
Cardiac Output Calculator
Calculate cardiac output (CO), cardiac index (CI), stroke volume (SV), and stroke volume index (SVI) using either the heart rate times stroke volume equation or the Fick principle. Includes Du Bois body surface area indexing, clinical zone interpretation for low, normal, and high output states, and a waterfall visualization showing how heart rate and stroke volume combine to produce cardiac output.
| Classification | Cardiac Index (L/min/m2) | Cardiac Output (L/min) | Clinical Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Severe low (cardiogenic shock) | < 1.8 | Typically < 3.2 | Meets hemodynamic criteria for cardiogenic shock. Urgent evaluation required. |
| Low output | 1.8 to 2.2 | Typically 3.2 to 3.9 | Reduced cardiac performance. Correlate with lactate, urine output, mentation. |
| Borderline | 2.2 to 2.5 | Typically 3.9 to 4.5 | Below normal range but may be adequate in some patients. Clinical correlation needed. |
| Normal | 2.5 to 4.0 | Typically 4.5 to 7.2 | Normal resting hemodynamics for most adults. |
| High output | > 4.0 | Typically > 7.2 | Elevated output. Consider anemia, thyrotoxicosis, sepsis, AV fistula, pregnancy. |
| Parameter | Normal Range | Reduced | Elevated |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiac Output (CO) | 4.0 – 8.0 L/min | < 4.0 L/min | > 8.0 L/min |
| Cardiac Index (CI) | 2.5 – 4.0 L/min/m2 | < 2.5 L/min/m2 | > 4.0 L/min/m2 |
| Stroke Volume (SV) | 60 – 100 ml/beat | < 60 ml/beat | > 100 ml/beat |
| SV Index (SVI) | 33 – 47 ml/beat/m2 | < 33 ml/beat/m2 | > 47 ml/beat/m2 |
| Heart Rate (HR) | 60 – 100 bpm | < 60 bpm (bradycardia) | > 100 bpm (tachycardia) |
| Mixed Venous SvO2 | 65 – 75 per cent | < 65 per cent | > 80 per cent |
| Arterial SaO2 | 95 – 100 per cent | < 95 per cent (hypoxaemia) | N/A |
| Hemoglobin (adult) | 12 – 17 g/dL | < 12 g/dL (anemia) | > 17 g/dL (polycythaemia) |
Current calculation breakdown:
| Step | Calculation | Result |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Body Surface Area (Du Bois) | 0.007184 x 69.9^0.425 x 170.2^0.725 | 1.80 m2 |
| 2. Cardiac Output | 75 bpm x 70 ml / 1000 | 5.25 L/min |
| 3. Cardiac Index | 5.25 / 1.80 | 2.91 L/min/m2 |
| 4. Stroke Volume Index | 70 / 1.80 | 38.9 ml/beat/m2 |
About This Cardiac Output Calculator
This cardiac output calculator is intended for clinicians, medical students, cardiology trainees, critical care and anesthesiology practitioners, and anyone studying cardiovascular physiology. It computes cardiac output (CO), cardiac index (CI), stroke volume (SV), and stroke volume index (SVI) using two widely taught methods: the direct heart rate times stroke volume equation and the Fick principle based on oxygen consumption and the arteriovenous oxygen content difference.
The underlying formulae follow standard cardiology and critical care references. Body surface area is computed using the Du Bois and Du Bois formula from 1916, which remains the classical reference in hemodynamic indexing. Arterial and venous oxygen content use the Hufner constant of 1.34 ml oxygen per gram of hemoglobin. Clinical zone thresholds are based on widely accepted cutoffs for cardiogenic shock (CI less than 1.8), reduced output (CI 1.8 to 2.5), normal range (CI 2.5 to 4.0), and high output states (CI greater than 4.0 L/min/m2).
The tool helps users understand how heart rate and stroke volume combine to determine total cardiac output through a visual waterfall chart, how body size influences clinical interpretation via cardiac index, and where a patient’s hemodynamic status falls on the severity zone bar. The severity reference and clinical criteria tabs provide normal ranges for all major hemodynamic parameters. This calculator does not replace direct bedside measurement or the judgement of a qualified clinician, and all clinical decisions should be made in the full context of history, examination, and appropriate investigations.
