Ventilated Patients Clinical Trial
Official title:
Is There a Correlation Between the Pulmonary Artery Pressure and the Acceleration of the Flow in the Pulmonary Artery Evaluated by Transesophageal Echocardiography (TOE) ?
The measure of the pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) is a very useful index in intensive care
to estimate right ventricular after load. The reference technique for this measure is the
right catheterism which is an invasive technique. It is possible to estimate the pulmonary
artery pressure by using transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) which allows, using the
continuous Doppler, the measure of maximum speed of tricuspid regurgitation (TRvmax). The
measure of the TRvmax can however be difficult for intensive care patients with little
echogenicity or impossible for those having no tricuspid leak. The evaluation of the
tricuspid regurgitation is also particularly difficult using TOE. To avoid these drawbacks,
one can use the analysis of the pulmonary ejection in the pulmonary artery (PAAT) with TOE.
However, the data of the literature are controversial on this method and it was not
validated in mechanically ventilated intensive care patients.
The aim of this work is to compare three methods of measure of the PAP: the measure TRVMAX
(by means of the tricuspid leak) by transthoracic echocardiography, the measure of the TAAP
by transesophageal ultrasound and the direct measure of the pulmonary pressures by right
catheterization, in ventilated patients already monitored with a catheter in the right
cavities for usual indications in intensive care (ARDS, shock). We shall analyze then the
correlation between the TRVmax, the TAAP and the pressures measured by the right catheterism
which serves as reference technique.
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Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Basic Science
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