Development and validation of new non-invasive cardiac output models: bench to bedside
'Cardiac output,' the rate of circulation of the blood in the body, is responsible for providing the nutrients required to sustain life.
In health, it is regulated according to the needs of the body. In the case of heart disease, severe illness, and during some operations, the blood flow to the body can be inadequate to meet its needs, therefore depriving vital organs of the blood flow they need to maintain normal function.
Cardiac output is difficult to measure accurately. Currently, its measure first requires the insertion of a long tube that courses through the heart, with its tip sitting in a major vessel in the lungs. Even so, the measures have many drawbacks in risk, expense, reliability of data and practicality. Its use is therefore reserved for specific life-threatening occasions. As a result, it is not available for more liberal use where it would improve patient well-being and outcome.
For many years there has been a quest to provide accurate, practical, non-invasive means for measuring cardiac output. Some such means (many are only semi-invasive) are already commercially available. We have developed several related non-invasive, accurate, clinically practical methods of measuring cardiac output.
We are currently testing new commercial devices, as well as investigating and validating the various assumptions of our new methods and configuring them to be suitable for clinical testing.