Title: What is the future of haemodynamic monitoring
1What is the future of haemodynamic monitoring?
- Steven M. Hollenberg, MD
- Professor of Medicine
- Robert Wood Johnson Medical School/UMDNJ
- Director, Coronary Care Unit
- Cooper University Hospital, Camden NJ
2Prediction is very difficult, especially about
the future.
3The only way to predict the future is to invent
it.
4The future of hemodynamic monitoring
- New technologies
- New hemodynamic parameters
- New methods of analysis
- Methods of evaluation
5New technologies
6New technologies
- Miniaturization
- Imagers
- X-ray
- MRI
- Ultrasound
- Sensors, effectors, and transmitters
- Surgical instruments
- Analyzers
- Optical sensors
7New technologies
- Noninvasive methods of evaluation
- Echocardiography
- Myocardial contrast visualization, perfusion
- Tissue Doppler
- Strain rate imaging
- Hand-held devices
- Bioimpedance
- Magnetic resonance imaging
8New hemodynamic parameters
- Microcirculatory flow and density
- Cardiac power
9(No Transcript)
10Cooper MARS Mission
- To study the alterations of the sublingual
microcirculatory network in humans with severe
sepsis undergoing early goal-directed
resuscitation - To determine if microcirculatory flow velocity
and perfused vessel density correlate with
conventional hemodynamic parameters in patients
with severe sepsis
11Microcirculatory flow in Sepsis
12Cardiac Power
Cardiac Power Output watt Mean Arterial
Pressure x Cardiac Output / 451
Fincke R, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2006 44340
13New methods of analysis
- Reductionist approach
- Take things apart
- Simple rules will yield simple results
- Output is proportional to input
- Engineering paradigms for hemodynamics
- Heart as a pump
- Electrical analogy with impedance as resistance
14Hemodynamic waveforms
- Time series measurements
- Smooth, large-scale continuous signal
- Discontinuous, small-scale, erratic disruptions
(noise) - Filter out the noise
- Describe the average state toward which
homeostatic mechanisms are heading
15Biology is a complex system
- Body is complex, open and dynamic
- System a group of independent but interconnected
elements that function together to comprise a
unified whole. - Emergent properties properties of the system
as a whole that cannot be predicted from
individual components - Fluctuations around the average are not just
noise, but convey information - Healthy variability nonstationary, nonlinear,
and multiscaled - Disease is characterized not by loss of
regularity but by loss of complexity
16Nonlinear analysis
- Can in theory be automated by computer
- Changes in frequency spectrum components of
variability - Breakdowns of fractal scaling with disease
- Challenges
- Some of the measures are nonintuitive
- Volume of data to be captured is daunting
- Artifacts are a real problem
- Paucity of therapeutic interventions directed at
nonlinear measures
17Evaluation of new technologies
- Monitoring tools would not be expected to improve
outcome unless tied to an effective therapeutic
strategy prompted by data they provide - Hemodynamic measures are not used in isolation
but in clinical context - Thus, a single hemodynamic variable taken alone
is rarely a good predictor of the response to an
intervention - Implications for trial design
18New evaluation paradigms
- Polar ideas that no approach can be adopted
without a pivotal RCT and that since no approach
can be rigorously tested that theory is enough
are equally constricting - Consensus conferences
- Uniform definitions
- Uniform processes of evaluation
- Managing differences of opinion
19Evaluating existing evidence and planning new
trials
- Surrogate endpoints
- Skepticism is appropriate, but there may be no
alternative - Tradeoff between power and feasibility
- How should surrogates be developed and validated?
- Translation of measures of proven efficacy in
clinical trials into effective strategies when
applied broadly
20The way forward
- We make our own future
- We need active engagement with the evaluation and
implementation of new concepts and technologies - New hemodynamic parameters
- New ways of measurement
- New methods of analysis