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- Rashmi Ghanpur, John Santamaria, and Barry Dixon.
- Department of Critical Care, St Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
- Shock. 2016 Sep 1; 46 (3): 287-9.
ObjectivesMeasurement of central venous oxygen (SvO2) levels remains an important method for the detection of circulatory shock. Plastic blood gas syringes have supplanted glass. These syringes are, however, permeable to atmospheric oxygen. Common sampling practices, including a delay between blood aspiration and analysis and continuous mixing of the sample, may promote equilibration of the blood sample with atmospheric oxygen and could result in over estimation of SvO2 levels.MethodsPulmonary artery or central venous catheter blood samples were taken from 21 critically ill patients. Two venous blood gas samples were collected simultaneously in plastic syringes. One sample was continuously mixed through a gentle rotation. The other sample was not mixed. Blood gas analyses were undertaken on both samples at baseline and at 5, 10, 15, and 20 min.ResultsCompared with baseline levels, the SvO2 increased significantly over time for both continuously mixed and nonmixed samples (P < 0.0001). The rate of the increase was 2-fold greater for continuously mixed samples (P < 0.0001). For continuously mixed samples, the SvO2 was 63% at baseline, 65% at 5 min, 70% at 10 min, 74% at 15 min, and 78% at 20 min. For the nonmixed samples, the levels were 63%, 64%, 66%, 68%, and 70%, respectively.ConclusionsThis is the first report documenting that plastic blood gas syringes systematically overestimate SvO2 levels when there is a delay in analysis or continuous mixing of the sample. Overestimation of SvO2 levels may harm patients as circulatory shock may not be recognized and treated.
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