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2 - Monitoring

from Section 1 - General critical care

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2013

Kaushal Shah
Affiliation:
Department of Emergency Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York
Jarone Lee
Affiliation:
Department of Emergency Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
Kamal Medlej
Affiliation:
American University of Beirut
Scott D. Weingart
Affiliation:
Department of Emergency Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York

Summary

This chapter discusses the basic methods and principles of monitoring for proper management of the critically ill patient in the emergency setting. Pulse oximetry provides continuous measurement of a patient's oxygenation status in the case of respiratory monitoring. Capnography measures the partial pressure or concentration of expired carbon dioxide (CO2), the end-tidal carbon dioxide (EtCO2). Ultrasonography of the inferior vena cava (IVC) can be useful in determining fluid responsiveness during non-invasive hemodynamic monitoring. Invasive hemodynamic monitoring provides data via catheters inserted in central veins or arteries. Central venous pressure is obtained by placing a central venous catheter (CVC) in the internal jugular or subclavian vein. The CVP should be interpreted with caution in critically ill patients that have known heart disease or structural cardiac anomalies. Pulse pressure variation (PPV) and systolic pressure variation (SPV) can be used to determine fluid responsiveness in a mechanically ventilated patient.
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

2 Monitoring

Brandy Ferguson

Introduction

Monitoring and understanding of monitoring devices are necessary for proper management of the critically ill patient. The goal of hemodynamic and respiratory monitoring is to ensure and maintain adequate tissue perfusion. This chapter will review the basic methods and principles of monitoring in the emergency setting.

Basic monitoring

Several aspects of a critically ill patient’s status can be obtained from the telemetry monitor (Table 2.1).

Table 2.1. Basic readings on the telemetry monitor

  1. Three electrodes (white, black, and red) are used in 3-lead ECG systems, allowing for multiple views of the heart. Lead II is typically displayed on the cardiac monitor. For accurate ECG tracing, the electrodes should be applied in the following manner:

    1. The white electrode is placed just below the clavicle on the right shoulder.

    2. The black electrode is located on the left clavicle near the shoulder.

    3. The red electrode is connected to the left pectoral muscle near the apex of the heart.

  2. Heart rate is measured as number of beats per minute (bpm). The normal heart rate range is 60–100 bpm.

  3. Blood pressure is measured as systolic pressure over diastolic pressure.

    1. Systolic pressure is the peak pressure in the arteries. This occurs when the ventricles contract.

    2. Diastolic pressure is the minimum pressure of the arteries. This occurs when the ventricles are filled with blood.

  4. Noninvasive blood pressure measurements can be obtained via auscultatory or oscillometric measurements.

    1. Oscillometric blood pressure is used with telemetry monitoring. Proper cuff size is essential for accurate readings.

  5. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) is the average arterial pressure during a single cardiac cycle and can be used as indicator of adequate tissue perfusion. MAP = (⅔diastolic pressure) + (⅓systolic pressure).

    1. MAP = (cardiac output (CO) × systemic vascular resistance (SVR)) + central venous pressure (CVP).

    2. Normal MAP can range between 70 and 110 mmHg.

  6. Respiratory rate is a measure of the total number of breaths per minute.

  7. Temperature can be measured via oral, tympanic, axillary, esophageal, or rectal routes. Rectal and esophageal temperatures are more indicative of a patient’s core temperature.

Respiratory monitoring

Pulse oximetry

  1. Pulse oximetry provides continuous measurement of a patient’s oxygenation status.

  2. Measurements are obtained via sensors placed on the patient’s fingertip, earlobe, or forehead. These sensors use two light-emitting electrodes.

    1. The first emits red light that has a wavelength of 660 nm.

    2. The second emits infrared light that has a wavelength of 905, 910, or 940 nm.

    3. The difference in absorption of the red light and infrared light determines the oxyhemoglobin to deoxyhemoglobin ratio. This measurement corresponds to the pulse oximeter saturation estimate (SpO2).

  3. Pitfalls:

    1. Once the arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2) falls below 70%, the pulse oximetry readings are no longer accurate.

    2. Pulse oximetry cannot reliably detect hypoxemia in the setting of carbon monoxide poisoning because carboxyhemoglobin has similar light absorption to that of oxyhemoglobin at 660 nm.

    3. It is also inaccurate in the setting of methemoglobinemia as both red light and infrared light are equally absorbed by methemoglobin. This results in a fixed SpO2 around 85% regardless of the true SaO2.

    4. Oxygenated blood that is redistributed from central to peripheral circulation can cause a delay in saturation readings known as pulse oximetry lag. This lag can be as long as 2–3 minutes in critically ill patients secondary to reduced blood flow.

