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Clinical Trial
. 2008 May;34(5):888-94.
doi: 10.1007/s00134-008-1021-z. Epub 2008 Feb 8.

Respiratory variations in aortic blood flow predict fluid responsiveness in ventilated children

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Respiratory variations in aortic blood flow predict fluid responsiveness in ventilated children

Philippe Durand et al. Intensive Care Med. 2008 May.

Abstract

Objective: To investigate whether respiratory variations in aortic blood flow velocity (DeltaVpeak ao), systolic arterial pressure (DeltaPS) and pulse pressure (DeltaPP) could accurately predict fluid responsiveness in ventilated children.

Design and setting: Prospective study in a 18-bed pediatric intensive care unit.

Patients: Twenty-six children [median age 28.5 (16-44) months] with preserved left ventricular (LV) function.

Intervention: Standardized volume expansion (VE).

Measurements and main results: Analysis of aortic blood flow by transthoracic pulsed-Doppler allowed LV stroke volume measurement and on-line DeltaVpeak ao calculation. The VE-induced increase in LV stroke volume was >15% in 18 patients (responders) and <15% in 8 (non-responders). Before VE, the DeltaVpeak ao in responders was higher than that in non-responders [19% (12.1-26.3) vs. 9% (7.3-11.8), p=0.001], whereas DeltaPP and DeltaPS did not significantly differ between groups. The prediction of fluid responsiveness was higher with DeltaVpeak ao [ROC curve area 0.85 (95% IC 0.99-1.8), p=0.001] than with DeltaPS (0.64) or DeltaPP (0.59). The best cut-off for DeltaVpeak ao was 12%, with sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of 81.2%, 85.7%, 93% and 66.6%, respectively. A positive linear correlation was found between baseline DeltaVpeak ao and VE-induced gain in stroke volume (rho=0.68, p=0.001).

Conclusions: While respiratory variations in aortic blood flow velocity measured by pulsed Doppler before VE accurately predict the effects of VE, DeltaPS and DeltaPP are of little value in ventilated children.

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