Jenda Arawiran 1 , JeanneMarie Curry , Lorna Welde , Gad Alpan . Show Affiliations »
Abstract
AIM: To investigate the variability in sojourn times at high oxygen saturations (SpO2 ) in individual patients and to examine whether there are subsets of patients or treatments that are associated with differing sojourn times at SpO2 ≥93%. METHODS: Pulse oximetry data (Masimo) were studied in 71 premature babies receiving supplemental oxygen. Outcome measure was proportion of time per 12-h shift that individual babies spent in the range SpO2 ≥93%. We studied whether an inordinate proportion of time spent at SpO2 ≥93% was attributable to any subset of babies, mode of ventilation or nursing shifts, whether sojourn times were statistically independent shift-to-shift and whether an educational intervention reduced the amount of time spent at SpO2 ≥93%. RESULTS: The proportion of time spent by the populations overall at SpO2 ≥93% was distributed equally among babies. However, high-frequency ventilation was associated with the least amount of time at SpO2 ≥93% compared with other modes of respiratory support (p < 0.0001), while nasal cannulae were associated with the highest proportion of time at SpO2 ≥93% (p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: Measures to improve compliance with targeted SpO2 ranges should be applied universally although further improvement may be achieved by specifically targeting babies receiving supplemental oxygen via nasal cannula. ©2014 Foundation Acta Paediatrica. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
AIM: To investigate the variability in sojourn times at high oxygen saturations (SpO2 ) in individual patients and to examine whether there are subsets of patients or treatments that are associated with differing sojourn times at SpO2 ≥93%. METHODS: Pulse oximetry data (Masimo) were studied in 71 premature babies receiving supplemental oxygen . Outcome measure was proportion of time per 12-h shift that individual babies spent in the range SpO2 ≥93%. We studied whether an inordinate proportion of time spent at SpO2 ≥93% was attributable to any subset of babies, mode of ventilation or nursing shifts, whether sojourn times were statistically independent shift-to-shift and whether an educational intervention reduced the amount of time spent at SpO2 ≥93%. RESULTS: The proportion of time spent by the populations overall at SpO2 ≥93% was distributed equally among babies. However, high-frequency ventilation was associated with the least amount of time at SpO2 ≥93% compared with other modes of respiratory support (p < 0.0001), while nasal cannulae were associated with the highest proportion of time at SpO2 ≥93% (p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: Measures to improve compliance with targeted SpO2 ranges should be applied universally although further improvement may be achieved by specifically targeting babies receiving supplemental oxygen via nasal cannula. ©2014 Foundation Acta Paediatrica. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Entities: Chemical
Species
Keywords:
Hyperoxia; Oximetry; Oxygen saturation; Premature infant
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Year: 2014
PMID: 25319771 DOI: 10.1111/apa.12827
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Paediatr ISSN: 0803-5253 Impact factor: 2.299