    5. A proper waveform must be visualized on the monitor in order to be able to properly determine the SpO2.

    6. Hypothermia and peripheral vasoconstriction can lead to inaccurate or unobtainable values.

End-tidal carbon dioxide (EtCO2)

  1. Capnography measures the partial pressure or concentration of expired carbon dioxide (CO2), the EtCO2. This concentration is a function of the production of CO2 at the tissue level and delivery of CO2 to the lungs by the circulatory system. Therefore, capnography provides important information regarding ventilation, circulation, and metabolism.

  2. The normal expired CO2 level is around 5%, which is approximately 40 mmHg.

  3. There are two different EtCO2 monitoring modalities that are used in the emergency department (ED).

    1. Colorimetric capnometry is a filter generally used to confirm endotracheal tube (ET) placement in the trachea.

      1. The filter attaches to the ET tube and displays the change in concentration of carbon dioxide by color change.

      2. In certain colorimetric capnometers, detection of carbon dioxide is exhibited by filter color change from purple to yellow. This is a semiquantitative mode of monitoring. The color ranges are as follows: purple = EtCO2 <0.5%; tan = EtCO2 0.5–2%; and yellow = EtCO2 >2%.

      3. Pitfalls:

        1. The filter can turn yellow when exposed to acidic material such as stomach contents, or medications including lidocaine and epinephrine.

        2. In patients in cardiac arrest, color change may not be seen even with tracheal intubation because of the low EtCO2 value resulting from poor or absent blood flow.

    2. Quantitative capnography uses infrared technology to provide a continuous numerical value and a continuous waveform display of EtCO2. This measure is plotted graphically on a monitor.

  4. Some ED applications of quantitative EtCO2 monitoring are listed below.

    1. Intubation:

      1. Quantitative EtCO2 will reliably confirm tracheal placement of endotracheal tube despite low cardiac output states, unlike colorimetric devices.

      2. Postintubation continuous capnography can help early identification of airway obstruction or tube dislodgment.

    2. Procedural sedation:

      1. Pulse oximetry provides information about oxygenation, not ventilation. With any amount of supplemental oxygenation, detection of hypoventilation will be significantly delayed. This occurs because patients will start desaturating seconds to minutes after they stop breathing.

      2. EtCO2 monitoring provides early detection of airway compromise and can rapidly identify apnea, airway obstruction, bronchospasm, and laryngospasm. Respiratory depression can therefore be identified prior to hypoxia.

    3. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR):

      1. Monitoring of ventilation:

        1. Monitoring of the respiratory rate can be achieved more accurately with an EtCO2 waveform. It is important not to hyperventilate patients during CPR as this leads to worse outcomes.

      2. Monitoring of effectiveness of chest compressions:

        1. In low flow states, the EtCO2 value is a reflection of the cardiac output to the lungs. The more effective chest compressions are, the higher the EtCO2 value will be.

      3. Assessment of return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC):

        1. A sudden increase in EtCO2 can represent a return of spontaneous circulation and indicates the need to check for the presence of a pulse.

      4. Prognosis:

        1. EtCO2 can be used to help determine whether further resuscitation efforts are futile as studies have shown that an EtCO2 <10 mmHg after 20 minutes of CPR is predictive of a failure to resuscitate.

  5. Monitoring conditions in which arterial PaCO2 levels are critical:

    1. Traumatic brain injury or intracerebral hemorrhage with elevated intracranial pressure.

    2. Severely acidemic patients prior to intubation.

    3. In normal lungs with normal gas exchange, EtCO2 values are usually 3–5 mmHg lower than arterial PaCO2 values. In critically ill patients the values will not correlate. However, if an arterial PaCO2 and EtCO2 values are obtained simultaneously, EtCO2 may be used to trend PaCO2 values.

Noninvasive hemodynamic monitoring

Ultrasonographic assessment of the inferior vena cava (IVC)

Ultrasonography of the IVC can be useful in determining fluid responsiveness. After bringing the IVC into sagittal view, changes in the diameter of the vessel with respiration are recorded. Interpretation of these measurements will depend on whether the patient is mechanically ventilated or breathing spontaneously.

  1. In a spontaneously breathing patient:

    1. Assess the diameter of the IVC and percentage of collapse with inspiratory effort. This provides an estimate of central venous pressure (CVP).

    2. An IVC diameter ≤1.7 cm with complete inspiratory collapse demonstrates a low CVP (<5 mmHg).

    3. An IVC diameter of >1.7 cm with no inspiratory collapse is indicative of a high CVP (>15 mmHg).

  2. In a mechanically ventilated patient:

    1. Mechanical ventilation causes the diameter of the IVC to increase with inspiration. Therefore the physician should not evaluate for IVC collapse but rather for IVC distension with inspiration.

