Stroke Volume Index (SVi) Calculator
- Stroke Volume Index (SVi): Explanation and Clinical Context
Stroke Volume Index is a hemodynamic parameter that describes the amount of blood ejected by the left ventricle during each cardiac contraction, adjusted to body surface area. This index refines the interpretation of stroke volume by incorporating patient size, making it a more accurate indicator of forward flow in individuals with significantly different body habitus. Its physiological relevance lies in the fact that myocardial performance and cardiac output must always be interpreted in relation to patient size in order to properly understand cardiovascular efficiency and reserve.
Typical values for SVi range from twenty five to forty five milliliters per meter square. Values below normal may indicate impaired stroke volume generation, reduced preload, impaired contractility, or increased afterload. Low SVi is frequently seen in conditions such as heart failure with reduced or preserved ejection fraction, cardiogenic shock, severe aortic stenosis, and restrictive cardiomyopathy. Conversely, elevated SVi may be seen in hyperdynamic circulatory states such as anemia, sepsis, pregnancy, or significant valvular regurgitation.
Clinicians often interpret SVi together with cardiac index, ejection fraction, filling pressures, and systemic vascular resistance in order to construct a comprehensive hemodynamic profile. This parameter is particularly valuable in advanced heart failure evaluation, assessment of cardiogenic shock phenotypes, perioperative hemodynamic monitoring, and decision making in valvular heart disease including aortic stenosis where low flow states significantly influence prognosis and treatment pathways.
Accurate assessment of SVi can guide fluid resuscitation, vasodilator therapy, inotropic support, and the titration of mechanical circulatory support. Since SVi reflects the complex interplay of preload, afterload, contractility, and heart rate, it serves as a central integrative marker for real time hemodynamic assessment across critical care, cardiology, and perioperative settings.
Reference:
Lang RM et al. Recommendations for cardiac chamber quantification by echocardiography in adults. Journal of the American Society of Echocardiography. 2015.
Cohen MG et al. Hemodynamic monitoring in the critically ill. New England Journal of Medicine. 2020.
Otto CM and Nishimura RA. Valvular Heart Disease. Braunwald Heart Disease Textbook. Twelfth Edition.
Yancy CW et al. 2022 ACC AHA HFSA Guideline for the Management of Heart Failure.
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