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Observational Study
Tourniquet-induced tissue hypoxia characterized by near-infrared spectroscopy during ankle surgery: an observational study.
- Liang Lin, Gang Li, Jinlei Li, and Lingzhong Meng.
- Department of Anesthesiology, The First Affiliated Hospital, Xiamen University, Xiamen, Fujian Province, China.
- BMC Anesthesiol. 2019 May 10; 19 (1): 70.
BackgroundPneumatic tourniquet inflation during extremity surgery leads to profound and prolonged tissue ischemia. Its effect on tissue oxygenation is inadequately studied.MethodsPatients undergoing elective ankle surgery with tourniquet application participated in this observational cohort study. Somatic and cerebral tissue oxygen saturation (SstO2 and SctO2) were monitored using tissue near-infrared spectroscopy. Oxygenation was monitored distally (SstO2-distal) and proximally to the tourniquet, on the contralateral leg, and the forehead (a total of 4 tissue beds). Tissue oxygenation at different time points was compared. The magnitude, duration, and load (product of magnitude and duration) of tissue desaturation during tourniquet inflation were correlated with tissue resaturation and hypersaturation after tourniquet deflation.ResultsData of 26 patients were analyzed. The tourniquet inflation time was 120 ± 31 mins. Following a rapid desaturation from 77 ± 8% pre-inflation to 38 ± 20% 10 mins post-inflation, SstO2-distal slowly and continuously desaturated and reach the nadir (16 ± 11%) toward the end of inflation. After deflation, SstO2-distal rapidly resaturated from 16 ± 11% to 91 ± 5% (i.e., hypersaturation); SstO2 monitored proximally to the tourniquet and on contralateral leg had significant but small desaturation (~ 2-3%, p < 0.001); in contrast, SctO2 remained stable. The desaturation load had a significant correlation with resaturation magnitude (p < 0.001); while the desaturation duration had a significant correlation with hypersaturation magnitude (p = 0.04).ConclusionsTissue dys-oxygenation following tourniquet application can be reliably monitored using tissue oximetry. Its outcome significance remains to be determined.
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