| Literature DB >> 29312908 |
Beri Massa-Buck1, Virginia Amendola2, Reagan McCloskey2, Khodayar Rais-Bahrami1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) has been used to non-invasively measure specific tissue oxygen saturation (StO2) continuously. Cerebral autoregulation status can be derived from NIRS and arterial blood pressure. The relationship of both cerebral and somatic StO2, fractional tissue oxygen extraction (FTOE), and cerebro-splanchnic oxygenation ratio (CSOR) with measured vital sign parameters for Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) patients has not been well studied.Entities:
Keywords: cerebral autoregulation; near-infrared spectroscopy; neonate; pressure passive index; regional tissue oxygen saturation; specific tissue oxygen saturation; vital signs
Year: 2017 PMID: 29312908 PMCID: PMC5742570 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2017.00276
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Patient demographics, n = 27, male = 18 (67%).
| Median (range) | |
|---|---|
| Gestational age at delivery (weeks) | 31.2 (22.2–42) |
| Birth weight (g) | 1,266 (480–4,170) |
| Weight at time of study (g) | 2,210 (530–4,030) |
| Age at the time of study (days) | 6 (0–143) |
| Length of hospital stay (days) | 49 (7–189) |
| Number of patients with: | |
| Confirmed sepsis | 2 |
| NEC | 2 |
| Brain abnormalities | 16 |
| Mortality | 7.4% |
.
Linear regression Pearson correlation coefficient (r) values of brain specific tissue oxygen saturation (StO2B), somatic StO2 (StO2S), specific tissue oxygen saturation (SpO2), brain fractional tissue oxygen extraction (FTOE-B), somatic FTOE (FTOE-S), and CSOR compared to blood pressure (diastolic, mean, and systolic), heart rate, respiration rate, and subject age indices for all subject data combined using the 60-s binned data.
| Pearson regression correlation coefficient ( | StO2B | StO2S | SpO2 | FTOE-B | FTOE-S | CSOR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ABP (diastolic) | 0.285 | 0.175 | 0.277 | −0.224 | −0.116 | 0.044 |
| ABP (mean) | 0.266 | 0.159 | 0.259 | −0.213 | −0.113 | 0.049 |
| ABP (systolic) | 0.22 | 0.126 | 0.216 | −0.183 | −0.101 | 0.054 |
| HR | −0.171 | −0.148 | −0.218 | 0.089 | 0.079 | −0.058 |
| RR | −0.02 | 0.056 | 0.048 | 0.041 | −0.038 | 0.075 |
| Age | −0.081 | −0.199 | −0.021 | 0.076 | 0.201 | −0.166 |
| Gestational age (GA) at birth | 0.364 | 0.277 | 0.348 | −0.285 | −0.213 | 0.088 |
| Total age (GA + age) | 0.322 | 0.151 | 0.336 | −0.238 | −0.076 | −0.018 |
| Birth weight | 0.348 | 0.285 | 0.336 | −0.26 | −0.204 | 0.098 |
| Current weight | 0.355 | 0.229 | 0.324 | −0.27 | −0.136 | 0.031 |
There were ~29,000–39,000 paired data points per comparison where all comparisons were statically significant (.
All statistically significant (.
ABP, arterial blood pressure.
Figure 1(A–C) Scatter plots of the oxygen saturation parameters [brain specific tissue oxygen saturation (StO2B), somatic StO2 (StO2S), and pulse oximetry (SpO2)] vs mean blood pressure (MBP) with subjects divided into two groups: low birth weight [LBW, BW < 1.5 kg/gestational age (GA) < 32 weeks (n = 13)] vs moderate birth weight [BW > 1.5 kg/GA > 32 weeks (n = 12)]. The LBW group showed a higher linear regression correlation (r) to the oxygen saturation parameters, where the strongest correlation was with StO2B. There were 33,000–35,000 valid (60 s binned) paired data points to create these scatter plots.
Figure 2(A–C) Scatter plots of the oxygenation indices [brain fractional tissue oxygen extraction (FTOE-B), somatic fractional tissue oxygen extraction (FTOE-S), and CSOR] vs mean blood pressure (MBP) with subjects divided into low birth weight (LBW) and moderate birth weight (MBW) groups like that of Figure 1. The LBW group showed a higher linear regression negative correlation (r) to FTOE-B and FTOE-S, where the strongest correlation was with FTOE-B. CSOR weakly correlated to MBP, with little differences between LBW and MBW groups. There were 28,000–31,000 valid (60 s binned) paired data points to create these scatter plots.
Figure 3(A,B) Scatter plots of brain specific tissue oxygen saturation (StO2B) and brain fractional tissue oxygen extraction (FTOE-B) vs mean blood pressure (MBP) with subjects grouped by brain scan results: normal brain (n = 10) and abnormal brain (n = 15). Both the linear regression slopes and correlation (r) values were greater than the previous low birth weight (LBW) group for StO2B and FTOE-B vs MBP of the previous figures. Note that 11 of 15 subjects with brain abnormalities were in the LBW group.
Figure 4(A–C) For case study demonstration purposes, the pressure passive index (PPI) is binned into discrete mean blood pressure (MBP) ranges to create PPI profile plots for three subjects, which can be interpretable to autoregulation function. (A) Shows subject data where PPI is low for the MBP ranges measured, where it is believed that autoregulation function is good. (B) Shows subject data where PPI is generally high for the MBP ranges measured, where it is believed that autoregulation function is poor. (C) Shows subject data where PPI is high for low MBP, and PPI is moderate for higher MBP, where it is believed that autoregulation function is poor for low MBP and moderate for higher MBP. The arbitrary black line at PPI = 0.30 is hypothesized to be a transition point where autoregulation function transits gradually from poor to good.
Figure 5(A–C) Pressure passive index (PPI) profile plots with subject values binned in discrete mean blood pressure (MBP) ranges by two groups with 95% confidence interval for mean values: (A) by birth weight/gestational age (GA) groups low birth weight (n = 13) vs moderate birth weight (n = 12), (B) by current weight and total age groups LCW (n = 12) and MCW (n = 13), and (C) brain scan results, normal (n = 10) and abnormal brain (n = 15).