Cardiac Output Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Cardiac Output stocks.

Cardiac Output Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Apr 26 EW Factors Setting the Tone For Lantheus' (LNTH) Q1 Earnings
Apr 26 EW Edwards Lifesciences (EW) Q1 Earnings Top, 2024 Sales View Up
Apr 26 EW Q1 2024 Edwards Lifesciences Corp Earnings Call
Apr 26 EW Edwards gets Q1 boost as Pascal valve repair sales ramp up
Apr 26 EW Edwards Lifesciences Corp (EW) (Q1 2024) Earnings Call Transcript Highlights: Robust Growth and ...
Apr 26 EW Edwards Lifesciences Corporation (EW) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
Apr 25 EW Compared to Estimates, Edwards Lifesciences (EW) Q1 Earnings: A Look at Key Metrics
Apr 25 EW Edwards Lifesciences Q1 Earnings: Mixed Results with Adjusted EPS Beating Estimates
Apr 25 EW Edwards Lifesciences (EW) Q1 Earnings and Revenues Top Estimates
Apr 25 EW Edwards Lifesciences Nabs Quarterly Beat And Plans A 'Critical' Spinoff
Apr 25 EW Edwards Lifesciences Non-GAAP EPS of $0.66 beats by $0.02, revenue of $1.6B beats by $30M
Apr 25 EW Edwards Lifesciences Reports First Quarter Results
Apr 25 EW Decoding Edwards Lifesciences's Options Activity: What's the Big Picture?
Apr 24 EW Edwards Lifesciences Q1 2024 Earnings Preview
Apr 24 EW Watch These 3 MedTech Stocks This Earnings Season: Beat or Miss?
Apr 24 EW Rising Demand Likely to Aid GE HealthCare's (GEHC) Q1 Earnings
Apr 24 EW Ongoing Procedural Growth May Aid Stryker's (SYK) Q1 Earnings
Apr 23 EW DexCom (DXCM) to Report Q1 Earnings: What's in the Cards?
Apr 23 EW Boston Scientific, Dexcom and Edwards next as earnings season rolls on
Apr 22 EW Is a Beat Likely for West Pharmaceutical (WST) in Q1 Earnings?
Cardiac Output

Cardiac output (CO, also denoted by the symbols



Q


{\displaystyle Q}
and







Q
˙




c




{\displaystyle {\dot {Q}}_{c}}
), is a term used in cardiac physiology that describes the volume of blood being pumped by the heart, in particular by the left or right ventricle, per unit time. Cardiac output is the product of the heart rate (HR), or the number of heart beats per minute (bpm), and the stroke volume (SV), which is the volume of blood pumped from the ventricle per beat; thus, CO = HR × SV. Values for cardiac output are usually denoted as L/min. For a healthy person weighing 70 kg, the cardiac output at rest averages about 5 L/min; assuming a heart rate of 70 beats/min, the stroke volume would be approximately 70 mL.
Because cardiac output is related to the quantity of blood delivered to various parts of the body, it is an important indicator of how efficiently the heart can meet the body's demands for perfusion. For instance, physical exercise requires a higher than resting-level of oxygen to support increased muscle activity, where, in the case of heart failure, actual CO may be insufficient to support even simple activities of daily living; nor can it increase sufficiently to meet the higher metabolic demands stemming from even moderate exercise.
Cardiac output is a global blood flow parameter of interest in hæmodynamics, the study of the flow of blood. The factors affecting stroke volume and heart rate also affect cardiac output. The figure at the right margin illustrates this dependency and lists some of these factors. A detailed hierarchical illustration is provided in a subsequent figure.
There are many methods of measuring CO, both invasively and non-invasively; each has advantages and drawbacks as described below.

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