Cargando…

103 Analysis of Arterial Blood Pressure Waveform Features in a Porcine Model of Burn and Resuscitation

INTRODUCTION: Functional arterial blood pressure waveform (ABW) features are incompletely understood in the context of burn injury and resuscitation. In this work, we analyzed the variability of pulse pressure (PPV), systolic pressure (SPV), stroke volume (SVV), and five measures of heart rate varia...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Arabidarrehdor, Ghazal, Kao, Yi-Ming, Hahn, Jin-Oh, Burmeister, David, Parajuli, Babita, Carney, Bonnie, Keyloun, John, Moffatt, Lauren, Shupp, Jeffrey, Reese, Adam, Oliver, Mary
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10185201/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irad045.076
_version_ 1785042302724472832
author Arabidarrehdor, Ghazal
Kao, Yi-Ming
Hahn, Jin-Oh
Burmeister, David
Parajuli, Babita
Carney, Bonnie
Keyloun, John
Moffatt, Lauren
Shupp, Jeffrey
Reese, Adam
Oliver, Mary
author_facet Arabidarrehdor, Ghazal
Kao, Yi-Ming
Hahn, Jin-Oh
Burmeister, David
Parajuli, Babita
Carney, Bonnie
Keyloun, John
Moffatt, Lauren
Shupp, Jeffrey
Reese, Adam
Oliver, Mary
author_sort Arabidarrehdor, Ghazal
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Functional arterial blood pressure waveform (ABW) features are incompletely understood in the context of burn injury and resuscitation. In this work, we analyzed the variability of pulse pressure (PPV), systolic pressure (SPV), stroke volume (SVV), and five measures of heart rate variability (HRV) in time and frequency domains as potential indicators of burn resuscitation adequacy in a large total body surface area (TBSA) porcine model with varying degrees of intravenous fluids. METHODS: Data were collected from 21 anesthetized and mechanically-ventilated pigs (32±4 kg weight, 40% TBSA), which were instrumented for continuous hemodynamic monitoring for 24 hours. Urinary output (UO), hematocrit (HCT) and cardiac output (CO) were also measured at various time points. The animals were divided into Paradigm 1 (P1): no resuscitation (N=7); Paradigm 2 (P2): fluid titration to UO (N=8); and Paradigm 3 (P3): deliberate over-resuscitation with consistent high fluid rates (N=6). We calculated PPV, SPV, SVV, and five widely used HRV measures: normalized low-frequency power (NLF), high-frequency power (NHF), very-low-frequency power (VLF), low-frequency-high-frequency (LFHF) ratio, and the root-mean-squared of the duration difference in consecutive beats (RR-RMS). All features were averaged on an hourly basis and their potential in tracking reference CO and SV was investigated via linear regression and correlation analysis after calibrating the data to SV and CO on an individual basis. RESULTS: PPV, SPV, SVV, and RR-RMSE showed statistically distinguishable trends for different paradigms, as depicted in Figure 1, along with averaged trends for lab measurement. PPV, SPV, and SVV tracked the CO the best and were comparable to UO, however, SVV was far superior in tracking SV. A regression analysis between these four features and UO showed a very low level of agreement despite comparable tracking of SV and CO. HRV measures did not distinguish resuscitation paradigms and were inferior in tracking CO and similar in tracking SV to aforesaid features. CONCLUSIONS: PPV, SPV, SVV, and RR-RMSE may potentially complement UO in the hemodynamic assessment of the burn patients and outperform other HRV measures in general. Future work will optimize the extraction of strategic informative features of ABW analysis in the various fluid status states post-burn injury. APPLICABILITY OF RESEARCH TO PRACTICE: Titrating burn resuscitation rates to have protocols including PPV, SPV, SVV, and RR-RMSE alongside other standard metrics may offer precision medicine strategies to fine-tune IV fluid rates.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10185201
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-101852012023-05-16 103 Analysis of Arterial Blood Pressure Waveform Features in a Porcine Model of Burn and Resuscitation Arabidarrehdor, Ghazal Kao, Yi-Ming Hahn, Jin-Oh Burmeister, David Parajuli, Babita Carney, Bonnie Keyloun, John Moffatt, Lauren Shupp, Jeffrey Reese, Adam Oliver, Mary J Burn Care Res C-352 Correlative XIV: Translational Sciences: Critical Care and Metabolism INTRODUCTION: Functional arterial blood pressure waveform (ABW) features are incompletely understood in the context of burn injury and resuscitation. In this work, we analyzed the variability of pulse pressure (PPV), systolic pressure (SPV), stroke volume (SVV), and five measures of heart rate variability (HRV) in time and frequency domains as potential indicators of burn resuscitation adequacy in a large total body surface area (TBSA) porcine model with varying