Journal of clinical monitoring and computing
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Pulse oximetry, a non-invasive method for accurate assessment of blood oxygen saturation (SPO2), is an important monitoring tool in health care facilities. However, it is often not available in many low-resource settings, due to expense, overly sophisticated design, a lack of organised procurement systems and inadequate medical device management and maintenance structures. Furthermore medical devices are often fragile and not designed to withstand the conditions of low-resource settings. ⋯ Improving the probe wiring would increase the life span of pulse oximeter probes. Increasing the life span of probes will make pulse oximetry more affordable and accessible. This is of high priority in low-resource settings where frequent repair or replacement of probes is unaffordable or impossible.
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J Clin Monit Comput · Jun 2014
Comparative StudyA comparison of the incidence of hypercapnea in non-obese and morbidly obese peri-operative patients using the SenTec transcutaneous pCO2 monitor.
Obese patients are at increased risk for hypoventilation, leading to hypercapnea and acidosis. The primary objective of this study was to compare the incidence of perioperative hypercapnea in non-obese and morbidly obese patients using the SenTec transcutaneous PCO2 (tcPCO2) monitor. 10 morbidly obese subjects (BMI > 40 kg/m(2)) undergoing laparoscopic bariatric surgery, and 10 non-obese subjects (BMI < 30 kg/m(2)) undergoing laparoscopic abdominal procedures were studied, using a standardized anesthesia regimen. TcPCO2 and SpO2 were monitored continuously intraoperatively, and during the first 24 h postoperatively. ⋯ End-tidal CO2 (EtCO2) values were similar between groups during the intraoperative period, but tcPCO2 was significantly higher in the obese group at specific time points, and trended towards being higher throughout the case. Our study did not show significant tcPCO2 differences between non-obese and obese post-surgical patients, however, it did allow for continuous, trendable, nonobtrusive monitoring throughout the perioperative period. As V/Q mismatch increases with the PaCO2/EtCO2 gradient, and this effect is most pronounced in morbidly obese patients, tcPCO2 monitoring may prove to be a useful additional monitor in these patients during the intraoperative period.
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J Clin Monit Comput · Jun 2014
Randomized Controlled TrialEffect of preloading epidural space with normal saline on the incidence of complications of epidural catheter placement and spinal anesthesia for cesarean section.
To evaluate the effect of preloading the epidural space with normal saline (NS) on the incidence of complications of epidural catheter placement and spinal anesthesia for cesarean section. Two hundred and ninety parturients at full term, who were scheduled for cesarean section under combined spinal-epidural anesthesia were randomly divided into two groups: group control (I) and group NS (II). The epidural puncture was performed at the estimated L3-4 interspace with a Tuohy needle attached to a 5 ml syringe. ⋯ Blood vessel trauma in group II was significantly lower than in group I, P < 0.05. However, the incidence of paraesthesia was similar between the two groups, P > 0.05. Preloading the epidural space with NS can decrease the incidence of clinically apparent injury to blood vessels during epidural catheter placement, and can improve the effects of spinal analgesia, but does not reduce the incidence of paraesthesia.
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J Clin Monit Comput · Jun 2014
Clinical TrialIntraoperative flash VEPs are reproducible in the presence of low amplitude EEG.
Flash visual evoked potentials (FVEPs) are often irreproducible during surgery. We assessed the relationship between intraoperative FVEP reproducibility and EEG amplitude. Left then right eyes were stimulated by goggle light emitting diodes, and FVEPs were recorded from Oz–Fz′ (International 10-20 system) in 12 patients. ⋯ Raising the low cut filter to 10 and 30 Hz (in two patients) progressively reduced EEG and FVEP amplitude, reduced amplifier blocking time and improved FVEP reproducibility. FVEPs were more reproducible in the presence of low amplitude EEG than high amplitude EEG. This is the first report describing the effect of EEG amplitude on FVEP reproducibility during surgery