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Advancements in Critical
Care
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Hemodynamic instability
James Bailey, MD, PhD
Associate Professor in the Department of Anesthesiology, Cardiac Anesthesia
and Critical Care Medicine Division, Emory University School of Medicine,
Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Published by permission of GASNet
Inc.© 2003
The article also available in PDF:
120KB
Scope of the problem:
Why is hemodynamic instability important?
The term “hemodynamic
instability” is most commonly associated with an abnormal or unstable
blood pressure, especially hypotension. Here, hemodynamic instability
will be defined more broadly as global or regional perfusion that is not
adequate to support normal organ function. This definition recognizes
the obligation to insure adequate organ perfusion during the perioperative
period.
Numerous hemodynamic parameters (heart rate, blood
pressure, central venous pressure, pulmonary artery pressure, pulmonary
artery occlusion pressure, and cardiac output) can be monitored and controlled.
Abnormalities of any of these parameters may indicate hemodynamic instability,
and control of any of these variables may restore adequate organ perfusion.
However, the two variables that most directly reflect organ perfusion
are blood pressure and indices of global perfusion, such as cardiac output
or mixed-venous hemoglobin oxygen saturation (SvO2).
Due to limits on coronary
and cerebral autoregulation, hypotension may compromise adequate perfusion
of the brain and heart. Animal studies have demonstrated that blood pressure
is the primary determinant of cerebral and coronary blood flow when the
limits of autoregulation are exceeded. However, studies relating hypotension
to outcome have shown mixed results [1-6]. Therefore, the clinician can
only conclude that there are blood pressure thresholds below which coronary
and cerebral ischemia may occur, that these are probably more stringent
in individuals with fixed vascular stenoses, and that they may vary greatly
among individuals.
For the same reasons that
there are mixed data relating hypotension to outcome, it has been difficult
to design studies relating outcome to decreased cardiac output or SvO2
[7-17]. Overall the evidence indicates that maintaining adequate global
perfusion contributes to improved outcome. The difficulty is that the
definition of “good” is unclear. Supranormal oxygen delivery
(a cardiac index roughly greater than 4.5 L.min/m2) has not been widely
accepted. An reasonable goal would be a cardiac index of 2.5-3 L/min/m2
or greater in conjunction with an SvO2 greater than 65-70% and a lactate
level lower than 2-3 mM/l.
Who is at risk?
It is important for the anesthesiologist to understand
the risk to the patient from pre-existing conditions or the surgical procedure
to plan perioperative patient management. However, even healthy patients
undergoing minor procedures may manifest hemodynamic instability due to
anesthesia itself. Often, anesthesiologists are better prepared to manage
the anticipated hemodynamic instability in a patient with significant
cardiovascular disease undergoing major surgery than they are in a relatively
healthy patient undergoing outpatient surgery.
Recognizing hemodynamic instability
A key concept necessary
for understanding hemodynamic instability is the simple equation relating
blood pressure and cardiac output:
MAP = SVR x CO + CVP
(where MAP is mean arterial systemic blood pressure,
SVR is systemic vascular resistance, CO is cardiac output, and CVP is
central venous pressure). This equation warns us that a normal blood pressure
does not guarantee an adequate cardiac output. Recognition of hemodynamic
instability requires monitoring of both blood pressure and global perfusion.
While hypotension is probably the most commonly recognized
manifestation of hemodynamic instability it is not the most common problem.
An adequate blood pressure may insure coronary and cerebral perfusion
[18,19]; however, it does not insure renal and mesenteric perfusion, which
cannot be measured directly. It is best to assume that appropriate “global”
perfusion (i.e., cardiac output or SvO2) will increase the chance that
the kidneys and mesentery are also adequately perfused. There is ample
evidence that maintaining blood pressure in the presence of inadequate
cardiac output by excessive vasoconstriction of efferent glomerular arterioles
is deleterious to renal function [20]. Mesenteric circulation is even
more sensitive to excessive vasoconstriction [21] and the global cardiac
output needed to insure mesenteric and renal perfusion is unclear. However,
cardiac indices lower than normal values must be viewed as suspect. In
addition, it is most prudent to look at multiple indicators of adequate
perfusion, such as cardiac output, SvO2, and lactate concentrations.
Monitoring
Blood pressure
While noninvasive blood pressure monitoring may be quite accurate,
if the patient is hemodynamically unstable it is important to monitor
blood pressure invasively on a beat-to-beat basis. The most common catheterization
site is the radial artery, although femoral, brachial and axillary arteries
have also been used. The monitoring system must be appropriately zeroed
and calibrated. It is often helpful to utilize both invasive and noninvasive
monitoring in order to have both beat-to-beat monitoring and an independent
measure of the accuracy of the invasive system. There may be discrepancies
between peripherally measured blood pressure and central aortic pressures
(aortic systolic lower than radial). However, in two important situations
— immediately after cardiopulmonary bypass and in septic patients
— the systolic blood pressure measured from the radial arterial
catheter may be misleadingly low [22].
