| Literature DB >> 24267637 |
John P Scott1, George M Hoffman.
Abstract
The safety of anesthesia has improved greatly in the past three decades. Standard perioperative monitoring, including pulse oximetry, has practically eliminated unrecognized arterial hypoxia as a cause for perioperative injury. However, most anesthesia-related cardiac arrests in children are now cardiovascular in origin, and standard monitoring is unable to detect many circulatory abnormalities. Near-infrared spectroscopy provides noninvasive continuous access to the venous side of regional circulations that can approximate organ-specific and global measures to facilitate the detection of circulatory abnormalities and drive goal-directed interventions to reduce end-organ ischemic injury.Entities:
Keywords: hemodynamics; hypoxia-ischemia; monitoring; near-infrared; physiologic; regional blood flow; shock; spectroscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24267637 DOI: 10.1111/pan.12301
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Paediatr Anaesth ISSN: 1155-5645 Impact factor: 2.556