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The investigators will perform a clinical observational study of patients undergoing abdominal surgery. The study will be performed at Sykehuset Telemark, Skien. The aims of the study are to compare suprasternal and transoesophageal Doppler (reference method) to measure blood flow in the proximal descending aorta and to explore the variability of hemodynamic variables during surgery.
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Background and aim: The best validated method to estimate cardiac output with ultrasound requires measuring the Doppler velocity time integral (VTI) in the left ventricular outflow tract measured from the apical (lateral chest) window/ projection. However, this projection is often out of reach for anaesthesiologists during many surgical procedures (e.g. abdominal surgery) due to draping, and is often difficult to perform if the patient cannot be placed in the left lateral decubitus position. Alternatively, VTI in the proximal descending aorta may be measured via the suprasternal view, which is one of the standard projections in transthoracic echocardiography. This view is often available for anaesthesiologists during surgery on a patient in supine position. Assuming that changes in cardiac output are associated with changes in VTI in proximal descending aorta, this may provide the anaesthesiologist with a non-invasive measure of the response to a fluid challenge. The first aim of this study is to evaluate the ability of suprasternal Doppler to measure blood flow in the proximal descending aorta, and its agreement with the reference method oesophageal Doppler, during ongoing abdominal surgery.
Fluid challenges are typically given when stroke volume is reduced by 10-15%, which is considered a significant reduction. This is however dependent on the precision of the measurements, which is estimated during hemodynamic stability. During surgery, on the other hand, the variability may be larger, leading to erroneously concluding that stroke volume is reduced due to volume loss, when in fact this may be due to other stimuli related to surgery (mechanical, e.g. compression of large veins or the thoracic cavity, or stimuli affecting the autonomic nervous system, e.g. pain). The proportion of potentially falsely measured reduction may be calculated by performing repeated measurements during ongoing surgery. Thus, an other aim with this study is to explore the variability of measurements of stroke volume during surgery.
Study design: Clinical observational study.
Data collection: 30 patients scheduled to undergo laparoscopic or open abdominal surgical procedures (gastrointestinal or gynecological) of at least 1.5 hrs estimated duration. The patients should be of American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status 1-3 and have no contraindications to the use of oesophageal ultrasound. Hemodynamic data will be downloaded to a PC continuously from the clinical monitoring equipment (Philips Intellivue) using the VSCapture software (https://github.com/xeonfusion/VSCaptureMP) in VisualStudio (Microsoft). "Landmarks" in the procedure (e.g. surgical incision, manipulation in the surgical field and hemorrhage) will be recorded manually to relate the hemodynamic data to the different steps in the procedure. Blood flow velocity in the descending aorta will be measured using ultrasound machines in ordinary clinical use (GE Venue R 2.5; GE Healthcare). The Doppler recordings will be analyzed using commercially available software (EchoPAC; General Electric) after blinding.
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30 participants in 1 patient group
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Torkjell Nøstdahl, MD, PhD; Håvard Djupedal, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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