In extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), blood is drawn out of the body via tubes, oxygenated in an artificial lung; and then pumped back into the blood vessels. This allows the supply of oxygen-rich blood to the organs (brain, heart, lungs, kidneys, liver, intestines, etc.) to be maintained. Continuous monitoring of cardiac function and circulatory status (blood pressure, blood flow to organs) is very important in intensive care medicine in order to control the administration of circulation-supporting medication and infusions. Various devices are routinely used for this task. However, in the specific situation of ECMO treatment, the measurements of these devices could be affected due to the artificial circulation; outside the body. The purpose of this study is therefore to test the accuracy of different methods of circulation monitoring during ECMO treatment.
Hemodynamic monitoring and tests for fluid responsiveness are cornerstones of intensive care medicine. Generally, hemodynamic measurements can be obtained, for instance, with the following methods: pulmonary artery catheter, transthoracic echocardiography (TTE), esophageal doppler, transpulmonary thermodilution, pulse contour analysis and bioreactance, amongst others. Maneuvers for assessing volume responsiveness include passive leg raising (PLR), respiratory pulse pressure variation (PPV), stroke volume variation (SVV), inferior vena cava ultrasound (IVC), and end-inspiratory or end-expiratory occlusion tests. While these commonly used methods of hemodynamic assessment have been validated in various clinical scenarios, data are lacking in the setting of venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV ECMO). VV ECMO is commonly used for respiratory support in patients with severe acute respiratory failure. Blood is usually drained from a femoral vein, pumped through an oxygenator, where it is oxygenated and decarboxylated, and thereafter reinfused into the patient via a central venous, most commonly jugular, return cannula. Theoretically, the artificial circulation with its blood drainage and return flows may interfere with common hemodynamic monitoring techniques and lead to erroneous measurements. The aim of this study therefore is to validate select techniques of hemodynamic monitoring and assessment of fluid responsiveness in patients on VV ECMO. In the context of this study, the performance of different hemodynamic monitoring tools and techniques for predicting fluid responsiveness will be compared.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
30
Transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) is used for intermittent non-invasive stroke volume (SV) measurements. It is calculated by multiplication of left ventricular out flow tract (LVOT) and LVOT velocity time integral (VTI), obtained in a parasternal long axis view and apical five chamber view, respectively.
Pulse Contour Analysis allows an automated and continuous measurement of stroke volume (SV). Its underlying principle is that the integral of the systolic arterial pressure curve directly correlates with stroke volume.
Transpulmonary thermodilution (TPTD) involves the administration of a cold saline bolus into a central venous catheter. A special thermistor catheter placed in the femoral or brachial artery detects the successive changes in blood temperature. The resulting heat dissipation curve is analyzed to estimate stroke volume, cardiac output and other hemodynamic variables such as intrathoracic thermal volume (ITTV), pulmonary thermal volume (PTV), global end-diastolic volume (GEDV), intrathoracic blood volume (ITBV) and extravascular lung water (EVLW). Intermittent TPTD-derived cardiac output measurements (typically performed 1-3x/d) are used to calibrate pulse contour analysis.
In esophageal Doppler, a thin ultrasound probe, coated with aqueous ultrasound gel, is orally or nasally inserted into the esophagus and orientated towards the aorta. By emission and detection of continuous wave Doppler signals, real time spectral waveforms of red blood cell velocity in the aorta are obtained, from which cardiac indices can be derived.
Bioreactance is a noninvasive hemodynamic monitoring technique, in which four double electrode sensors are placed on the skin of the chest. A high frequency sine wave is transmitted across the thorax. Pulsatile flow in the aorta causes phase shifts and amplitude changes of this signal, which are measured across the different electrodes and used to compute cardiac output.
Passive Leg Raising (PLR) is a maneuver that mimics a fluid challenge by shifting about 300 ml of venous blood from the lower body to the heart. Thereby, it can help to predict fluid responsiveness without actual fluid infusion. To start with, the patient is placed in a semi-recumbent position. Then, the bed is adjusted so that the patient's torso is moved to a horizontal position and the lower limbs are raised to an angle of 45°. Hemodynamic effects occur and can be measured within one minute.