degrees of intravenous fluids. METHODS: Data were collected from 21 anesthetized and mechanically-ventilated pigs (32±4 kg weight, 40% TBSA), which were instrumented for continuous hemodynamic monitoring for 24 hours. Urinary output (UO), hematocrit (HCT) and cardiac output (CO) were also measured at various time points. The animals were divided into Paradigm 1 (P1): no resuscitation (N=7); Paradigm 2 (P2): fluid titration to UO (N=8); and Paradigm 3 (P3): deliberate over-resuscitation with consistent high fluid rates (N=6). We calculated PPV, SPV, SVV, and five widely used HRV measures: normalized low-frequency power (NLF), high-frequency power (NHF), very-low-frequency power (VLF), low-frequency-high-frequency (LFHF) ratio, and the root-mean-squared of the duration difference in consecutive beats (RR-RMS). All features were averaged on an hourly basis and their potential in tracking reference CO and SV was investigated via linear regression and correlation analysis after calibrating the data to SV and CO on an individual basis. RESULTS: PPV, SPV, SVV, and RR-RMSE showed statistically distinguishable trends for different paradigms, as depicted in Figure 1, along with averaged trends for lab measurement. PPV, SPV, and SVV tracked the CO the best and were comparable to UO, however, SVV was far superior in tracking SV. A regression analysis between these four features and UO showed a very low level of agreement despite comparable tracking of SV and CO. HRV measures did not distinguish resuscitation paradigms and were inferior in tracking CO and similar in tracking SV to aforesaid features. CONCLUSIONS: PPV, SPV, SVV, and RR-RMSE may potentially complement UO in the hemodynamic assessment of the burn patients and outperform other HRV measures in general. Future work will optimize the extraction of strategic informative features of ABW analysis in the various fluid status states post-burn injury. APPLICABILITY OF RESEARCH TO PRACTICE: Titrating burn resuscitation rates to have protocols including PPV, SPV, SVV, and RR-RMSE alongside other standard metrics may offer precision medicine strategies to fine-tune IV fluid rates. Oxford University Press 2023-05-15 /pmc/articles/PMC10185201/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irad045.076 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Burn Association. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle C-352 Correlative XIV: Translational Sciences: Critical Care and Metabolism
Arabidarrehdor, Ghazal
Kao, Yi-Ming
Hahn, Jin-Oh
Burmeister, David
Parajuli, Babita
Carney, Bonnie
Keyloun, John
Moffatt, Lauren
Shupp, Jeffrey
Reese, Adam
Oliver, Mary
103 Analysis of Arterial Blood Pressure Waveform Features in a Porcine Model of Burn and Resuscitation
title 103 Analysis of Arterial Blood Pressure Waveform Features in a Porcine Model of Burn and Resuscitation
title_full 103 Analysis of Arterial Blood Pressure Waveform Features in a Porcine Model of Burn and Resuscitation
title_fullStr 103 Analysis of Arterial Blood Pressure Waveform Features in a Porcine Model of Burn and Resuscitation
title_full_unstemmed 103 Analysis of Arterial Blood Pressure Waveform Features in a Porcine Model of Burn and Resuscitation
title_short 103 Analysis of Arterial Blood Pressure Waveform Features in a Porcine Model of Burn and Resuscitation
title_sort 103 analysis of arterial blood pressure waveform features in a porcine model of burn and resuscitation
topic C-352 Correlative XIV: Translational Sciences: Critical Care and Metabolism
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10185201/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irad045.076
work_keys_str_mv AT arabidarrehdorghazal 103analysisofarterialbloodpressurewaveformfeaturesinaporcinemodelofburnandresuscitation
AT kaoyiming 103analysisofarterialbloodpressurewaveformfeaturesinaporcinemodelofburnandresuscitation
AT hahnjinoh 103analysisofarterialbloodpressurewaveformfeaturesinaporcinemodelofburnandresuscitation
AT burmeisterdavid 103analysisofarterialbloodpressurewaveformfeaturesinaporcinemodelofburnandresuscitation
AT parajulibabita 103analysisofarterialbloodpressurewaveformfeaturesinaporcinemodelofburnandresuscitation
AT carneybonnie 103analysisofarterialbloodpressurewaveformfeaturesinaporcinemodelofburnandresuscitation
AT keylounjohn 103analysisofarterialbloodpressurewaveformfeaturesinaporcinemodelofburnandresuscitation
AT moffattlauren 103analysisofarterialbloodpressurewaveformfeaturesinaporcinemodelofburnandresuscitation
AT shuppjeffrey 103analysisofarterialbloodpressurewaveformfeaturesinaporcinemodelofburnandresuscitation
AT reeseadam 103analysisofarterialbloodpressurewaveformfeaturesinaporcinemodelofburnandresuscitation
AT olivermary 103analysisofarterialbloodpressurewaveformfeaturesinaporcinemodelofburnandresuscitation