The Non-invasive Cardiac Output (NICO) monitor (Novametrix Medical Systems Inc., Wallingford, CT, U.S.A.) utilizes a minimally-invasive partial rebreathing method to determine cardiac output by means of a differential form of the Fick equation. We evaluated the NICO monitor by comparing its output to paired measurements obtained by the standard thermodilution (TD) technique in patients who had recently undergone cardiac surgery. Forty-two paired measurements were carried out in 12 patients. The correlation between the two methods was moderate with a correlation coefficient of 0.691. Repeated measures ANOVA showed that TD measures of cardiac output were significantly higher than those obtained by the NICO monitor (P=0.0003). Comparison of the two techniques using the method described by Bland and Altman showed decreased correlation at higher values of cardiac output. We conclude that the NICO monitor may well have a place in intensive care monitoring, provided patients are not breathing spontaneously and are able to tolerate a 4 mmHg rise in P a CO 2. It is less suitable for use in patients with a high cardiac output state.
Objective: We evaluated ion exchange chromatography (IEC) on the Jeol Aminotac 500 analyzer for total homocysteine (tHcy) determination and compared it with an immunoassay method using fluorescence polarization on an Abbott IMx analyzer. Methods: IEC method validation (linearity, limit of detection, precision, interference) was made according to the French Biology Society guidelines (Société Française de Biologie Clinique). Moreover, during a 2-month period, 55 plasma samples from patients scheduled for routine tHCy measurement were assayed by both methods for determining correlation. Results: The IEC method was found linear up to at least 190 µmol/l, and the limit of detection was 1.6 µmol/l. Precision was studied with 3 controls at 6, 15 and 30 µmol/l. Intra-assay coefficients of variation (n = 14) were 8.3, 3.1 and 2.3%, respectively, and inter-assay coefficients of variation (n = 15) were 9.6, 5.1 and 4.9%, respectively. No interference was found with other sulfur-containing amino acids (methionine, cysteine). An excellent agreement was found between IEC and fluorescence polarization (Deming regression; y = 0.99x – 1.23; r = 0.97; p < 0.001). Conclusion: The IEC method for tHcy measurement shows adequate precision and correlates highly with the IMx assay. The IEC method is more time-consuming but less expensive in reagent cost and allows simultaneous determination of plasma methionine concentration which may help to explain the underlying mechanism responsible for hyperhomocysteinemia.
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