• Eur J Emerg Med · Oct 2006

    Point-of-care blood analyzer during the interhospital transport of critically ill children.

    • Gijs Vos, Monique Engel, Graham Ramsay, and Dick van Waardenburg.
    • Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Intensive Care, University Hospital Maastricht, Maastricht, The Netherlands. gvo@paed.azm.nl
    • Eur J Emerg Med. 2006 Oct 1; 13 (5): 304-7.

    ObjectivesTo investigate the influence of point-of-care laboratory results (arterial blood gases, ionized calcium, potassium, sodium, glucose, hematocrit and hemoglobin) on therapeutic interventions during interhospital pediatric intensive care transport.DesignProspective observational study.SettingsSpecialist pediatric intensive care retrieval team of a university hospital.ParticipantsCritically ill pediatric patients who were referred from a community hospital to a pediatric intensive care of a tertiary center. The retrieval team sampled arterial blood during the time of stabilization in the referring hospital and during transport. All results were recorded and for each result the physician of the specialist retrieval team wrote down the influence on the treatment (none, partly, only). The physician specified the kind of intervention.ResultsPoint-of-care blood analyses influenced the therapeutic management in 76.5% of all blood samples and in 86.2% of the referred patients. Of all interventions, 42.9% were based only on the laboratory results. The majority of interventions were adjustments of the mechanical ventilation. Point-of-care blood analyses reduced the delay in treatment of potentially life-threatening abnormalities of laboratory results (severe hypokalemia and low hematocrit).ConclusionsDuring interhospital pediatric intensive care transport, point-of-care blood analyses frequently led to therapeutic interventions. Some abnormal blood results were potentially life threatening and could not have been discovered without point-of-care measurement. We therefore recommend the use of a point-of-care blood analyzer during interhospital intensive care transports, not only for blood gases but also for electrolytes, glucose and hematocrit.

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