of stroke volume variation measured by oesophageal Doppler monitoring to predict fluid responsiveness during surgery  P.-G. Guinot, B. de Broca,
Predictive value of pulse pressure variation for fluid responsiveness in septic patients using lung-protective ventilation strategies  F.G.R. Freitas,
Acute traumatic coagulopathy: pathophysiology and resuscitation
Respiratory systolic variation test in acutely impaired cardiac function for predicting volume responsiveness in pigs  V. Eichhorn, C. Trepte, H.P. Richter,
Thoracic paravertebral blocks in abdominal surgery – a systematic review of randomized controlled trials  K. El-Boghdadly, C. Madjdpour, K.J. Chin  British.
Non-invasive continuous arterial pressure monitoring with Nexfin® does not sufficiently replace invasive measurements in critically ill patients  A Hohn,
Anticoagulation monitoring during vascular surgery: accuracy of the Hemochron® low range activated clotting time (ACT-LR)  B. Tremey, B. Szekely, S. Schlumberger,
Validity of the 6 min walk test in prediction of the anaerobic threshold before major non- cardiac surgery  R.C.F. Sinclair, A.M. Batterham, S. Davies,
Intraoperative use of transoesophageal Doppler to predict response to volume expansion in infants and neonates  O. Raux, A. Spencer, R. Fesseau, G. Mercier,
T. Saito, S.T.H. Chew, W.L. Liu, K.K. Thinn, T. Asai, L.K. Ti 
Immediate postoperative extubation in bilateral lung transplantation: predictive factors and outcomes†   M.-L. Felten, J.-D. Moyer, J.-F. Dreyfus, J.-Y.
Oesophageal Doppler and calibrated pulse contour analysis are not interchangeable within a goal-directed haemodynamic algorithm in major gynaecological.
Assessment of pulse transit time to indicate cardiovascular changes during obstetric spinal anaesthesia†  G Sharwood-Smith, J Bruce, G Drummond  British.
Influence of the site of measurement on the ability of plethysmographic variability index to predict fluid responsiveness  F.-P. Desgranges, O. Desebbe,
Positive end-expiratory pressure-induced increase in central venous pressure to predict fluid responsiveness: don’t forget the peripheral venous circulation! 
H. Solus-Biguenet, M. Fleyfel, B. Tavernier, E. Kipnis, J. Onimus, E
Automated pulse pressure and stroke volume variations from radial artery: evaluation during major abdominal surgery  A. Derichard, E. Robin, B. Tavernier,
Haemodynamic effects of oxytocin given as i. v
Sufentanil administration guided by surgical pleth index vs standard practice during sevoflurane anaesthesia: a randomized controlled pilot study†  M.
H-indices in a university department of anaesthesia: an evaluation of their feasibility, reliability, and validity as an assessment of academic performance 
Ability of esCCO to track changes in cardiac output†
Predictor of fluid responsiveness in the ‘grey zone’: augmented pulse pressure variation through a temporary increase in tidal volume  J.J. Min, N.-S.
Non-invasive measurement of pulse pressure variation and systolic pressure variation using a finger cuff corresponds with intra-arterial measurement 
Is applanation tonometry a reliable method for monitoring blood pressure in morbidly obese patients undergoing bariatric surgery?  G Greiwe, P.A. Tariparast,
Cricoid pressure force retention analysis using a simulator
Comparison of stroke volume (SV) and stroke volume respiratory variation (SVV) measured by the axillary artery pulse-contour method and by aortic Doppler.
Evaluation of artery and vein differentiation methods using ultrasound imaging among medical students  N. Komasawa, R. Mihara, K. Hattori, T. Minami 
J. Renner, O. Broch, P. Duetschke, J. Scheewe, J. Höcker, M. Moseby, O
R.L. Johnson, E.K. Cannon, C.B. Mantilla, D.A. Cook 
Presentation transcript:

Non-invasive assessment of fluid responsiveness using CNAP™ technology is interchangeable with invasive arterial measurements during major open abdominal surgery  J Renner, M Gruenewald, M Hill, L Mangelsdorff, H Aselmann, C Ilies, M Steinfath, O Broch  British Journal of Anaesthesia  Volume 118, Issue 1, Pages 58-67 (January 2017) DOI: 10.1093/bja/aew399 Copyright © 2017 The Author(s) Terms and Conditions

Fig 1 Flow of participants. PLR, passive leg raising. Responders, increase in stroke volume index measured by transpulmonary thermodilution ≥15%. British Journal of Anaesthesia 2017 118, 58-67DOI: (10.1093/bja/aew399) Copyright © 2017 The Author(s) Terms and Conditions

Fig 2 Correlation between pulse pressure variation (PPV) before volume-loading manoeuvre and percentage change in stroke volume index measured by transpulmonary thermodilution (ΔSVITPTD; n=85). The grey rectangle indicates the upper and lower limits of the uncertainty zone, the grey zone. British Journal of Anaesthesia 2017 118, 58-67DOI: (10.1093/bja/aew399) Copyright © 2017 The Author(s) Terms and Conditions

Fig 3 Box plots and individual values of pulse pressure variation obtained with the PiCCO system (PPVPiCCO) and with the CNAP device (PPVCNAP) in responders (Rs) and non-responders (NRs) before volume-loading manoeuvres (passive leg raising and first fluid bolus of crystalloid). The dashed line indicates the calculated threshold value of PPVCNAP (9%) and of PPVPiCCO (13%). The ‘grey zone’ is indicated with the grey rectangle (PPVCNAP, 7–10%; PPVPiCCO, 10–13%). British Journal of Anaesthesia 2017 118, 58-67DOI: (10.1093/bja/aew399) Copyright © 2017 The Author(s) Terms and Conditions

Fig 4 Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves showing the ability of PPVPiCCO and PPVCNAP to predict fluid responsiveness to different volume-loading manoeuvres. (A) Passive leg raising. (B) Fluid resuscitation in the operating room. (C) Summary of both volume challenges. British Journal of Anaesthesia 2017 118, 58-67DOI: (10.1093/bja/aew399) Copyright © 2017 The Author(s) Terms and Conditions