Inferior Vena Cava (IVC) Ultrasound has become a popular technique for assessing volume status. IVC diameter is measured in a subcostal long-axis IVC view 1-2 cm from the junction with the right atrium. The magnitude of distensibility during mechanical ventilation cycles or collapsibility during spontaneous breathing has been proposed to correlate with fluid responsiveness
In preload-dependent patients, mechanical ventilation induces periodic changes in cardiac output. Standardized maneuvers of end-expiratory or end-inspiratory interruption over 15 seconds may increase or decrease stroke volume, respectively, which is a valid predictor of fluid responsiveness
To verify fluid responsiveness, 500 ml of balanced crystalloids will be infused over a time of 15-20 min (25-33.33 ml/min) after completion of passive leg raising and restoration of baseline patient positioning.
Medical University of Vienna
Vienna, Austria
RECRUITINGAgreement of receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves for predicting fluid responsiveness using the passive leg-raising test between different cardiac output measurement techniques (echocardiography, pulse contour analysis, thermodilution).
Cardiac Output (L/min) will be measured using transthoracic echocardiography, uncalibrated pulse contour analysis, and thermodilution before, during, and after a passive leg-raising test, as well as after administration of a fluid bolus of 500 ml balanced crystalloids over 15-20 min. A cardiac output increase of \> 15% will be the cut-off for defining fluid responsiveness. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves will be generated for each cardiac output measurement technique and compared using the Hanley-McNeil method. The agreement between the ROC curves (Hanley-McNeil test statistic) will serve as the primary outcome.
Time frame: Repeated measurements throughout ECMO therapy (duration ranging from a few days to up to 24 weeks) and within up to 7 days after ECMO removal. Separate analysis for controlled and assisted mechanical ventilation.
Diagnostic performance (receiver operating characteristic (ROC) area under the curve) of an inspiratory and expiratory occlusion test in conjunction with pulse contour analysis for the prediction of fluid responsiveness during ECMO.
Cardiac Output (L/min) will be measured using calibrated and uncalibrated pulse contour analysis before, during, and after an end-inspiratory and end-expiratory occlusion test (15 s), as well as after administration of a fluid bolus of 500 ml balanced crystalloids over 15-20 min. A cardiac output increase of \> 15% after fluid infusion will be the cut-off for defining fluid responsiveness. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves will be generated to assess the performance of the end-inspiratory and end-expiratory occlusion tests and the best threshold for predicting fluid responsiveness during ECMO.
Time frame: Repeated measurements throughout ECMO therapy (duration ranging from a few days to several weeks) and within a few days after ECMO removal. Separate analysis for controlled and assisted mechanical ventilation.
Changes of cardiac output (L/min) over the course of ECMO therapy
Cardiac output (L/min) will be measured at different time points (at least at the beginning of ECMO therapy and after ECMO removal) throughout ECMO therapy using transthoracic echocardiography, uncalibrated pulse contour analysis, and thermodilution.
Time frame: Repeated measurements throughout ECMO therapy (duration ranging from a few days to up to 24 weeks) and within up to 7 days after ECMO removal.
Changes of tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE, mm) over the course of ECMO therapy
Tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE, mm) will be measured at different time points (at least at the beginning of ECMO therapy and after ECMO removal) throughout ECMO therapy using transthoracic echocardiography.
Time frame: Repeated measurements throughout ECMO therapy (duration ranging from a few days to up to 24 weeks) and within up to 7 days after ECMO removal.
Changes of tissue doppler imaging tricuspid annular velocity (cm/s) over the course of ECMO therapy
Tissue doppler imaging tricuspid annular velocity (cm/s) will be measured at different time points (at least at the beginning of ECMO therapy and after ECMO removal) throughout ECMO therapy using transthoracic echocardiography.
Time frame: Repeated measurements throughout ECMO therapy (duration ranging from a few days to up to 24 weeks) and within up to 7 days after ECMO removal.
Changes in cardiac output (L/min, measured by transthoracic echocardiography, uncalibrated pulse contour analysis, thermodilution) at different ECMO blood flow rates
During the ECMO weaning trial (zero gas flow), cardiac output (L/min) will be measured repeatedly at different ECMO blood flow rates (1 l/min, 3 l/min, 5 l/min or maximum flow with venous pressure \<-100 mmHg) using transthoracic echocardiography, uncalibrated pulse contour analysis, and thermodilution.
Time frame: A few days (up to 5 days) before the expected ECMO removal: during ECMO weaning trial, i.e. zero ECMO gas flow
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