T. Krantz et al., CENTRAL CARDIOVASCULAR AND OXYGEN VARIABLES DURING HEMORRHAGE IN THE PIG, Acta anaesthesiologica Scandinavica, 41(6), 1997, pp. 719-724
Background: We evaluated the ability of the standards issued by the Da
nish Society of Anaesthesiologists to reflect a blood loss. Methods: I
n 9 pigs bled (0-24 ml kg(-1)) and retransfused (to 28 ml kg(-1)) duri
ng halothane anaesthesia, central cardiovascular, thoracic electrical
impedance (TI), oxygen, acid-base and temperature variables were recor
ded. Results: With the recommendation for minor surgery (mean arterial
pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR)), the correlation to the blood los
s was 0.74 (P< 0.001) and with that for major surgery (MAP, HR, centra
l venous pressure (CVP) and rectal temperature (Temp(r))) it was 0.79
(P< 0.001). With the recommendation for extensive surgery (MAP, HR, CV
P, pulmonary artery catheter variables and the central-peripheral temp
erature difference (Delta Temp,(r-t))), the correlation was 0.84 (P< 0
.001). Non-invasive monitoring (MAP, HR, Delta Temp(r-t), TI and near-
infrared spectroscopy of the brain (SinvosO2)) was only slightly bette
r than basal monitoring (r=0.76, P< 0.001). However, adding arterial b
ase excess (BE), TI and peripheral temperature (Temp(t)) to the recomm
endation for major surgery resulted in a correlation of 0.87 (P< 0.001
), while adding BE and TI to the recommendation for extensive surgery
raised correlation to only 0.88 (P<0.001). Conclusion: When the recomm
endations were followed the correlation to the blood loss ranged from
0.74-0.84. However, with the recording of MAP, HR, CVP, Delta Temp(r-t
), BE and TI a correlation of 0.87 was achieved, indicating that a pul
monary artery catheter may not be in need for patients undergoing surg
ical procedures with expected haemorrhage.