Journal of clinical monitoring
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Comparative Study
Automated charting of physiological variables in anesthesia: a quantitative comparison of automated versus handwritten anesthesia records.
Eight physiological variables--tidal volume, breathing rate, end-tidal carbon dioxide fraction, oxygen fraction in the anesthetic circuit, oxygen saturation by pulse oximetry, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and heart rate--recorded on-line by a commercially available automated system were compared with the same variables recorded on handwritten anesthesia records. We quantified the differences between the automated and handwritten records generated from the same 30 patients (2,412 minutes of general anesthesia for elective eye surgical procedures). Considering the design of the study, we claim that the differences between both records were caused by the incompleteness or inaccuracy of the handwritten records, except in two instances. ⋯ Erroneous data were observed on the automated records for the tidal volume during induction (EFe = 0.0044) and for the oxygen fraction during maintenance (EFe = 0.0024). The effect of averaging by the recordkeeper is discussed. The results of this study indicate the clinical relevance of automated record keeping.
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The use of pulse oximetry as a noninvasive method to assess intravascular volume status is described. Pulse oximeters providing a continuous display of the pulse waveform offer a new method of estimating relative volume status during positive-pressure ventilation. ⋯ A significant correlation (r = 0.61) was seen between pulse waveform variation and systolic pressure variation, which has previously been shown to be a sensitive indicator of hypovolemia. When data from individual patients were analyzed separately, the correlation between pulse waveform variation and systolic pressure variation was as high as 0.88.
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Pulse oximetry was used to determine the incidence of intraoperative hypoxemia in 108 patients undergoing ambulatory gynecologic operation. Eleven (10%) experienced moderate desaturation (arterial oxygen saturation less than 90%), and 5 (5%) suffered severe hypoxemic episodes (arterial oxygen saturation less than 85%). Among patient risk factors--including operation, body habitus, smoking habits, history of asthma, age, and airway characteristics--an association with moderate hypoxemia was found only with nonlaparoscopic gynecologic operation, obesity, and age over 35 years, and an association with severe hypoxemia was found only with obesity and age over 35. ⋯ The cost per patient of monitoring with a pulse oximeter is about +1.35. A cost-benefit analysis reveals that a mortality rate of 1 in 40,000 among patients who actually become moderately hypoxemic would justify the cost of monitoring arterial oxygen saturation. We conclude that pulse oximetry should be part of routine anesthetic monitoring.
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Comparative Study
Methylene blue and indocyanine green artifactually lower pulse oximetry readings of oxygen saturation. Studies in dogs.
The effects of fluorescein, methylene blue, and indocyanine green on hemodynamic variables and on pulse oximetry and co-oximetry measurements of arterial hemoglobin oxygen saturation (SaO2) and oxyhemoglobin percentage (% HbO2) were evaluated in 16 anesthetized dogs in vitro by co-oximetry (% HbO2) and in vivo by pulse oximetry (SaO2). The light absorbance (optical density) in plasma (range 500 to 800 nm) was measured by a spectrophotometer. Fluorescein did not affect oximetry measurements, plasma light absorbance in the range measured, or hemodynamic variables. ⋯ Methylene blue had a dose- and time-dependent effect on plasma light absorbance, and this effect peaked in the 660- to 670-nm range. The data do not distinguish the relative contributions of physiology (hemodynamic change), chemistry (methemoglobin production), and physics (optical properties) to the decrease in pulse oximetry and co-oximetry measurements that follows injection of methylene blue. Indocyanine green affected neither hemodynamic variables nor co-oximetry readings but decreased pulse oximetry readings for up to 10 minutes dose dependently.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Direct measurements of systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial blood pressure and electrocardiogram-derived heart rates were compared with indirect arterial blood pressure measurements using the Dinamap 847XT noninvasive monitor. A total of 260 paired comparisons from 16 patients were analyzed. ⋯ The 95% confidence limits for systolic, mean, and diastolic arterial pressure were +/- 16 mm Hg, +/- 18 mm Hg, and +/- 21 mm Hg, respectively. The Dinamap monitor was found to be an accurate trend recorder of heart rate and blood pressure during anesthesia in neonates and small infants.