Correlation of Central with Jugular and Upper-limb Venous Pressure Measurements.


Journal

Journal of Nepal Health Research Council
ISSN: 1999-6217
Titre abrégé: J Nepal Health Res Counc
Pays: Nepal
ID NLM: 101292936

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
20 Apr 2020
Historique:
received: 05 12 2019
accepted: 19 04 2020
entrez: 27 4 2020
pubmed: 27 4 2020
medline: 25 2 2021
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Correlation data of different external reference points and methods used to measure venous pressures are scarce in the literature. We correlated central venous pressure with jugular venous pressure measured from sternal angle and with jugular and upper-limb venous pressures from zero level corresponding to mid-right-atrium level. A hospital-based observational study in the medical and surgical intensive care units was conducted for period of one year. Central venous pressure was measured from right fourth intercostal space in mid-axillary line and jugular venous pressure from sternal angle and jugular and upper-limb venous pressures from horizontal plane through the midpoint of anteroposterior line from anterior end of right fourth intercostal space to back. We measured central venous pressure by central venous cannulation and jugular and upper-limb venous pressures clinically by JVP Meter®. Upper-limb venous pressure was indicated by collapse of visible veins in dorsum of hands as the arm was slowly raised from dependent position. Correlation coefficient (r) values were 0.61 between central venous pressure and jugular venous pressure from zero level, 0.48 between central venous pressure and jugular venous pressure from sternal angle, and 0.31 between central and upper-limb venous pressures; and 0.67 and 0.50 between central venous pressure measured from right internal jugular vein and jugular venous pressure from zero level and sternal angle respectively and 0.52 and 0.44 between central venous pressure from right sub-clavian vein and jugular venous pressure from zero level and sternal angle respectively. Different correlation values indicate the need to have future investigations and consensus on the common external reference point and methods to measure venous pressures.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Correlation data of different external reference points and methods used to measure venous pressures are scarce in the literature. We correlated central venous pressure with jugular venous pressure measured from sternal angle and with jugular and upper-limb venous pressures from zero level corresponding to mid-right-atrium level.
METHODS METHODS
A hospital-based observational study in the medical and surgical intensive care units was conducted for period of one year. Central venous pressure was measured from right fourth intercostal space in mid-axillary line and jugular venous pressure from sternal angle and jugular and upper-limb venous pressures from horizontal plane through the midpoint of anteroposterior line from anterior end of right fourth intercostal space to back. We measured central venous pressure by central venous cannulation and jugular and upper-limb venous pressures clinically by JVP Meter®. Upper-limb venous pressure was indicated by collapse of visible veins in dorsum of hands as the arm was slowly raised from dependent position.
RESULTS RESULTS
Correlation coefficient (r) values were 0.61 between central venous pressure and jugular venous pressure from zero level, 0.48 between central venous pressure and jugular venous pressure from sternal angle, and 0.31 between central and upper-limb venous pressures; and 0.67 and 0.50 between central venous pressure measured from right internal jugular vein and jugular venous pressure from zero level and sternal angle respectively and 0.52 and 0.44 between central venous pressure from right sub-clavian vein and jugular venous pressure from zero level and sternal angle respectively.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
Different correlation values indicate the need to have future investigations and consensus on the common external reference point and methods to measure venous pressures.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32335590
doi: 10.33314/jnhrc.v18i1.2406
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Observational Study

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

35-40

Auteurs

Sanjit Karki (S)

Patan Academy of Health Sciences, Patan, Nepal.

Madhur Dev Bhattarai (MD)

Chitwan Medical College, Bharatpur, Nepal.

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Classifications MeSH