Inferior Vena Caval Measures Do Not Correlate with Carotid Artery Corrected Flow Time Change Measured Using a Wireless Doppler Patch in Healthy Volunteers

Author:

Kenny Jon-Emile S.12ORCID,Prager Ross3,Rola Philippe4,McCulloch Garett2ORCID,Atwi Sarah2,Munding Chelsea E.2,Eibl Joseph K.125,Haycock Korbin6

Affiliation:

1. Health Sciences North Research Institute, Sudbury, ON P3E 2H3, Canada

2. Flosonics Medical, Toronto, ON P3E 2H2, Canada

3. Division of Critical Care Medicine, Western University, London, ON N6A 3K7, Canada

4. Intensive Care Unit, Santa Cabrini Hospital, Montreal, QC H1T 1P7, Canada

5. Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Sudbury, ON P3E 2C6, Canada

6. Department of Emergency Medicine, Riverside University Health System Medical Center, Moreno Valley, CA 92555, USA

Abstract

(1) Background: The inspiratory collapse of the inferior vena cava (IVC), a non-invasive surrogate for right atrial pressure, is often used to predict whether a patient will augment stroke volume (SV) in response to a preload challenge. There is a correlation between changing stroke volume (SV∆) and corrected flow time of the common carotid artery (ccFT∆). (2) Objective: We studied the relationship between IVC collapsibility and ccFT∆ in healthy volunteers during preload challenges. (3) Methods: A prospective, observational, pilot study in euvolemic, healthy volunteers with no cardiovascular history was undertaken in a local physiology lab. Using a tilt-table, we studied two degrees of preload augmentation from (a) supine to 30-degrees head-down and (b) fully-upright to 30-degrees head down. In the supine position, % of IVC collapse with respiration, sphericity index and portal vein pulsatility was calculated. The common carotid artery Doppler pulse was continuously captured using a wireless, wearable ultrasound system. (4) Results: Fourteen subjects were included. IVC % collapse with respiration ranged between 10% and 84% across all subjects. Preload responsiveness was defined as an increase in ccFT∆ of at least 7 milliseconds. A total of 79% (supine baseline) and 100% (head-up baseline) of subjects were preload-responsive. No supine venous measures (including IVC % collapse) were significantly related to ccFT∆. (5) Conclusions: From head-up baseline, 100% of healthy subjects were ‘preload-responsive’ as per the ccFT∆. Based on the 42% and 25% IVC collapse thresholds in the supine position, only 50% and 71% would have been labeled ‘preload-responsive’.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry

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