Ac. Perrino et al., TRANSTRACHEAL DOPPLER CARDIAC-OUTPUT MONITORING - COMPARISON TO THERMODILUTION DURING NONCARDIAC SURGERY, Anesthesia and analgesia, 78(6), 1994, pp. 1060-1066
The validity of transtracheal Doppler (TTD) cardiac output (CO) monito
ring during noncardiac surgery has not been established. A prospective
evaluation was undertaken in 30 patients undergoing noncardiac surger
y to assess the agreement between TTD and thermodilution measurements
of CO. Linear regression, Bland-Altman analysis, and receiver operator
characteristic (ROC) techniques were employed to evaluate the accurac
y, reliability, and trending capability of TTD monitoring. A total of
250 simultaneous TTD and thermodilution CO values were compared. TTD a
nd thermodilution CO measurements were highly correlated (P < 0.005, r
= 0.84) and Bland-Altman analysis revealed a small systematic underes
timation of thermodilution CO (mean bias = -0.25 L/min) with a so of t
he bias of 0.88 L/min and a mean percent error of 12.4%. TTD performed
particularly well in patients in whom the Doppler signal was stable t
hroughout surgery and required minimal manipulation. In these patients
, linear regression yielded the relation TTD CO = 0.96 thermodilution
CO + 0.15 with a correlation coefficient r = 0.92. Mean percent error
was 10.0% with a mean bias of -0.02 L/min and a SD of the bias of 0.58
L/min. The ability of TTD to track directional changes in thermodilut
ion CO was evaluated by regression analysis and a ROC plot. Changes in
TTD CO were highly correlated to changes in thermodilution CO (r = 0.
81). ROC plots showed that changes in TTD CO reliably identified large
(greater than 15%) changes in thermodilution CO with a sensitivity of
92% and a specificity of 87%. Clinical experience with the TTD device
is needed to obtain accurate measurements. A total of 10 cases was re
quired for our research team to obtain consistent performance with TTD
monitoring. Our results demonstrate that TTD can accurately track dir
ectional changes in thermodilution CO and, particularly in those patie
nts in whom a stable signal is obtained, provides accurate estimates o
f thermodilution CO. Limitations of the TTD technique were a failure r
ate of 13% and the requirement of repeated probe manipulation in 27% o
f patients. Continuous CO monitoring during noncardiac surgery can be
achieved with TTD, but shortcomings in the current technology, includi
ng a difficult user interface, warrant trained personnel for operation
.