ABSTRACT
PURPOSE: To prospectively evaluate the accuracy of noninvasive central venous pressure (CVP) assessment by compression ultrasound of a forearm vein (CUS), inferior vena cava (IVC-C) and internal jugular vein collapsibility (IJV-C) compared to invasive CVP measurement (invCVP) as the gold standard. MATERIALS AND METHODS: CUS, IVC-C and IJV-C were performed in a random sequence in 81 consecutive intensive care patients with simultaneous invCVP monitoring. Examiners were blinded to invCVP and previous examinations. RESULTS: Median invCVP was 12.0âmmHg (range 1â-â23). CUS, IVC-C and IJV-C could be obtained in 89â%, 95â% and 100â% of cases, respectively, within a median time of 188âsec [IQR 125; 270], 133âsec [IQR 100; 211] and 60âsec [IQR 50; 109], respectively. The Spearman correlation coefficient between invCVP and CUS, IVC-C, and IJV-C was 0.485 95â%-CI [0.25; 0.65], -0.186 [-0.42; 0.07], and -0.408 [-0.59; -0.18], respectively. The median absolute difference between CUS and invCVP was 3âmmHg [IQR 2; 6.75]. CVP was categorized as low (<â7âmmHg; collapsibility >â0.6), normal (7â-â12âmmHg; collapsibility 0.6â-â0.2) and high (>â12âmmHg; collapsibility <â0.2) as prespecified. The proportions of identical CVP classifications compared to invCVP were 61.4% 95%-CI [49.3%; 72.4%] with CUS, 48.7% [37.4%; 60%] with IVC-C and 51.3% [40.3%; 62.3%] with IJV-C (pâ>â0.10 for all pair-wise comparisons). CONCLUSION: The overall ability of CUS, IVC-C and IJV-C to assess invCVP was only moderate. CUS seems to be the preferable method if absolute CVP values are needed. IJV-C seems to be the fastest and most easily acquirable method, and thus may be especially valuable in emergency rooms.
Subject(s)
Blood Pressure Determination/instrumentation , Central Venous Pressure/physiology , Point-of-Care Systems , Ultrasonography/instrumentation , Aged , Female , Forearm/blood supply , Humans , Intensive Care Units , Jugular Veins/diagnostic imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Predictive Value of Tests , Prospective Studies , Veins/diagnostic imaging , Vena Cava, Inferior/diagnostic imagingSubject(s)
Diagnostic Techniques and Procedures/standards , Heparin/adverse effects , Thrombocytopenia/diagnosis , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Observation , Observer Variation , Prospective Studies , Thrombocytopenia/chemically induced , Young AdultABSTRACT
Competition is believed to be a central force limiting local diversity and controlling the structure of plant communities. However, it has been proposed that the stressed understory environment limits total understory plant density to such low levels that competitive exclusion cannot be an important factor limiting the local diversity of understory plants. To evaluate the importance of inter-seedling competition, we performed a seedling competition experiment with five shade-tolerant species in a tropical moist forest in Panama. Three-month-old seedlings were transplanted into the forest singly or with their roots intertwined with a single conspecific or heterospecific seedling in all pairwise species combinations. If competition is important, performance (survival, stem height, and number of leaves after one and six years) would be expected to be lowest with a conspecific neighbor and greatest without a neighbor. The experiment was replicated in five 0.24-m(2) plots at each of 20 sites in tall secondary forest. To test whether seedling performance differed among treatments we fitted linear mixed models (LMM) and generalized linear mixed models (GLMM), treating species identity and microsite (site and plot) as random effects. The five shade-tolerant study species all experienced good establishment with relatively high survival and growth rates. The neighbor treatment consistently affected seedling performance, but the effect was always very small, both in absolute terms and relative to the much stronger species and microsite effects. Seedlings with a conspecific neighbor consistently performed worse than seedlings with a heterospecific neighbor, but having no neighbor generally did not cause superior performance relative to the other treatments. We conclude that direct competitive interactions are relatively unimportant among understory plants in humid tropical forests.