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Venous Oxygenation SCV02

FlowContractilityCO = Cardiac Output dPmx = Left Ventricular ContractilityCI = Cardiac IndexGEF = Global ejection fractionPCCI = Pulse Contour Cardiac Index CFI = Cardiac Function IndexAP = Arterial Blood PressureCPI = Cardiac Power IndexSVI= Stroke Volume In

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Venous Oxygenation SCV02

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    2. Flow Contractility CO = Cardiac Output dPmx = Left Ventricular Contractility CI = Cardiac Index GEF = Global ejection fraction PCCI = Pulse Contour Cardiac Index CFI = Cardiac Function Index AP = Arterial Blood Pressure CPI = Cardiac Power Index SVI = Stroke Volume Index HR = Heart Rate Preload Afterload GEDI = Global End Diastolic Volume SVRI = Systemic Vascular Resistance ITBI = Intra Thoracic Blood Volume Index MAP = Mean Arterial Pressure Volume Responsiveness Pulmonary Odema SVV = Stroke Volume Variation ELWI = Extra Vascular Lung Water PPV = Pulse Pressure Variation PVPI = Pulmonary Vascular Permeability

    3. Top tips: Keep pocket reference Keep your approach simple as possible Know what parameters represent: Flow Preload Afterload Contractility Oxygenation Lung Volume Response Different methods:

    4. 2 examples to initial assessment: PiCCO 3 step CI Preload Lung Local protocol: Preload/ELWI Contractility/Afterload Cardiac Index

    8. Vasopressors: Stimulate vasoconstriction Inotropes: Stimulate the force of cardiac contraction Some drugs do only one, some do both. Some drugs do one or both depending on dose

    9. 1. Oxygen Delivery/Consumption: ScvO2 (70-80%) = Mixed venous oxygenation Low = Poor oxygen delivery (e.g. poorer CO = greater extraction Solution: look at preload, afterload & contractility High = Poor oxygen consumption (e.g. less oxygen extraction) Solution: look at oxygen delivery Normal? = Poor DO2 & VO2 High DO2 & High VO2

    10. 1. Oxygen Delivery/Consumption: DO2 Oxygen Delivery (400-650 ml/min/m2) VO2 Oxygen Consumption (125-175 ml/min/m2)

    11. 2. Flow: CO = Cardiac Output (4.0 8.0 l/min) CI = Cardiac Index (3.0-5.0 l/min/m2) SVI Stroke Volume Index (40-60 ml/m2) The amount of blood ejected in one beat indexed to BSA

    12. 2. Flow: PCCO = Pulse Contour Cardiac Output Cardiac output determined continuously from the pulse contour analysis PCCI = Pulse Contour Cardiac Index (3.0 5.0) Cardiac output determined continuously from the pulse contour analysis indexed to BSA Other parameters include: ABP = Arterial Blood Pressure HR = Heart Rate

    13. 3. Preload: GEDI = Global End Diastolic Index (4.0 8.0 l/min) An excellent indicator of preload. It is the filling volume of all four heart chambers indexed to BSA ITBI = Intra Thoracic Blood Volume Idx (850-1000ml/m2) An alternative indicator of preload. It is the filling volume of all four heart chambers and pulmonary blood volume indexed to BSA Good preload = good cardiac output

    14. 4. Afterload: SVRI = Systemic Vascular Resistance Index (1700 2400 Dyn*s/*cm-5*m2) Increased by vasopressors, cardiogenic shock and centralisation Decreased by sepsis and anaphylaxis MAP = Mean Arterial Pressure

    15. 5. Contractility: GEF = Global ejection Fraction (25 35%) Correlates well with echocardiogram CFI = Cardiac Function Index (4.5 6.5 l/min) This is good for trends. It tells you about the relationship between flow and preload CPI = Cardiac Power Index (0.5 0.7 W/min2) This is the fraction of preload volume pumped in one minute which is a parameter of global cardiac contractility. This makes it invaluable as an indicator of cardiogenic shock

    16. 5. Contractility: dPmx = Left ventricular contractility (Trend only) This is about the left ventricle contractility and is useful for trends only. Increasing trend tells you of increased contractility. Reduced trend the reverse

    17. 6. Volume Responsiveness: SVV = Stroke Volume Variation (<10%) PPV = Pulse Pressure Variation (<10%) Remember that these measure volume over the respiratory cycle. They are only applicable to patients being ventilated (with decent tidal volumes) and a normal sinus rhythm, (free from artifact).

    18. 7. Lung: ELWI = Extra Vascular Lung Water (3.0-7.0 ml/kg) Elevated may indicate too much volume, poor contractility or an afterload that is too high. High shows intracellular, interstitial or intra alveolar odema PVPI = Pulmonary Pressure Vascular Permeability Index (1.0 - 3.0) PVPI is used to compare to ELWI: ELWI Normal (3.0 7.0) + PVPI Normal (1.0-3.0) = Normal ELWI High (7.0+) + PVPI Normal (1.0-3.0) = Cardiogenic ELWI High (7.0+) + PVPI High (3.0+) = Sepsis

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