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Continuous recording of arterial pO<sub>2</sub>, pCO<sub>2</sub>, pH, and O<sub>2</sub> saturation in vivo
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1961
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Biomedical EngineeringSocial SciencesBlood FlowCerebral Vascular RegulationNeurologyPao 2Blood Flow MeasurementCardiologyCardiovascular ImagingCerebral Blood FlowPaco 2NeurophysiologySao 2PhysiologyBioelectronicsContinuous RecordingTissue OxygenationElectrophysiologyCardiovascular PhysiologyMedicineAnesthesiology
Methods are described for concurrent, continuous, and automatic recording of paO 2 , paCO 2 , apH, and SaO 2 of the arterial or venous blood. Measurements were obtained by catheterization of vessels as small as 1 mm in diameter. Graphs of these parameters may be compared with similar measurements in tissue, such as the brain, and correlated with records of function (EKG, EEG, pneumograph). Continuously flowing blood was brought into contact with electrodes and a cuvette for measuring pCO 2 , pO 2 , pH, and arterial oxygen saturation by means of catheters and an electrode housing and was then returned to the circulation. For arterial measurements, an arteriovenous shunt was used, for venous blood a mechanical pump is necessary. pCO 2 was determined by a membrane-covered pH electrode, pO 2 by a membrane-covered polarograph electrode, pH by a small glass electrode, SaO 2 by a flow-through oximeter cuvette. Alterations in arterial pH influence SaO 2 and paO 2 in opposite directions (Bohr effect). Brain tissue parameters reflect changes in arterial pO 2 , pCO 2 , and pH but often move independently due to localized changes in tissue circulation and metabolism. Submitted on October 10, 1960