British Journal of Anaesthesia, 2001, Vol. 86, No. 6 794-797
© 2001 The Board of Management and Trustees of the British Journal of Anaesthesia
Oesophageal Doppler monitoring overestimates cardiac output during lumbar epidural anaesthesia
Department of Anaesthesiology, University Hospitals, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, U. Z. Gasthuisberg, Herestraat 49, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium*Corresponding author
Oesophageal Doppler monitoring (ODM) has been advocated as a non-invasive means of measuring cardiac output (CO). However, its reliance upon blood flow measurement in the descending aorta to estimate CO is susceptible to error if blood flow is redistributed between the upper and lower body. We hypothesize that lumbar epidural anesthesia (LEA), which causes blood flow redistribution, causes errors in CO estimates. We compared ODM with thermodilution (TD) measurements in fourteen patients under general anaesthesia for radical prostatectomy, who had received an epidural catheter at the intervertebral level L2L3. Coupled measurements of CO by means of the TD and ODM techniques were performed at baseline (general anaesthetic only) and after epidural administration of 10 ml of 0.25% bupivacaine. The two methods were compared using Bland-Altman analysis: before LEA there was a bias of 0.89 litre min1 with limits of agreement ranging between 2.67 and +0.88 litre min1. Following lumbar sympathetic block, bias became positive (+0.55 litre min1) and limits of agreement increased to 3.21 and +4.30 litre min1. ODM measured a greater increase in CO after LEA (
=+1.71 (1.19) litre min1 (mean (SD)) compared with TD (
=+0.51 (0.70) litre min1). We conclude that following LEA, measurements with the Oesophageal Doppler Monitor II overestimate CO and show unacceptably high variability. Blood flow redistribution may limit the value of ODM.
Br J Anaesth 2001; 86: 7947
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