Pulmonary artery occlusion pressure and central venous pressure fail to predict ventricular filling volume, cardiac performance, or the response to volume infusion in normal subjects
Rush University Medical Center · Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center · +1 more institution
Abstract
Pulmonary artery occlusion pressure and central venous pressure have been considered to be reliable measures of left and right ventricular preload in patients requiring invasive hemodynamic monitoring. Studies in recent years have questioned the correlation between these estimates of ventricular filling pressures and ventricular end-diastolic volumes/cardiac performance variables in specific patient groups, but clinicians have continued to consider the relationship valid in the broader context. The objective of this study was to assess the relationship between pressure estimates of ventricular preload (pulmonary artery occlusion pressure, central venous pressure) and end-diastolic ventricular volumes/cardiac performance in healthy volunteers.
Prospective, nonrandomized, nonblinded interventional study.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 32.32
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 50
Authors
11- AKAnand KumarCorresponding
Rush University Medical Center, Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center, University of Manitoba
- RARamon Añel
University of Manitoba, Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center, Rush University Medical Center
- EBEugene Bunnell
Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center, Rush University Medical Center, University of Manitoba
- KHKalim Habet
University of Manitoba, Rush University Medical Center, Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center
- SZSergio Zanotti
University of Manitoba, Rush University Medical Center, Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Preload
- Cardiology
- Stroke volume
- Central venous pressure
- Cardiac output
- Internal medicine
- Cardiac index
- Good health and well-being