Stroke volume variation as an index of fluid responsiveness can be impaired by mental stress

Autor: R, Wiszt, B, Czippelova, J, Cernanova Krohova, N, Mazgutova, Z, Turianikova, Z, Lazarova, M, Javorka
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of physiology and pharmacology : an official journal of the Polish Physiological Society. 73(2)
ISSN: 1899-1505
Popis: Cardiac stroke volume variation (SVV) measurement is one of the techniques to detect fluid-responsive hypovolemia in patients under mechanical ventilation. There is an ongoing effort to apply SVV for this purpose also in conscious patients. However, the effect of mental stress often occurring in conscious patients as a potential confounding factor on SVV is not known. The aim of our study was to compare effect of simulated hypovolemia and mental stress on SVV in healthy volunteers in the context of potential confounders - breathing pattern, respiratory sinus arrhythmia magnitude and sex. We examined 102 young healthy volunteers (58 females), mean age 18.6 years. Finger arterial blood pressure was recorded by volume-clamp photoplethysmographic method (Finometer Pro, FMS, Amsterdam, Netherland). From the blood pressure curve, a built in ModelFlow algorithm calculated stroke volume values (SV) for each heartbeat. Respiratory volume was recorded using calibrated respiratory inductive plethysmography (RespiTrace, NIMS, Miami Beach, FL, USA). During four phases of examination protocol (supine rest, head-up tilt (HUT), supine recovery, mental arithmetic task (MA)) we analyzed SVV related to respiratory activity. While during HUT we found an expected increase in SVV together with mean SV decrease, SVV significantly decreased during MA. The observed changes during MA could be attributed to an increased respiratory rate and/or decreased respiratory sinus arrhythmia. Sex related differences in SVV responses to HUT and MA were observed. We conclude that mental stress together with respiratory sinus arrhythmia and respiratory pattern changes can significantly influence SVV as a potential index of fluid responsiveness in conscious patients.
Databáze: OpenAIRE