Perioperative goal directed fluid therapy may reduce complication rate after surgery. Minimal invasive cardiac output monitoring is a key method to guide fluid therapy. More operations are being performed by keyhole surgery (laparoscopy). For laparoscopy, the abdomen is filled with carbon dioxide. Increased pressure in the abdomen may influence minimal cardiac output monitoring, therefore minimal cardiac output monitoring is not recommended during laparoscopy. This study aims to validate minimal cardiac output monitoring during laparoscopy and therefore facilitate for goal directed fluid therapy.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
5
Haukeland University Hospital
Bergen, Norway
Change of stroke volume variation and pulse pressure variation during pneumoperitoneum
Change in PPV/SVV(LiDCO), PPV(Philips) and SVV/CO(TEE) in percent before and after pneumoperitoneum.
Time frame: peroperative
Difference in measurements from different methods of minimal cardiac output monitoring.
Time frame: peroperative
Effect of fluid bolus under pneumoperitoneum (responder vs. non-responder)
Time frame: peroperative
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