# Trends and Challenges in Noninvasive Hemodynamic Monitoring of Neonates Following Cardiac Surgery: A Narrative Review

**Authors:** Carmina Nedelcu, Nicolae Sebastian Ionescu, Ana Mihaela Bizubac, Cristina Filip, Catalin Cirstoveanu

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/life15101621 · Life · 2025-10-17

## TL;DR

This review discusses current methods and challenges in noninvasive monitoring of blood flow in neonates after heart surgery.

## Contribution

The paper provides a comprehensive overview of emerging noninvasive techniques for neonatal hemodynamic monitoring.

## Key findings

- Current monitoring relies on indirect indicators like blood pressure and lactate, which offer limited insights.
- New noninvasive tools like NIRS and biosensing enable continuous, real-time hemodynamic tracking.
- Multimodal monitoring is recommended to better assess systemic and regional perfusion in neonates.

## Abstract

Hemodynamic monitoring is essential in the postoperative management of neonates undergoing cardiac surgery, enabling early identification of circulatory failure and its underlying cause, optimization of oxygen delivery to tissues, and evaluation of treatment response. Despite its significant role, there is still no consensus and there remains substantial heterogeneity in bedside hemodynamic monitoring practices. Pediatric intensivists typically rely on macro- and microcirculatory indicators, including arterial blood pressure, urine output, capillary refill time, mixed venous oxygen saturation, lactate concentration, and serial echocardiographic evaluations. However, most of these are indirect hemodynamic indicators and provide only intermittent snapshots of the hemodynamic status, which can be very fluctuating following cardiac surgery. Technological advancements have driven a shift toward continuous, noninvasive monitoring techniques, such as near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), electrical biosensing technology, and microcirculatory assessment tools. Real-time, simultaneous tracking of multiple physiological variables through a multimodal hemodynamic monitoring protocol facilitates the understanding of systemic and regional perfusion and oxygenation. This narrative review aims to summarize current techniques and innovations in neonatal hemodynamic monitoring following cardiac surgery, combining clinical evaluation with both intermittent and continuous noninvasive techniques.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** circulatory failure (MESH:D012769)
- **Chemicals:** lactate (MESH:D019344), oxygen (MESH:D010100)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

87 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12565398/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12565398