Publications

Detailed Information

Correlation between Pulse Oximetry Oxygen Saturation (SpO2) and Measured Arterial Oxygen Saturation (SaO2) and Arterial Oxygen Tension (PaO2) in Neonates : 신생아에서 Pulse Oximetry에 의한 산소포화도(SpO2)와 동맥혈 산소포화도(SaO2) 및 동맥혈 산소분압(PaO2)의 상관관계

Cited 0 time in Web of Science Cited 0 time in Scopus
Authors

Choi, Jung-Hwan; Park, Won Soon; Yun, Chong Ku

Issue Date
1991-03
Publisher
Seoul National University College of Medicine
Citation
Seoul J Med, Vol.32 No.1, pp. 17-25
Keywords
Pulse OximetryOxygen SaturationNeonate
Abstract
Pulse oximetry has recently been introduced as a method for continuous
and non-invasive transcutaneous monitoring of arterial oxygen saturation in neonates.
The purpose of our study was to determine the reliability, accuracy, and practicability
of pulse oximetry for monitoring arterial oxygenation in sick newborn infants. Pulse
oximetry oxygen saturation values (SpO2) were compared with simultaneously measured
arterial oxygen saturation values (Sa02) by a co-oximeter. The linear regression equation
for 65 data pairs was Y=24.53 + 0.726X (r=0.90, p <0.01). The difference between
measured Sa02 and pulse oximetry oxygen saturation (Sp02) was 0.44% ± 2.97%
(mean ± S.D.). The linear regression equation comparing measured Sa02 minus pulse
oximetry saturation (Sp02) was Y=-23.09 + 0.258X (r=0.58, p <0.01). This demonstrated
an increasing error of pulse oximetry with decreasing Sa02. Pulse oximetry oxygen
saturation (Sp02) also correlated well with measured arterial oxygen tension (Pa02),
and the upper reach of the S-shaped hemoglobin-oxygen dissociation curve was clear.
With a hypothetical alarm limit set at 92%, all hyperoxemic values (29/29) were correctly
identified (sensitivity 100%). Of the 78 paired values, 33 were classified correctly
as nonhyperoxemic (specificity 42%), and a total of 62 (29 + 33) out of the 107 paired
values were ranged correctly (accuracy 58%). The accuracy increased significantly with
an increase in alarm limit up to 94%, and it remained stable thereafter.
We conclude that pulse oximetry is a simple, accurate, noninvasive, and continuous
method of transcutaneously measuring arterial oxygen saturation, and hyperoxemia
can be detected by pulse oximetry with a high sensitivity provided that prior to use,
type-specific alarm limits are set.
ISSN
0582-6802
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/6706
Files in This Item:
Appears in Collections:

Altmetrics

Item View & Download Count

  • mendeley

Items in S-Space are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Share