Clinical Trial: Minimally-invasive Assessment of Cardiac Output in Severe Preeclampsia

Study Status: Withdrawn
Recruit Status: Withdrawn
Study Type: Observational

Official Title: Minimally-invasive Assessment of Cardiac Output in Severe Preeclampsia: Radial Artery Wave Form Analysis Versus Trans-thoracic Echocardiogram

Brief Summary:

Severe preeclampsia often presents with uncontrolled hypertension and therefore requires close monitoring of blood pressure and cardiac performance.

The purpose of the study is to compare two methods of measuring the performance of the heart in pregnant women: one by ultrasound of the heart, the other by assessing the pulse generated in the blood vessel of the wrist. We hope that the method using pulse analysis will be as effective as ultrasound, which is labour intensive and operator dependant.


Detailed Summary:

Severe preeclampsia often presents with uncontrolled hypertension, which requires close monitoring of blood pressure and cardiac output. It will be very useful to know the cardiac output in this patient population, because it will guide the choice of antihypertensive drugs and measure their effect on cardiac output.

Traditionally pulmonary artery catheters were used to measure cardiac output. There are numerous problems with using this method in severe preeclampsia. These include technical difficulty inserting the catheter in an awake, edematous pregnant patient, potentially causing a pneumothorax, damaging the carotid artery or insertion site infection. There is also an increased risk for cardiac arrhythmias. Apart from the risks, the accuracy of the thermodilution measurements can be influenced by factors such as timing of the injection within the respiratory cycle, temperature of the injectate, speed of injection, and placement of the catheter. A readily available, accurate non-invasive cardiac output measurement technique, that will provide reliable data with fewer risks, is needed.

Doppler ultrasound (trans thoracic echocardiography) is the gold standard for measuring cardiac output non-invasively in pregnant patients. Unfortunately the method is operator dependant, not continuous and not always available when needed most.

Recently a device called the FloTrac has been introduced that measures cardiac output minimally invasively. Attached to an arterial line it measures cardiac output every 20 seconds via arterial waveform analysis. The standard of care for measuring blood pressure in severe preeclampsia requires the placement of an intra-arterial line. This group of patients is therefore ideal for measuring cardiac output with the FloTrac, especially since powerful int
Sponsor: Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute, Mount Sinai Hospital

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Information By: Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute, Mount Sinai Hospital

Dates:
Date Received: April 23, 2007
Date Started: April 2007
Date Completion: December 2007
Last Updated: October 1, 2009
Last Verified: October 2009