Central Venous Pressure in Space

  • Buckey J
  • Gaffney F
  • Lane L
  • et al.
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Abstract

Gravity affects cardiac filling pressure and intravascular fluid distribution significantly. A major central fluid shift occurs when all hydrostatic gradients are abolished on entry into microgravity (microG). Understanding the dynamics of this shift requires continuous monitoring of cardiac filling pressure; central venous pressure (CVP) measurement is the only feasible means of accomplishing this. We directly measured CVP in three subjects: one aboard the Spacelab Life Sciences-1 space shuttle flight and two aboard the Spacelab Life Sciences-2 space shuttle flight. Continuous CVP measurements, with a 4-Fr catheter, began 4 h before launch and continued into microG. Mean CVP was 8.4 cmH2O seated before flight, 15.0 cmH2O in the supine legs-elevated posture in the shuttle, and 2.5 cmH2O after 10 min in microG. Although CVP decreased, the left ventricular end-diastolic dimension measured by echocardiography increased from a mean of 4.60 cm supine preflight to 4.97 cm within 48 h in microG. These data are consistent with increased cardiac filling early in microG despite a fall in CVP, suggesting that the relationship between CVP and actual transmural left ventricular filling pressure is altered in microG.

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APA

Buckey, J. C., Gaffney, F. A., Lane, L. D., Levine, B. D., Watenpaugh, D. E., & Blomqvist, C. G. (1993). Central Venous Pressure in Space. New England Journal of Medicine, 328(25), 1853–1854. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm199306243282516

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