Evaluation of a Model-Based Hemodynamic Monitoring Method in a Porcine Study of Septic Shock

Introduction. The accuracy and clinical applicability of an improved model-based system for tracking hemodynamic changes is assessed in an animal study on septic shock. Methods. This study used cardiovascular measurements recorded during a porcine trial studying the efficacy of large-pore hemofiltra...

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Veröffentlicht in:Computational and mathematical methods in medicine 2013-01, Vol.2013 (2013), p.1-17
Hauptverfasser: Revie, James A., Stevenson, David, Chase, J. Geoffrey, Pretty, Chris J., Lambermont, Bernard C., Ghuysen, Alexandre, Kolh, Philippe, Shaw, Geoffrey M., Desaive, Thomas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction. The accuracy and clinical applicability of an improved model-based system for tracking hemodynamic changes is assessed in an animal study on septic shock. Methods. This study used cardiovascular measurements recorded during a porcine trial studying the efficacy of large-pore hemofiltration for treating septic shock. Four Pietrain pigs were instrumented and induced with septic shock. A subset of the measured data, representing clinically available measurements, was used to identify subject-specific cardiovascular models. These models were then validated against the remaining measurements. Results. The system accurately matched independent measures of left and right ventricle end diastolic volumes and maximum left and right ventricular pressures to percentage errors less than 20% (except for the 95th percentile error in maximum right ventricular pressure) and all R2>0.76. An average decrease of 42% in systemic resistance, a main cardiovascular consequence of septic shock, was observed 120 minutes after the infusion of the endotoxin, consistent with experimentally measured trends. Moreover, modelled temporal trends in right ventricular end systolic elastance and afterload tracked changes in corresponding experimentally derived metrics. Conclusions. These results demonstrate that this model-based method can monitor disease-dependent changes in preload, afterload, and contractility in porcine study of septic shock.
ISSN:1748-670X
1748-6718
1748-6718
DOI:10.1155/2013/505417