Cardiac Output Calculator: Complete Clinical Guide
Cardiac output is one of the most fundamental measures of cardiovascular function. It represents the total volume of blood the heart pumps out of the left ventricle each minute and is the primary determinant of how much oxygen and nutrient-rich blood reaches the body's tissues. When cardiac output falls below what the body needs, organs begin to suffer: the kidneys produce less urine, the brain becomes confused, and the extremities turn cool and mottled. When it rises excessively, the heart strains to meet metabolic demand and eventually decompensates. Understanding cardiac output, its determinants, and the normal reference ranges is therefore central to the assessment of almost every seriously ill patient in intensive care, the cardiology clinic, the operating room, and the emergency department.
This calculator computes cardiac output (CO), stroke volume (SV), cardiac index (CI), and stroke volume index (SVI) using the two most widely taught methods: the heart rate times stroke volume equation and the Fick principle. It also provides body surface area indexing using the Du Bois formula so that results can be compared meaningfully across patients of different body sizes. All computations use globally recognized formulae that appear in standard cardiology and critical care textbooks, so the results are valid for clinical, educational, and research reference worldwide.
What Is Cardiac Output
Cardiac output is the volume of blood ejected from the left ventricle per minute, expressed in liters per minute (L/min). In a resting adult of average build, cardiac output typically falls between 4 and 8 L/min, with 5 L/min often cited as a textbook average. During heavy exercise, a trained athlete can reach a cardiac output of 25 L/min or more. During severe cardiogenic shock, cardiac output may drop below 2.5 L/min, a state that rapidly leads to multi-organ failure if not corrected.
The concept of cardiac output is easy to grasp in principle but rich in clinical implications. Every beat of the heart, the left ventricle contracts and ejects a certain quantity of blood, called the stroke volume. Multiply the stroke volume by the number of beats per minute and you have the cardiac output. A heart that beats 70 times per minute and ejects 70 milliliters per beat produces a cardiac output of 4.9 L/min. The same heart beating 100 times per minute at the same stroke volume produces 7 L/min, and at a stroke volume of 50 ml per beat at 70 bpm the output drops to 3.5 L/min. These simple arithmetic relationships govern much of hemodynamic medicine.
The Fick Principle Method
The Fick principle, first described by the German physiologist Adolf Fick in 1870, provides an alternative way to calculate cardiac output based on oxygen consumption and the difference between the oxygen content of arterial and mixed venous blood. It states that the amount of oxygen taken up by the body per minute must equal the amount of oxygen delivered to the tissues, which equals cardiac output multiplied by the arteriovenous oxygen content difference. Rearranged to solve for cardiac output, the equation becomes the foundation of direct Fick measurement in the cardiac catheterisation laboratory.
In most clinical and educational settings, oxygen consumption is estimated rather than directly measured, using an assumed value of roughly 125 ml/min per square meter of body surface area. This estimate, while convenient, introduces a margin of error and is one reason that indirect Fick measurements are considered less accurate than direct Fick measurements or thermodilution. When greater accuracy is required, VO2 is measured directly by expired gas analysis using a metabolic cart.
Cardiac Index and Body Surface Area
Raw cardiac output does not by itself tell the complete story because body size matters. A cardiac output of 5 L/min is adequate for a small adult but grossly inadequate for a large one. To adjust for body size, clinicians index cardiac output to body surface area (BSA), producing the cardiac index (CI), which is expressed in L/min/m². The normal cardiac index ranges from approximately 2.5 to 4.0 L/min/m². Values below 2.2 L/min/m² are generally considered evidence of reduced cardiac performance, and values below 1.8 L/min/m² meet one of the hemodynamic criteria for cardiogenic shock.
Stroke volume index (SVI) is a related quantity that divides stroke volume by body surface area, yielding milliliters per beat per square meter. A normal SVI falls between approximately 33 and 47 ml/beat/m². Like cardiac index, SVI allows meaningful comparison between patients of different sizes and is useful in deciding whether a low stroke volume truly reflects impaired ventricular performance or merely a small body habitus.
