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Article
Impact of Obesity on Noninvasive Cardiac Hemodynamic Measurement by Electrical Cardiometry in Adults With Aortic Stenosis.
Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia
  • Patrick Teefy, Western University
  • Rodrigo Bagur, Western University
  • Chantal Phillips, Western University
  • Kourosh Karimi-Shahri, Western University
  • John Teefy, Western University
  • Raksha Sule, Western University
  • Adam A Dempsey, Western University
  • Kambiz Norozi, Western University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2018
URL with Digital Object Identifier
https://doi.org/10.1053/j.jvca.2018.04.040
Disciplines
Abstract

Objectives

There are substantial potential benefits to noninvasive cardiac monitoring methods, such as electrical cardiometry (EC), over more invasive methods, including significantly reduced risk of complications, lower up-front and operational costs, ease of use, and continuous monitoring. To take advantage of these technologies, clinical equivalence to currently established methods must be determined. The authors sought to determine if the noninvasive measurement of cardiac index (CI) by EC was clinically equivalent to thermodilution (TD) in adult patients with aortic stenosis (AS).

Design

This is a cross-sectional study comparing measurement devices in a single patient group.

Setting

Single-center, university teaching hospital.

Participants

The study included 52 adult patients with aortic stenosis undergoing right heart catheterization.

Interventions

Cardiac output (CO) was measured concurrently using EC with an ICON device and TD in 52 participants with AS. CI values were to determine the accuracy and precision of EC in reference to TD. Percentage error (PE) was used to assess their clinical equivalence. The participants were divided further into groups (normal and overweight/obese) based on body mass index and the analysis was repeated.

Measurements and Main Results

CO measurement made by EC in adult patients with obesity or overweight was reduced significantly relative to TD. This was not observed in normal-weight adult AS patients. EC provided clinically equivalent measurements to TD for measuring CI in normal-weight adult AS patients (PE = 25.0%), but not for those adult AS patients with overweight or obesity (PE = 42.3%).

Conclusion

Overall, the ICON device produced lower CO and index measurements relative to TD in adult patients with AS. Overweight and obesity also significantly affected the relative precision and accuracy of the ICON electrical cardiometric device to measure CI in these patients.

Notes

Article originally published at Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia

https://doi.org/10.1053/j.jvca.2018.04.040

Citation Information
Patrick Teefy, Rodrigo Bagur, Chantal Phillips, Kourosh Karimi-Shahri, et al.. "Impact of Obesity on Noninvasive Cardiac Hemodynamic Measurement by Electrical Cardiometry in Adults With Aortic Stenosis." Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia Vol. 32 Iss. 6 (2018) p. 2505 - 2511
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/kambiz-norozi/4/