Abstract

Thermodilution cardiac output monitoring, using a thermistor-tipped intravascular catheter, is used in critically ill patients to guide hemodynamic therapy. Often, these patients also need magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for diagnostic or prognostic reasons. As thermodilution catheters contain metal, they are considered MRI-unsafe and advised to be removed prior to investigation. However, removal and replacement of the catheter carries risks of bleeding, perforation and infection. This research is an in vitro safety assessment of the PiCCO™ thermodilution catheter during 3 T Magnetic Resonance Imaging (3T-MRI). In a 3T-MRI environment, three different PiCCO™ catheter sizes were investigated in an agarose-gel, tissue mimicking phantom. Two temperature probes measured radiofrequency-induced heating; one at the catheter tip and one at a reference point. Magnetically induced catheter dislocation was assessed by visual observation as well as by analysis of the tomographic images. For all tested catheters, the highest measured temperature increase was 0.2 °C at the center of the bore and 0.3 °C under “worst-case” setting for the tested MRI pulse sequences. No magnetically induced catheter displacements were observed. Under the tested circumstances, no heating or dislocation of the PiCCO™ catheter was observed in a tissue mimicking phantom during 3T-MRI. Leaving the catheter in the critically ill patient during MRI investigation might pose a lower risk of complications than catheter removal and replacement.

Highlights

  • Cardiac output monitoring is frequently used to analyze the hemodynamic condition and guide therapy in critically ill patients

  • The clinical gold standard cardiac output monitor is based on the thermodilution technique, which requires a thermistor-tipped intravascular catheter

  • As these catheters all contain ferro-magnetic material, they are considered unsafe in patients requiring Magnetic Resonance Imaging investigation (MRI). [1, 2]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cardiac output monitoring is frequently used to analyze the hemodynamic condition and guide therapy in critically ill patients. A frequently used cardiac output monitoring system is the PiCCOTM device (Getinge group, Germany) It has demonstrated comparable accuracy and less complications than the pulmonary artery catheter and has the advantage to be validated in children.[3, 4] It requires a standard central venous catheter and a (thermistor-tipped; PiCCOTM) catheter placed in a large artery. This may become a safety hazard when critically ill patients with a PiCCOTM catheter need an MRI for diagnostic or prognostic reasons. We studied RF-induced heating and magnetically induced dislocation of three different PiCCOTM catheters in a tissue-mimicking phantom during 3T-MRI

Materials and methods
Discussion
Compliance with ethical standards
ASTM-F2182-11
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call