Does indocyanine green accurately measure plasma volume early after cardiac surgery?
Potential overestimation of plasma volume (PV) determination by the conventional indocyanine green (ICG) dilution method (PV-ICG) can occur when generalized capillary protein leakage is present, because ICG binds to proteins. We recently reported that this overestimation can be recognized by simultaneous measurement of the initial distribution volume of glucose (IDVG). We examined whether overestimation of PV-ICG and further ICG-pulse dye densitometry-derived plasma volume (PV-PDD) can occur early after cardiac surgery by using the PV-ICG/IDVG ratio as an indicator. Possible overestimation was defined as a ratio higher than 0.45. Twenty-four consecutive postcardiac surgical patients were enrolled. PV-ICG, PV-PDD, and IDVG were calculated simultaneously after admission to the intensive care unit and on the first postoperative day. The mean +/- SD PV-ICG/IDVG ratio for 47 recordings was 0.38 +/- 0.05. Four had a PV-ICG/IDVG ratio higher than 0.45, and the highest was 0.48. The mean PV-PD
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