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DOI: 10.1055/s-0031-1299506
Prospective Comparison of Noninvasive, Bedside Ultrasound Methods for Assessing Central Venous Pressure
Prospektiver Vergleich von nicht invasiven Ultraschallmethoden zur Bestimmung des zentralen VenendrucksPublication History
19 December 2011
20 March 2012
Publication Date:
01 June 2012 (online)
Abstract
Purpose: To prospectively evaluate the accuracy of noninvasive central venous pressure (CVP) assessment by compression ultrasound of a forearm vein (CUS), inferior vena cava (IVC-C) and internal jugular vein collapsibility (IJV-C) compared to invasive CVP measurement (invCVP) as the gold standard.
Materials and Methods: CUS, IVC-C and IJV-C were performed in a random sequence in 81 consecutive intensive care patients with simultaneous invCVP monitoring. Examiners were blinded to invCVP and previous examinations.
Results: Median invCVP was 12.0 mmHg (range 1 – 23). CUS, IVC-C and IJV-C could be obtained in 89 %, 95 % and 100 % of cases, respectively, within a median time of 188 sec [IQR 125; 270], 133 sec [IQR 100; 211] and 60 sec [IQR 50; 109], respectively. The Spearman correlation coefficient between invCVP and CUS, IVC-C, and IJV-C was 0.485 95 %-CI [0.25; 0.65], –0.186 [–0.42; 0.07], and –0.408 [–0.59; –0.18], respectively. The median absolute difference between CUS and invCVP was 3 mmHg [IQR 2; 6.75]. CVP was categorized as low (< 7 mmHg; collapsibility > 0.6), normal (7 – 12 mmHg; collapsibility 0.6 – 0.2) and high (> 12 mmHg; collapsibility < 0.2) as prespecified. The proportions of identical CVP classifications compared to invCVP were 61.4% 95%-CI [49.3%; 72.4%] with CUS, 48.7% [37.4%; 60%] with IVC-C and 51.3% [40.3%; 62.3%] with IJV-C (p > 0.10 for all pair-wise comparisons).
Conclusion: The overall ability of CUS, IVC-C and IJV-C to assess invCVP was only moderate. CUS seems to be the preferable method if absolute CVP values are needed. IJV-C seems to be the fastest and most easily acquirable method, and thus may be especially valuable in emergency rooms.
Zusammenfassung
Ziel: Die prospektive Untersuchung der Genauigkeit der nicht invasiven Bestimmung des zentralen Venendrucks (ZVD) durch Kompressions-Ultraschall der Unterarmvene (KUS), der Kollapsibilität der Vena cava inferior (IVC-C) und der Kollapsibilität der inneren Jugularvene (IJV-C) im Vergleich zur invasiven ZVD-Messung (invZVD) als Goldstandard.
Material und Methoden: KUS, IVC-C und IJV-C wurden in zufälliger Reihenfolge bei 81 aufeinanderfolgenden Intensivpatienten mit gleichzeitiger Messung des invZVD durchgeführt. Die Untersucher waren bezüglich invZVD und allfälligen Voruntersuchungen verblindet.
Ergebnisse: Der mediane invZVD betrug 12,0 mmHg (Bereich 1 – 23). Der KUS war in 89 %, IVC-C in 95 % und IJV-C in 100 % der Fälle bestimmbar bei einer mittleren Untersuchungszeit von 188 s [IQR 125; 270] für KUS, 133 s [IQR 100; 211] für IVC-C und 60 s [IQR 50; 109] für IJV-C. Der Spearmans Rankkorrelationskoeffizient zwischen invZVD und KUS lag bei 0,485 [95 %-CI 0,25; 0,65], zwischen invZVD und IVC-C bei –0,186 [–0,42; 0,07] und zwischen invZVD und IJV-C bei 0,408 [–0,59; –0,18]. Die mediane absolute Differenz zwischen KUS und invZVD betrug 3 mmHg [IQR 2; 6,75]. Der ZVD wurde, wie vorher festgelegt, als niedrig (< 7 mmHg; Kollapsibilität > 0.6), normal (7 – 12 mmHg; Kollapsibilität 0,6 – 0,2) und hoch (> 12 mmHg; Kollapsibilität < 0.2) kategorisiert. Im Vergleich zum invZVD wurde der ZVD mittels KUS in 61.4% 95%-KI [49.3%; 72.4%] identisch kategorisiert (IVC-C 48.7% [37.4%; 60%]; IJV-C 51.3% [40.3%; 62.3%]; p > 0.10 für alle paarweisen Vergleiche).
Schlussfolgerung: Die Genauigkeit von KUS, IVC-C und IJV-C in der Bestimmung des invZVD ist nur mittelmäßig. Benötigt man absolute ZVD-Werte, so scheint KUS die Methode der Wahl zu sein. Die schnellste und am einfachsten durchführbare Methode ist die Bestimmung der IJV-C, die deshalb insbesondere auf Notfallstationen von Nutzen sein kann.
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