Peripheral venous pressure as a predictor of central venous pressure during orthotopic liver transplantation
- PMID: 16797425
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jclinane.2005.09.031
Peripheral venous pressure as a predictor of central venous pressure during orthotopic liver transplantation
Abstract
Study objective: To assess the reliability of peripheral venous pressure (PVP) as a predictor of central venous pressure (CVP) in the setting of rapidly fluctuating hemodynamics during orthotopic liver transplant surgery.
Design: Prospective clinical trial.
Setting: UCLA Medical Center, main operating room-liver transplant surgery.
Patients: Nine adult patients with liver failure undergoing orthotopic liver transplant surgery.
Interventions: A pulmonary artery catheter and a 20-g antecubital peripheral intravenous catheter dedicated to measuring PVP were placed in all patients after standard general endotracheal anesthesia induction and institution of mechanical ventilation.
Measurements: Peripheral venous pressure and CVP were recorded every 5 minutes and/or during predetermined, well-defined surgical events (skin incision, venovenous bypass initiation, portal vein anastamosis, 5 minute post graft reperfusion, abdominal closure). Pulmonary artery pressure and cardiac output (via thermodilution) were recorded every 15 and 30 minutes, respectively.
Main results: Peripheral venous pressure (mean +/- SD) was 11.0 +/- 4.5 mmHg vs a CVP of 9.5 +/- 5.0; the two measurements differed by an average of 1.5 +/- 1.6 mmHg. Peripheral venous pressure correlated highly with CVP in every patient, and the overall correlation among all nine patients calculated using a random-effects regression model was r = 0.95 (P < 0.0001). A Bland-Altman analysis used to determine the accuracy of PVP in comparison to CVP yielded a bias of -1.5 mmHg and a precision of +/-3.1 mm Hg.
Conclusion: Our study confirms that PVP correlates with CVP even under adverse hemodynamic conditions in patients undergoing liver transplantation.
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