Clinical Significance of Cardiac Output
Cardiac output is the currency of hemodynamic medicine. When a patient presents with hypotension, cool extremities, oliguria, or confusion, the central question becomes whether the underlying problem is inadequate cardiac output, inadequate vascular tone, or both. Different answers lead to different treatments: fluids and vasopressors for vasodilatory shock, inotropes and afterload reduction for cardiogenic shock, and surgical or procedural intervention for obstructive shock. Measuring or estimating cardiac output is therefore often the pivotal step in directing therapy.
In chronic heart failure, cardiac output gradually declines as the ventricle fails, and patients experience fatigue, reduced exercise tolerance, and eventually pulmonary congestion. In high-output states such as severe anemia, thyrotoxicosis, arteriovenous fistulae, and septic shock, cardiac output is abnormally elevated, but the elevation is paradoxically inadequate for tissue demand. In the operating room, cardiac output monitoring guides fluid and inotrope use during major surgery. In the intensive care unit, it is used to titrate vasoactive medications, assess response to resuscitation, and predict outcome.
For a resting adult, the textbook ranges are cardiac output 4 to 8 L/min, stroke volume 60 to 100 ml per beat, cardiac index 2.5 to 4.0 L/min/m², and stroke volume index 33 to 47 ml/beat/m². These values vary with age, sex, fitness, and body composition, so individual readings should always be interpreted in clinical context.
Determinants of Cardiac Output
Four physiological variables determine cardiac output: heart rate, preload, afterload, and contractility. Heart rate is the most immediate modulator and responds to autonomic tone, medications, and metabolic demand. Preload reflects the volume of blood returning to the ventricle and stretching it at end-diastole; Starling's law states that within physiological limits, a greater preload produces a greater stroke volume. Afterload is the resistance the ventricle must overcome to eject blood and is dominated by systemic vascular resistance for the left ventricle and pulmonary vascular resistance for the right. Contractility is the intrinsic force-generating ability of the myocardium, independent of loading conditions.
Each determinant can be manipulated therapeutically. Heart rate can be slowed with beta-blockers or increased with pacing or chronotropic drugs. Preload can be raised with fluids or lowered with diuretics and venodilators. Afterload can be reduced with vasodilators such as ACE inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers. Contractility can be augmented with inotropes such as dobutamine, milrinone, and levosimendan. The art of hemodynamic management lies in recognising which determinant is abnormal and applying the appropriate intervention.
Measurement Methods in Clinical Practice
Cardiac output can be measured by several methods, each with its own advantages and limitations. The gold standard in the cardiac catheterisation laboratory has traditionally been thermodilution using a pulmonary artery catheter, in which a cold saline bolus is injected into the right atrium and the resulting temperature change in the pulmonary artery is analyzed to derive cardiac output. The direct Fick method, using measured oxygen consumption and true mixed venous sampling, is considered even more accurate but is technically demanding.
Non-invasive methods have grown in popularity because they avoid the risks of central catheterisation. Echocardiography calculates stroke volume from the left ventricular outflow tract diameter and the velocity-time integral obtained by Doppler. Pulse contour analysis derives cardiac output from the arterial pressure waveform after calibration. Bioreactance and bioimpedance methods measure changes in thoracic electrical properties during the cardiac cycle. Each of these non-invasive methods has validated use cases but also well-documented limitations in certain patient populations.
This tool performs the arithmetic of cardiac output calculation using heart rate and stroke volume, or using the Fick principle. It does not replace invasive or non-invasive clinical measurement. For patient care decisions, use direct bedside measurement with a validated monitor interpreted by a qualified clinician.
Low Cardiac Output States
Low cardiac output describes any clinical situation in which the heart fails to pump enough blood to meet the metabolic needs of the body. The commonest causes are acute myocardial infarction, decompensated heart failure, severe valvular disease, cardiac tamponade, massive pulmonary embolism, and severe arrhythmias. The clinical picture typically includes hypotension, tachycardia, cool and mottled extremities, reduced urine output, altered mental status, and elevated lactate levels. If left untreated, low cardiac output progresses to multi-organ failure and death.
