| Literature DB >> 33983967 |
Jantine G Röttgering1,2, Angelique M E de Man1,2, Thomas C Schuurs3, Evert-Jan Wils4, Johannes M Daniels5, Joost G van den Aardweg5, Armand R J Girbes1,2, Yvo M Smulders2,6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: In the context of an ongoing debate on the potential risks of hypoxemia and hyperoxemia, it seems prudent to maintain the partial arterial oxygen pressure (PaO2) in a physiological range during administration of supplemental oxygen. The PaO2 and peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) are closely related and both are used to monitor oxygenation status. However, SpO2 values cannot be used as an exact substitute for PaO2. The aim of this study in acutely ill and stable patients was to determine at which SpO2 level PaO2 is more or less certain to be in the physiological range.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33983967 PMCID: PMC8118260 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0250740
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Visual representation of the included cohorts.
Demographics of included patients and data pairs characteristics.
| Prospective Inpatient Acutely Ill (PIA) cohort | Retrospective Outpatient Pulmonary (ROP) cohort | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age in years | 63 | (17) | 58 | (15) | ||
| Male | 96 | 66% | 362 | 53% | ||
| Intensive Care Unit Amsterdam UMC | 68 | 47% | - | |||
| Emergency Room Amsterdam UMC | 78 | 53% | - | |||
| Pulmonary function department NWC | - | 68 | 47% | |||
| Pulmonary function department Amsterdam UMC | - | 78 | 53% | |||
| SpO2 (%) | 96.6 | (4.6) | 220 | 94.7 | (4.4) | 1379 |
| SaO2 (%) | 96.1 | (4.5) | 212 | 95.4 | (5.5) | 1357 |
| PaO2 (mmHg) | 110.9 | (64.6) | 220 | 88.6 | (20.6) | 1379 |
| PaO2 < 60 mmHg | 14 | 6.4% | 220 | 148 | 10.7% | 1379 |
| PaO2 > 125 mmHg | 45 | 20.5% | 220 | 31 | 2.2% | 1379 |
| PaCO2 (mmHg) | 43.6 | (13.2) | 220 | 36.8 | (6.1) | 1377 |
| pH | 7.36 | (0.13) | 218 | 7.37 | (0.06) | 1378 |
| Arterial Bicarbonate (mmol/l) | 24.1 | (5.3) | 216 | 21.7 | (3.8) | 1359 |
| Arterial Lactate (mmol/l) | 2.37 | (2.9) | 210 | |||
| Hemoglobin (mmol/l) | 6.9 | (1.4) | 183 | |||
| Systolic blood pressure (mmHg) | 127 | (28) | 214 | 179 | (38) | 1043 |
| Diastolic blood pressure (mmHg) | 68 | (17) | 214 | 88 | (16) | 1041 |
| Supplemental oxygen (%) | 191 | 87% | 219 | 0 | 0% | 1379 |
Data are presented as a mean (standard deviation) or number with % of total.
Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam University Medical Center; N, number of patients; NWC, North West Clinic; PaCO2, partial arterial carbon dioxide pressure; PaO2, partial arterial oxygen pressure; SaO2, peripheral oxygen saturation; SpO2, peripheral oxygen saturation
Fig 2Scatterplots of the data pairs of the Prospective Inpatient Acutely ill cohorts and Retrospective Outpatient Pulmonary cohort.
A. Prospective Inpatient Acutely ill cohort (PIA cohort) and B. Retrospective Outpatient Pulmonary cohort (ROP cohort). The black dashed vertical lines reflect the PaO2 values of 60 mmHg and 125 mmHg. The red dashed vertical lines reflect the calculated lower and upper bounds to avoid hypoxemic and hyperoxemic PaO2 measurements.
Fig 3Multilevel analysis of the Prospective Inpatient Acutely ill and Retrospective Outpatient Pulmonary cohort.
PIA, Prospective Inpatient Acutely ill cohort. ROP, Retrospective Outpatient Pulmonary cohort. The black curve represents the Prospective Inpatient Acutely Ill cohort with a 95% prediction interval (black dashed line). The blue curve represents the Retrospective Outpatient Pulmonary cohort with a 95% prediction interval (blue dashed line).
Fig 4Stacked bar plots of the number and percentage of PaO2 values at every SpO2 value.
A. Prospective Inpatient Acutely ill cohort (PIA cohort) and B. Retrospective Outpatient Pulmonary cohort (ROP cohort). The left y-axis represents the number of data points and the right y-axis represents the percentage of data points per SpO2 value of the total number of measurements in the whole cohort. PaO2 values are divided into three groups: < 60 mmHg (blue), 60–125 mmHg (gray) and > 125 mmHg (red).