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Erschienen in: Intensive Care Medicine 10/2009

01.10.2009 | Brief Report

Point-of-care assessment of microvascular blood flow in critically ill patients

verfasst von: Ryan C. Arnold, Joseph E. Parrillo, R. Phillip Dellinger, Michael E. Chansky, Nathan I. Shapiro, David J. Lundy, Stephen Trzeciak, Steven M. Hollenberg

Erschienen in: Intensive Care Medicine | Ausgabe 10/2009

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Abstract

Objective

Sublingual microvascular videomicroscopy can assess tissue perfusion in critically ill patients; however, data analysis is currently limited to delayed off-line evaluation. We hypothesized that a real-time point-of-care (POC) determination of the microcirculatory flow index (MFI), an established metric for assessing microcirculatory perfusion, agrees well with the conventional off-line analysis.

Design

Prospective observational study.

Setting

Urban academic intensive care unit.

Participants

A heterogeneous population of critically ill patients.

Measurements and results

A single operator performed side stream darkfield videomicroscopy of the sublingual microcirculation and made a POC determination of MFI in real-time on a portable bedside monitor by assigning a score (0 = no flow to 3 = normal) to each quadrant of the image and averaging the four values. After image processing, de-identification and randomization, the same operator, blinded to the previous interpretation, repeated the MFI assessment by viewing an AVI-formatted image sequence on a 94 cm 1,080 pixel LCD monitor (reference standard). There were 205 paired measurements in 18 subjects. The POC and reference standard MFI had good agreement by Bland–Altman analysis [mean difference of −0.031, SD = 0.198 (95% CI, −0.43 to 0.37)]. The POC assessment was 94% sensitive and 92% specific for detecting impaired microvascular flow (defined a priori as an MFI < 2.5 based on previously published data).

Conclusions

A POC determination of MFI had good agreement with conventional off-line analysis, and was highly sensitive and specific for detecting impaired microvascular flow. This real-time technique may be useful in future clinical trials targeting impaired microcirculatory perfusion in critically ill patients.
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Metadaten
Titel
Point-of-care assessment of microvascular blood flow in critically ill patients
verfasst von
Ryan C. Arnold
Joseph E. Parrillo
R. Phillip Dellinger
Michael E. Chansky
Nathan I. Shapiro
David J. Lundy
Stephen Trzeciak
Steven M. Hollenberg
Publikationsdatum
01.10.2009
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Intensive Care Medicine / Ausgabe 10/2009
Print ISSN: 0342-4642
Elektronische ISSN: 1432-1238
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00134-009-1517-1

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