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Figure 3 | Journal of Intensive Care

Figure 3

From: Limitations of global end-diastolic volume index as a parameter of cardiac preload in the early phase of severe sepsis: a subgroup analysis of a multicenter, prospective observational study

Figure 3

Comparison of GEDI between patients with SVV ≤13% and SVV >13% on day 0. Among patients with the SIMD group, GEDI was significantly higher in patients with SVV >13% than in patients with SVV ≤13% on the day of enrollment (SVV >13%, 872 [785–996] mL/m2; SVV ≤13%, 640 [597–696] mL/m2; p < 0.001). In contrast, GEDI was not significantly different between patients with SVV ≤13% and SVV >13% in the non-SIMD group on the day of enrollment (SVV ≤13%, 852 [687–934] mL/m2; SVV >13%, 787 [620–998] mL/m2; p = 0.629). SIMD, sepsis-induced myocardial dysfunction; GEDI, global end-diastolic volume index; SVV, stroke volume variation.

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