• Prehosp Emerg Care · Apr 2008

    Limitations of end-tidal CO2 as an early indicator of central hypovolemia in humans.

    • John G McManus, Kathy L Ryan, Melinda J Morton, Caroline A Rickards, William H Cooke, and Victor A Convertino.
    • U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, Fort Sam Houston, Texas 78234-6315, USA.
    • Prehosp Emerg Care. 2008 Apr 1;12(2):199-205.

    ObjectiveThis study tested the hypothesis that pulmonary end-tidal CO(2) (PETCO(2)) tracks reductions in central blood volume in human volunteers exposed to progressive central hypovolemia.MethodsMeasurements of PETCO(2), systolic (SBP), diastolic (DBP), and mean arterial (MAP) blood pressures, heart rate (HR), stroke volume (SV), and respiratory rate (RR) were obtained in 50 healthy human subjects during baseline supine rest and exposure to progressive reductions of central blood volume produced by application of lower body negative pressure (LBNP).ResultsAs increasing amounts of LBNP were applied, SBP, DBP, MAP, HR, SV, and PETCO(2) decreased (p<0.001). RR was not altered (p=1.0). The decrease in PETCO(2) did not begin to occur until 40% of maximal LBNP was applied. While PETCO(2) decreased progressively thereafter, the range of baseline values (28.8-49.2 mmHg) varied more than the reduction in PETCO(2) elicited by maximal LBNP (baseline=40.1+/-0.6 mmHg; maximal LBNP=29.8+/-1.0 mmHg). The earliest significant alteration was observed in SV, which occurred at 20% of maximal LBNP. MAP did not decline significantly until 80% of maximal LBNP was reached. PETCO(2) was correlated positively with SV (r(2)=0.87).ConclusionsAlthough PETCO(2)tracked decreases in SV in this human model of progressive central hypovolemia, reductions in PETCO(2)were small relative to the range of baseline values. Thus, monitoring such small reductions in PETCO(2) as an early warning of imminent cardiovascular collapse during hemorrhage may not be clinically useful without monitors capable of providing continuous trending.

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