| Literature DB >> 27873173 |
A M Belhaj1, J P Phillips2, P A Kyriacou3, R M Langford4.
Abstract
The estimation of venous oxygen saturations using photoplethysmography (PPG) may be useful as a noninvasive continuous method of detecting changes in regional oxygen supply and demand (e.g. in the splanchnic circulation). The aim of this research was to compare PPG-derived peripheral venous oxygen saturations directly with venous saturation measured from co-oximetry blood samples, to assess the feasibility of non-invasive local venous oxygen saturation. This paper comprises two similar studies: one in healthy spontaneously-breathing volunteers and one in mechanically ventilated anaesthetised patients. In both studies, PPG-derived estimates of peripheral venous oxygen saturations (SxvO2) were compared with co-oximetry samples (ScovO2) of venous blood from the dorsum of the hand. The results were analysed and correlation between the PPG-derived results and co-oximetry was tested for. In the volunteer subjects,moderate correlation (r = 0.81) was seen between SxvO2 values and co-oximetry derived venous saturations (ScovO2), with a mean (±SD) difference of +5.65 ± 14.3% observed between the two methods. In the anaesthetised patients SxvO2 values were only 3.81% lower than SpO2 and tended to underestimate venous saturation (mean difference = -2.67 ± 5.89%) while correlating weakly with ScovO2 (r = 0.10). The results suggest that significant refinement of the technique is needed to sufficiently improve accuracy to produce clinically meaningful measurement of peripheral venous oxygen saturation. In anaesthetised patients the use of the technique may be severely limited by cutaneous arteriovenous shunting.Entities:
Keywords: Non-invasive monitoring; Photoplethysmography; Pulse oximetry; Respiratory-induced intensity variations; Venous oxygen saturation
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27873173 PMCID: PMC5655584 DOI: 10.1007/s10877-016-9959-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Monit Comput ISSN: 1387-1307 Impact factor: 2.502
Fig. 1Amplitude spectrum of normalized red and infrared PPG signals recorded from a ventilated anaesthetised patient. Prominent peaks at the respiratory and cardiac frequencies can be seen in both traces
Fig. 4Modified Bland–Altman plot showing mean difference in venous oxygen saturation between PPG-derived method (SxvO2) and reference method (co-oximetry ScovO2) in awake volunteers
Fig. 230 s sample of red and infrared photoplethysmographic signals with simultaneously recorded airway pressures from one volunteer subject during timed forced breathing manoeuvre
Fig. 3Barchart showing mean (±SD) arterial oxygen saturation (from pulse oximeter) and venous oxygen saturations from co-oximetry (ScovO2)and PPG-derived (SxvO2) method recorded in awake volunteers (n = 17)
Fig. 530 s sample of red and infrared photoplethysmographic signals with simultaneously recorded airway pressures, radial arterial blood pressures and peripheral venous blood pressures from one ventilated anaesthetised patient
Fig. 6Barchart showing mean (±SD) arterial oxygen saturation (from pulse oximeter) and venous oxygen saturations (from co-oximetry and PPG-derived method) recorded in ventilated patients (n = 38)
Fig. 7Modified Bland–Altman plot showing mean difference in venous oxygen saturation between PPG-derived method (SxvO2) and reference method (co-oximetry ScovO2) in ventilated patients