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Baan, J., Aouw Jong, T. T., Kerkhof, P. L., Moene, R. J., van Dijk, A. D., van der Velde, E. T., and Koops, J., (1981) Con-tinuous stroke volume and cardiac output from in-tra-ventricular dimensions obtained with an impedance catheter. Cardiovascular Research, 15, 328–334.

  • Listed: 24 May 2026 2 h 56 min

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Baan, J., Aouw Jong, T. T., Kerkhof, P. L., Moene, R. J., van Dijk, A. D., van der Velde, E. T., and Koops, J., (1981) Con-tinuous stroke volume and cardiac output from in-tra-ventricular dimensions obtained with an impedance catheter. Cardiovascular Research, 15, 328–334.

**Baan, J., Aouw Jong, T. T., Kerkhof, P. L., Moene, R. J., van Dijk, A. D., van der Velde, E. T., and Koops, J., (1981) Con­tinuous stroke volume and cardiac output from intra‑ventricular dimensions obtained with an impedance catheter. Cardiovascular Research, 15, 328–334.**

### A Turning Point in Hemodynamic Monitoring

In the early 1980s, clinicians and researchers were still wrestling with the most reliable ways to gauge a patient’s heart performance in real time. Traditional methods—like thermodilution—were invasive, cumbersome, and often provided only intermittent snapshots of cardiac output. The 1981 paper by Baan and colleagues, *“Continuous stroke volume and cardiac output from intra‑ventricular dimensions obtained with an impedance catheter,”* marked a watershed moment. It introduced a novel, continuous approach that could revolutionize critical care, cardiac surgery, and the broader field of cardiovascular research.

### What is an Impedance Catheter?

An impedance catheter measures the electrical resistance (impedance) across the heart’s chambers. As the heart contracts and relaxes, blood volume—and consequently impedance—fluctuates. By translating these impedance changes into volumetric data, the catheter provides real‑time estimates of ventricular dimensions, stroke volume, and ultimately, cardiac output. This method is minimally invasive, offering clinicians a near “real‑time window” into the heart’s pumping efficiency.

### The 1981 Breakthrough

Baan et al.’s study demonstrated that intra‑ventricular dimensions derived from impedance readings could reliably predict stroke volume and cardiac output. The authors validated their technique against gold‑standard measurements and found a high correlation, even during dynamic physiological changes. Their work bridged a critical gap: continuous, bedside monitoring of cardiac performance without the need for large, bulky equipment or repeated, time‑consuming interventions.

### Why Does This Matter Today?

Modern intensive care units and operating rooms depend on continuous hemodynamic data to guide fluid therapy, vasopressor titration, and cardiac support. Although newer technologies—such as pulse‑wave contour analysis and non‑invasive cardiac output monitors—have emerged, the underlying principle pioneered by Baan et al. remains central. Impedance cardiography devices, often used in research and some clinical settings, still rely on the same physics of electrical impedance to estimate cardiac output.

### Impact on Research and Clinical Practice

The study spurred a wave of innovation in hemodynamic monitoring. Subsequent research refined impedance catheter design, improved signal filtering, and expanded applications to ambulatory cardiac monitoring. In clinical practice, continuous stroke volume measurement helps detect early signs of heart failure, guide decongestive therapy, and monitor the effectiveness of interventions such as inotropes and vasodilators.

### Keywords for Better Visibility

– **Cardiac output measurement**
– **Stroke volume**
– **Impedance catheter**
– **Intra‑ventricular dimensions**
– **Continuous monitoring**
– **Cardiovascular research 1981**
– **Hemodynamic monitoring**
– **Baan et al. 1981**
– **Cardiac physiology**
– **Invasive monitoring**

### A Legacy That Continues

The Baan et al. paper may be more than two decades old, but its influence endures. By converting the subtle shifts in electrical impedance into actionable cardiovascular data, they laid the groundwork for a generation of tools that keep patients’ hearts in check—whether in a bustling ICU or at the bedside. As we move toward increasingly personalized and data‑driven medicine, the humble impedance catheter remains a testament to the power of innovative thinking in the pursuit of better patient outcomes.

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