Purpose: Intensive care doctors commonly attend rapid response team (RRT) reviews of hospital-ward patients with hemodynamic instability and estimate the patient's likely cardiac index (CI). We aimed to non-invasively measure the CI of such patients and assess the level of agreement between such measurements and clinically estimated CI categories (low <2L/min/m2, normal 2-2.99L/min/m2 or high ≥3L/min/m2).
Materials and methods: A prospective, observational study of non-invasive measurement and clinical estimation of CI categories in 50 adult hospital-ward patients who activated the RRT for 'hemodynamic instability' (tachycardia > 100BPM or hypotension < 90mmHg or both).
Results: The CI was measured in 47/50(94%) patients and the mean CI was 3.5(95% CI 3.2-3.7) L/min/m2. Overall, 30(64%) patients had a high CI, 13(28%) and 4(9%) had a normal and a low CI, respectively. The level of agreement between measured and clinically estimated CI categories was low(19.2%). Sensitivity and positive predictive values of clinical estimation were low(0% and 3.3% for high CI, and 0% and 50% for low CI, respectively).
Conclusions: Non-invasive CI measurement was possible in almost all hospital-ward patients triggering RRT review for hemodynamic instability. In such patients, the CI was high, and intensive care clinicians were unable to identify a low or a high CI state.
Keywords: Cardiac index; Cardiac output; Hemodynamic monitoring; Medical emergency team; Non-invasive; Rapid response team.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.