    2. The IVC distensibility index is determined as (Maximum IVC diameter − Minimum IVC diameter)/(Minimum IVC diameter).

    3. Values ≥18% are predictive of fluid responsiveness.

  3. Pitfalls:

    1. The IVC may be difficult to visualize in obese patients.

    2. Large fluctuations in intrathoracic pressure (i.e., patients in respiratory distress) will cause changes in the IVC diameter that are not a result of the patient’s volume status.

Invasive hemodynamic monitoring

This section will highlight invasive monitoring techniques that can be used in the ED setting. Invasive techniques provide data via catheters inserted in central veins or arteries.

Pulmonary artery catheter (PAC)

  1. The pulmonary artery catheter or Swan–Ganz catheter is a balloon-tipped catheter that is inserted into the internal jugular or subclavian vein. From there it is guided by cardiac blood flow into the right atrium, the right ventricle, and finally into the pulmonary artery.

  2. It allows to measure a number hemodynamic parameters that are indicators of preload, cardiac output, and oxygen delivery. Central venous pressure (CVP), pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP), systemic vascular resistance (SVR), cardiac output (CO), cardiac index (CI), and mixed venous O2 (SvO2) are some of the commonly used variables that can be obtained from the PAC.

  3. PAC measures CO via the thermodilution method, which is usually the gold standard for CO measurement in studies.

  4. Preload can be estimated at the level of the right atrium by CVP, or the level of the left atrium by PCWP.

  5. Global oxygen delivery can be measured by the SvO2.

  6. PACs are not typically placed in the ED.

  7. Pitfall:

    1. Studies have not shown a mortality benefit through the use of PACs and their routine placement in critically ill patients has significantly decreased.

Central venous pressure

  1. CVP is obtained by placing a central venous catheter (CVC) in the internal jugular or subclavian vein. The tip of the CVC should ideally rest at the junction of the superior vena cava (SVC) and the right atrium.

  2. A normal CVP ranges between 4 and 6 mmHg. A CVP of 8–12 mmHg is targeted in hypotensive septic patients.

  3. Several factors can affect CVP measurements and these are summarized in Table 2.2.

  4. Pitfall:

    1. A systematic review has demonstrated a poor relationship between CVP and fluid responsiveness. The CVP should be interpreted with caution in critically ill patients that have known heart disease or structural cardiac anomalies.

Table 2.2. Factors that alter the reliability of CVP results

Pulse and systolic pressure variation

Pulse pressure variation (PPV) and systolic pressure variation (SPV) can be used to determine fluid responsiveness in a mechanically ventilated patient. Both of these methods require an arterial line for continuous measurement of arterial blood pressure.

The pulse pressure and systolic pressure show slight variations with respiration. These are caused by increased blood return to the right heart secondary to the negative intrathoracic pressure generated during inspiration. These variations are exacerbated by hypovolemia and their measurement beyond a certain threshold can be used as an indicator of fluid responsiveness.

  1. PPV = (PPmax − PPmin)/[(PPmax + PPmin)/2]

    1. PPV greater than 13% is associated with fluid responsiveness.

  2. SPV = SPmax − SPmin

    1. SPV >10 mmHg is associated with fluid responsiveness.

  3. Pitfalls:

    1. PPV and SPV should be measured in mechanically ventilated patients who are not making an effort to breathe.

    2. These patients should also be in sinus rhythm.

References

BarbierC, LoubièresY, SchmitC, et al. Respiratory changes in inferior vena cava diameter are helpful in predicting fluid responsiveness in ventilated septic patients. Intensive Care Med. 2004; 30: 1740–6.
BigatelloLM, GeorgeE. Hemodynamic monitoring. Minerva Anestesiol. 2002; 68: 21925.
MarikPE, BaramM, VahidB. Does central venous pressure predict fluid responsiveness? A systematic review of the literature and the tale of seven mares. Chest. 2008; 134: 172–8.
MeyersCM, WeingartSD. Critical care monitoring in the emergency department. Emerg Med Pract. 2007; 9(7): 1–29.
NagdevAD, MerchantRC, Tirado-GonzalezA, et al. Emergency Department Bedside Ultrasonographic Measurement of the Caval Index for Noninvasive Determination of Low Central Venous Pressure. Ann Emerg Med.; 55: 290–5.
Figure 0

Table 2.1. Basic readings on the telemetry monitor

Figure 1

Table 2.2. Factors that alter the reliability of CVP results

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