Publication | Closed Access
Combining transcutaneous blood gas measurement and pulse oximetry.
64
Citations
0
References
2002
Year
MeasurementEar Lobe Pco2Adult VolunteersPatient MonitoringClinical ChemistryInstrumentationLaboratory MedicineBlood Flow MeasurementCardiologyRadiologyHealth SciencesCardiovascular ImagingSingle SensorAnesthesia PracticePerioperative MonitoringPulse OximetryPhysiologyTissue OxygenationAnesthesiaMedicineAnesthesiology
We are describing the preliminary results of tests performed in adult volunteers and in adult patients during and after general anesthesia with a miniaturized single sensor combining the continuous and non-invasive measurement of oxygen saturaiton by pulse oximetry (SpO2) and transcutaneous PCO2 (OxiCarbo sensor). The sensor is heated to 42 degrees C to arterialize the cutaneous tissue and is applied at the ear lobe with a special low-pressure clip. The results indicate a good agreement between ear lobe PCO2 and arterial PCO2 in the range 35 to 70 mmHg (10 patients, number of measurements 104, regression line TcPCO2 = 1.01 PaCO2 + 0.59 mmHg, bias 1.22 mmHg, SD 3.69 mmHg) and between ear lobe SpO2 and SaO2 (bias 0.44% with SD 0.77% in the range 80% to 100%, bias 1.39% with SD 1.43% in the range 60% to 80%). The ear lobe OxiCarbog sensor detects the SpO2 change 5 to 37 sec faster than a finger sensor and the PCO2 change 9 to 48 sec faster than a transcutaneous sensor fixed at the upper arm. Further improvements versus single sensors are a higher stability of the SpO2 signal and the possibility of performing long term SpO2 and PCO2 measurement at the ear lobe.