Application of an improved intracardiac fibreoptic system.
Open Access
- 1 September 1978
- Vol. 40 (9), 1010-1013
- https://doi.org/10.1136/hrt.40.9.1010
Abstract
An improved fibreoptic in vivo haemoreflection system has been used in over 200 patients. Continuous recording of oxygen saturation while moving the catheter permits measurement of simultaneous pressure and oxygen saturation at almost an unlimited number of sites through the right heart. The oxygen saturation can be continuously monitored and the response is sufficiently fast to permit investigation of changes in oxygen saturation during portions of the cardiac cycle. Dye dilution curves have been recorded from over 200 patients. The only blood withdrawn for the dye dilution curve was the 3 ml needed for checking the calibration of the instrument. We have found that the calibration is extremely stable. In some instances where it has been deemed impractical to obtain blood for calibration, the calibration factor for each catheter may be used. In any case, the calibration check is performed at the end of the study and does not present problems of sterility. The calibration factor may yield a correction factor which then applies uniformly to all the cardiac output values obtained during the study.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- HEMODYNAMIC ADAPTATIONS IN THE NEWBORN INFANTPediatrics, 1965
- Clinical applications of an improved, rapidly responding fiberoptic catheterThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1965
- The Use of Fiberoptics in Clinical Cardiac CatheterizationCirculation, 1965
- The Use of Fiberoptics in Clinical Cardiac CatheterizationCirculation, 1965
- Intracardiac Oximetry in Congenital Heart DiseaseCirculation, 1964