• Respiratory care · Apr 2015

    Observational Study

    What Is the Potential Role of Transcutaneous Carbon Dioxide in Guiding Acute Noninvasive Ventilation?

    • James D van Oppen, Priya S Daniel, and Milind P Sovani.
    • The University of Nottingham Medical School, Queen's Medical Centre, Nottingham, United Kingdom. james@vanoppen.org.uk.
    • Respir Care. 2015 Apr 1;60(4):484-91.

    BackgroundTranscutaneous carbon dioxide (PtcCO2 ) monitoring is rarely used in the acute hospital setting, where serial samples of arterial blood are instead taken to measure carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2 ). In this pilot observational study, we assessed the potential of PtcCO2 monitoring to calculate pH and guide management of acute noninvasive ventilation (NIV).MethodsTen subjects with acute hypercapnic respiratory failure were recruited. All had arterial lines placed to guide acute NIV. PtcCO2 was monitored for 12 h (TOSCA TCM4) and compared with PaCO2 . Noninvasive transcutaneous pH was determined from PtcCO2 and calculated bicarbonate and then compared with true arterial pH. Agreements between PCO2 and pH methods were assessed using Bland-Altman analysis of limits of agreement and Pearson correlation coefficients. Hypothetical adjustments to acute NIV settings were based on transcutaneous data alone and evaluated in comparison with true management. Pain scores for each method were compared using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test.ResultsPCO2 time trends were concordant. Mean PCO2 bias was -2.33 (95% limits of agreement of -9.60 to 5.03) mm Hg, and r = 0.89 (P < .001). Mean pH bias was 0.012 (95% limits of agreement of -0.070 to 0.094), and r = 0.84 (P < .001). Hypothetical clinical decisions based on transcutaneous data alone matched true management on 85% of 34 occasions. Initiation of transcutaneous monitoring was less painful than the arterial equivalent (P = .008).ConclusionsThis pilot study demonstrates that PtcCO2 monitoring provides a continuous and reliable trend and also allows pH prediction. This patient-friendly approach is a promising alternative to repeated arterial blood gas sampling in patients requiring NIV for acute hypercapnic respiratory failure.Copyright © 2015 by Daedalus Enterprises.

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