Accuracy of volume measurement by conductance catheter in isolated, ejecting canine hearts.
Author(s) -
Daniel Burkhoff,
Enno T. van der Velde,
David A. Kass,
Jan Baan,
W L Maughan,
K Sagawa
Publication year - 1985
Publication title -
circulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.795
H-Index - 607
eISSN - 1524-4539
pISSN - 0009-7322
DOI - 10.1161/01.cir.72.2.440
Subject(s) - medicine , conductance , ventricular volume , balloon , volume (thermodynamics) , cardiology , biomedical engineering , catheter , nuclear medicine , ejection fraction , surgery , mathematics , heart failure , physics , combinatorics , quantum mechanics
We evaluated the accuracy of the recently reported technique of estimating intraventricular volume by measurement of intracavitary electrical conductance in six isolated, ejecting, canine left ventricles. Left ventricular volumes were measured directly by a previously validated servosystem that employed an electroconductive balloon placed in the left ventricular cavity. The volume measured continuously by the balloon method (Vbal) was compared with that estimated by the conductance method (Vcath). For this test, the hearts were made to eject and fill physiologically by the use of a previously described computer-simulated arterial loading system. Complex ejection and filling patterns were created by stimulating the atrium mechanically, which resulted in irregular arrhythmatic contractions spanning a wide range of volumes. We found that there was a highly linear relationship (r2 = .982 +/- .014) between Vbal and Vcath: Vcath = 0.82 (+/- .05) Vbal + 26.7 (+/- 11.8) ml. Despite the wide variation in the offset term of this relationship among the different hearts, the offset within a given heart was predicted within 3.5 ml by a previously detailed "dilution" method that is applicable to the heart in situ within a closed thorax. Thus, since the offset term is obtainable in situ, the conductance method provides a signal that is proportional to the actual volume. To determine whether right ventricular volume influenced the accuracy of left ventricular measurement, we compared the relationship between Vcath and Vbal obtained with right ventricular volumes of 0 and 30 ml. Increasing the right ventricular volume shifted the relationship upward by less than 3 ml in the working range.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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