Laura Bogatu, Simona Turco, Massimo Mischi, Lars Schmitt, Pierre Woerlee, Rick Bezemer, Arthur R Bouwman, Erik H H M Korsten, Jens Muehlsteff
Hemodynamic monitoring technologies are evolving continuously-a large number of bedside monitoring options are becoming available in the clinic. Methods such as echocardiography, electrical bioimpedance, and calibrated/uncalibrated analysis of pulse contours are becoming increasingly common. This is leading to a decline in the use of highly invasive monitoring and allowing for safer, more accurate, and continuous measurements. The new devices mainly aim to monitor the well-known hemodynamic variables (e.g., novel pulse contour, bioreactance methods are aimed at measuring widely-used variables such as blood pressure, cardiac output)...
February 16, 2023: Sensors