Finally, one should note that any system of monitoring
actually gives the clinicians three blood pressures — diastolic,
mean and systolic. Of these, the mean is least likely to be affected by
monitoring artifacts and (with the exception of diastolic pressure and
coronary perfusion) is the measure most directly correlated with organ
perfusion. Systolic pressure often gets the most attention, but is often
the least informative.
Cardiac output
While invasive monitoring of blood pressure is relatively common
in surgical patients who are at higher risk for hemodynamic instability,
cardiac output monitoring is less common. Clinical recognition of low
cardiac output syndrome in the absence of hypotension can be difficult
[23, 24]. The mainstay for cardiac output measurement has been the pulmonary
artery catheter, which allows measurement of cardiac output using the
thermodilution technique, and which simultaneously allows measurement
of central venous pressure, pulmonary artery pressure, and pulmonary artery
occlusion pressure. Recent advances in applications of the thermodilution
principle now allow for continuous cardiac output measurements. Furthermore,
mixed venous blood samples can be drawn and mixed venous hemoglobin oxygen
saturation can be monitored, either intermittently or continuously, using
fiberoptic technology.
Given these capabilities, it is no surprise that the
pulmonary artery catheter has been a mainstay of hemodynamic monitoring.
However, its use is not without controversy. No definitive study has demonstrated
that use of the pulmonary artery catheter improves outcome, rather two
retrospective studies have suggested that mortality is increased by use
of pulmonary artery catheters [25,26]. The conclusion, if not readily
accepted, must be taken seriously and has promoted interest in alternative
methods of measuring cardiac output.
Promising technology has been introduced, including
Fick measurement of cardiac output using CO2 rebreathing, Doppler echocardiographic
measurement of descending aortic flow, pulse contour analysis and thermodilution
using femoral arterial temperature sensing and lithium dilution [27-29].
While these new technologies have not yet been extensively validated,
early studies indicate that each may provide accurate estimations of cardiac
output, although there are caveats in their use [30].
Mixed-venous hemoglobin oxygen saturation
(SvO2)
One of the pitfalls of monitoring cardiac output is that the definition
of an “adequate” cardiac index is unclear. While normal cardiac
index is, in general, greater than 2.5 L/min/m2, this is only a very rough
guide to appropriate values of cardiac output. Consideration of venous
hemoglobin oxygen saturation is a logical means of assessing the adequacy
of cardiac output. From the Fick principle, we know that if delivery of
oxygen is inadequate SvO2 will decrease unless there is a concomitant
decrease in oxygen consumption. Oxygen delivery depends on hemoglobin
concentration, arterial oxygenation, and cardiac output. If hemoglobin
saturation, and arterial oxygenation are essentially normal (or remain
unchanged) then a low (or decreasing) SvO2 (< 65-70%) indicates that
cardiac output is inadequate for oxygen consumption.
In general, measurement of true mixed-venous hemoglobin
oxygen saturation requires a sample from the pulmonary artery, and hence
a pulmonary artery catheter. However, a simple central venous hemoglobin
oxygen saturation may track the true SVO2 and direct therapy for septic
patients [17]. It appears that this approach to monitoring the adequacy
of cardiac output merits consideration in other clinical scenarios, especially
as it avoids the necessity of a pulmonary artery catheter.
Echocardiography
When hemodynamic instability has been recognized
— as either hypotension or low cardiac output syndrome — treatment
may be greatly facilitated by echocardiography providing a quick and accurate
assessment of preload and contractility [31]. Preload refers to the stretch
of the myocardial fiber and is best estimated by left-ventricular end-diastolic
volume (LVEDV). Echocardiography provides cardiac dimensions, not pressures,
and, unlike those obtained using the pulmonary artery catheter, echocardiographic
measures of preload correlate well with LVEDV [32-34]. In addition, echocardiography
can estimate ejection fraction, a useful measure of contractility [33,
34].
Also, besides providing good estimates of the two
most important determinants of cardiac output (preload and contractility),
echocardiography assesses valve function, regional wall motion abnormalities,
sources of emboli, pericardial constraints to normal hemodynamics (e.g.
tamponade, constrictive pericarditis), as well as allowing the clinician
to distinguish right from left heart performance. For these reasons, echocardiography
is highly recommended whenever there is hemodynamic instability of unknown
etiology or that is not readily corrected by standard therapy.
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