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Measurement of Cardiac Output and Blood Volume During Hemodialysis with Fluorescent Dye Dilution Technique
Author(s) -
Jean-Michel I. Maarek,
Eduardo H. Rubinstein,
Yi Guo,
Christianne J. Lane,
Vito M. Campese,
Daniel P. Holschneider
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
annals of biomedical engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1573-9686
pISSN - 0090-6964
DOI - 10.1007/s10439-016-1711-6
Subject(s) - hemodialysis , medicine , blood volume , stroke volume , cardiac output , cardiology , cardiac index , hemodynamics , indocyanine green , bolus (digestion) , intravascular volume status , anesthesia , blood pressure , surgery , heart rate
Intradialytic hypotensive events (IDH) accompanied by deleterious decreases of the cardiac output complicate up to 25% of hemodialysis treatments. Monitoring options available to track hemodynamic changes during hemodialysis have been found ineffective to anticipate the occurrence of IDH. We have assembled opto-electronic instrumentation that uses the fluorescence of a small bolus of indocyanine green dye injected in the hemodialysis circuit to estimate cardiac output and blood volume based on indicator dilution principles in patients receiving hemodialysis. The instrument and technique were tested in 24 adult end-stage renal failure subjects during 64 hemodialysis sessions. A single calibration factor could be used across subjects and across time. Intra-subject variability of the measurements over time was <10%. Stroke volume index (SVI) (mean ± SEM = 34 ± 1 vs. 39 ± 2 mL m -2 ) and central blood volume (CBV) index (783 ± 36 vs. 881 ± 33 mL m -2 ) were lower at the beginning of the sessions in which IDH eventually occurred. Cardiac index, SVI, and CBV index decreased with hemodialysis in all treatment sessions but the decrease was more intense in the IDH sessions. We conclude that hemodynamic monitoring can be implemented in patients receiving hemodialysis with minimal disruption of the treatment and could help understand intradialytic hypotension.

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