Abstract

Cardiac output is estimated by least squares fitting of a model of pulmonary gas exchange to measurements of respiratory gas composition obtained with a mass spectrometer during a rebreathing maneuver. This new technique estimates cardiac output on spontaneously breathing subjects at rest and requires neither central venous nor arterial blood samples. Principal features of the technique are the use of multiple gases simultaneously in the analysis, the use of a mathematical model for breath-to-breath evaluation of gas exchange, and simultaneous estimation of gas exchange and alveolar gas tensions with the same instrumentation. The technique is compared with thermal dilution estimates in dogs before and during hemorrhagic shock. Two-thirds of these estimates were within 20% of one another. The standard deviation of replication was 15%. Shortcomings, possibilities for improvement, and possible applications are discussed.

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