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The Ability of Military Critical Care Air Transport Members to Visually Estimate Percent Systolic Pressure Variation
被引:0
作者:
Cheney, Mark A.
[1
,2
]
Smith, Maia P.
[3
]
Burkhardt, Joshua N.
[1
,4
]
Davis, William T.
[5
]
Brown, Daniel J.
[6
]
Horn, Christopher
[7
]
Hare, Jonathan
[1
]
Alderman, Mark
[1
]
Nelson, Eric
[1
]
Proctor, Melissa
[1
]
Goodman, Michael
[7
]
Sams, Valerie
[1
,7
]
Thiele, Robert
[8
]
Strilka, Richard J.
[1
,7
]
机构:
[1] Univ Cincinnati, Ctr Sustainment Trauma & Readiness Skills, Cincinnati, OH 45219 USA
[2] Univ Cincinnati, Dept Anesthesiol, Cincinnati, OH 45219 USA
[3] Air Force Res Lab, Wright Patterson AFB, OH 45324 USA
[4] Univ Cincinnati, Dept Emergency Med, Cincinnati, OH 45219 USA
[5] United States Route Care Res Ctr, 59th Med Wing,Sci & Technol, Lackland AFB, TX 78236 USA
[6] Wright State Univ, Dept Emergency Med, Dayton, OH 45324 USA
[7] Univ Cincinnati, Dept Surg, Cincinnati, OH 45219 USA
[8] Univ Virginia, Dept Anesthesiol, Hlth Sci Ctr, Charlottesville, VA 22903 USA
关键词:
PREDICTING FLUID RESPONSIVENESS;
PULSE PRESSURE;
OPEN ABDOMEN;
MANAGEMENT;
BALANCE;
SHOCK;
PARAMETERS;
SURVIVAL;
THERAPY;
SURGERY;
D O I:
10.1093/milmed/usad281
中图分类号:
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号:
1002 ;
100201 ;
摘要:
Introduction Inappropriate fluid management during patient transport may lead to casualty morbidity. Percent systolic pressure variation (%SPV) is one of several technologies that perform a dynamic assessment of fluid responsiveness (FT-DYN). Trained anesthesia providers can visually estimate and use %SPV to limit the incidence of erroneous volume management decisions to 1-4%. However, the accuracy of visually estimated %SPV by other specialties is unknown. The aim of this article is to determine the accuracy of estimated %SPV and the incidence of erroneous volume management decisions for Critical Care Air Transport (CCAT) team members before and after training to visually estimate and utilize %SPV. Material and Methods In one sitting, CCAT team providers received didactics defining %SPV and indicators of fluid responsiveness and treatment with %SPV & LE;7 and & GE;14.5 defining a fluid nonresponsive and responsive patient, respectively; they were then shown ten 45-second training arterial waveforms on a simulated Propaq M portable monitor's screen. Study subjects were asked to visually estimate %SPV for each arterial waveform and queried whether they would treat with a fluid bolus. After each training simulation, they were told the true %SPV. Seven days post-training, the subjects were shown a different set of ten 45-second testing simulations and asked to estimate %SPV and choose to treat, or not. Nonparametric limits of agreement for differences between true and estimated %SPV were analyzed using Bland-Altman graphs. In addition, three errors were defined: (1) %SPV visual estimate errors that would label a volume responsive patient as nonresponsive, or vice versa; (2) incorrect treatment decisions based on estimated %SPV (algorithm application errors); and (3) incorrect treatment decisions based on true %SPV (clinically significant treatment errors). For the training and testing simulations, these error rates were compared between, and within, provider groups. Results Sixty-one physicians (MDs), 64 registered nurses (RNs), and 53 respiratory technicians (RTs) participated in the study. For testing simulations, the incidence and 95% CI for %SPV estimate errors with sufficient magnitude to result in a treatment error were 1.4% (0.5%, 3.2%), 1.6% (0.6%, 3.4%), and 4.1% (2.2%, 6.9%) for MDs, RNs, and RTs, respectively. However, clinically significant treatment errors were statistically more common for all provider types, occurring at a rate of 7%, 10%, and 23% (all P < .05). Finally, students did not show clinically relevant reductions in their errors between training and testing simulations. Conclusions Although most practitioners correctly visually estimated %SPV and all students completed the training in interpreting and applying %SPV, all groups persisted in making clinically significant treatment errors with moderate to high frequency. This suggests that the treatment errors were more often driven by misapplying FT-DYN algorithms rather than by inaccurate visual estimation of %SPV. Furthermore, these errors were not responsive to training, suggesting that a decision-making cognitive aid may improve CCAT teams' ability to apply FT-DYN technologies.
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页码:1514 / 1522
页数:9
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