Management depends on the underlying cause. Inotropic support may be needed to improve contractility. Afterload reduction with vasodilators or with mechanical circulatory support such as intra-aortic balloon counterpulsation, percutaneous ventricular assist devices, or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation may be required when pharmacological therapy alone is insufficient. Correction of mechanical causes such as tamponade or embolus is urgent. Throughout, serial measurement of cardiac output, filling pressures, mixed venous oxygen saturation, and lactate helps track the response to therapy.
High Cardiac Output States
High cardiac output is less common but equally important to recognise. Causes include severe anemia, hyperthyroidism, pregnancy, large arteriovenous fistulae, beriberi (thiamine deficiency), Paget disease of bone, cirrhosis, and the early hyperdynamic phase of sepsis. In these states, total body oxygen demand outstrips supply, or peripheral vascular resistance is abnormally low, so the heart compensates by increasing its output. Although cardiac output is numerically elevated, tissue perfusion may still be inadequate because the underlying pathophysiology disturbs the normal distribution or utilization of blood flow.
Persistent high-output states can lead to high-output cardiac failure, in which the heart becomes overworked and dilated despite elevated output values. Treatment focuses on the underlying cause: transfusion for anemia, antithyroid therapy or radioiodine for hyperthyroidism, ligation or embolisation for fistulae, thiamine replacement for beriberi, and source control for sepsis.
Age, Sex, and Population Considerations
Resting cardiac output is broadly similar across adult men and women when indexed to body surface area, although absolute cardiac output tends to be larger in men because of greater body size. During pregnancy, cardiac output rises substantially, reaching 30 to 50 per cent above baseline by the second trimester due to increased stroke volume and heart rate. In older adults, resting cardiac output is generally preserved, but the ability to increase cardiac output during exercise declines due to reduced maximal heart rate and impaired ventricular compliance.
Cardiac output reference ranges have been validated across diverse populations in North America, Europe, Asia, Australia, and other regions. The underlying physiology is universal, and the normal ranges quoted here apply worldwide. Minor variations in body composition between populations influence body surface area and therefore cardiac index but do not change the fundamental reference intervals in a clinically meaningful way.
Common Pitfalls in Interpretation
Clinicians interpreting cardiac output values should remember a few recurring pitfalls. First, a normal cardiac output does not guarantee adequate tissue perfusion; in some shock states, cardiac output may be normal or high while distribution and utilization are deranged. Second, trends matter more than single values, and serial measurements combined with clinical reassessment are more informative than any isolated reading. Third, different measurement methods can yield significantly different numbers in the same patient, so it is important to use one method consistently for trending. Fourth, the calculation is only as good as its inputs: a wrongly entered heart rate or stroke volume produces a misleading result, and the same is true for Fick calculations using estimated oxygen consumption.
Additionally, fever, pain, agitation, shivering, and sedation all alter oxygen consumption and therefore affect Fick-based calculations. Severe aortic or mitral regurgitation can falsely elevate apparent stroke volume if measured across the outflow tract because regurgitant flow is counted. Intracardiac shunts invalidate simple Fick calculations and require more advanced techniques.
Frequently Asked Questions
Conclusion
Cardiac output is a cornerstone of cardiovascular physiology and a pivotal concept in the assessment of every critically ill patient. The simple relationship between heart rate and stroke volume belies the rich pathophysiology that governs its daily variation, and the Fick principle extends understanding to situations where direct measurement of flow is impractical. Cardiac index and stroke volume index provide the size-adjusted numbers that allow meaningful clinical decisions, and the established reference ranges of 4 to 8 L/min and 2.5 to 4.0 L/min/m² anchor interpretation across populations and settings.
This calculator is intended as a reference and learning tool that applies the classical formulae accurately and presents results clearly. It is not a substitute for direct bedside measurement or for the judgement of a qualified clinician. Use it to estimate cardiac output from known heart rate and stroke volume, to explore the Fick equation, and to understand how body size influences interpretation. For clinical decisions, always combine the calculated values with a thorough clinical assessment and appropriate direct measurement.