Simultaneous measurements of arterial, transcutaneous, and peak expired CO2 were obtained in 24 newborn infants receiving mechanical ventilation during the 1st wk after birth. Two calibration algorithms designed to estimate PaCO2 [arterial CO2 pressure] from the noninvasive measurements were then examined. Both approaches entailed finding a statistical relationship by which future noninvasive measurement could be used to estimate the arterial value rather than measuring it directly. The 1st utilized the difference between the initial paired measurements (an in vivo calibration); the 2nd used the mean difference between all measurements in the population. Adjusted tcPCO2 [transcutaneous CO2] measurements by either the in vivo calibration or by the population-based factor led to estimates of PaCO2 with 95% confidence limits of .+-. 6 to .+-. 8 torr. In contrast, this degree of precision for the peak expired CO2 measurements was only possible using the in vivo calibration method. The use of an airway adaptor for PCO2 measurement led to CO2 retention in more than half of the infants. Transcutaneous monitoring had no significant effects on the infants, but was hampered by excessive drift and erratic sensitivity of the electrodes.
机构:
UNIV CALIF SAN FRANCISCO, CARDIOVASC RES INST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94143 USAUNIV CALIF SAN FRANCISCO, CARDIOVASC RES INST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94143 USA
机构:
UNIV CALIF SAN FRANCISCO, CARDIOVASC RES INST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94143 USAUNIV CALIF SAN FRANCISCO, CARDIOVASC RES INST, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94143 USA