EFFECT OF ANEMIA ON PULSE OXIMETER ACCURACY AT LOW SATURATION

被引:66
作者
SEVERINGHAUS, JW
KOH, SO
机构
[1] Department of Anesthesia and the Cardiovascular Research Institute, University of California, San Francisco, CA
来源
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MONITORING | 1990年 / 6卷 / 02期
关键词
Blood: anemia; Equipment: pulse oximeters; Hypoxia; Measurement techniques: pulse oximetry; Oxygen: saturation;
D O I
10.1007/BF02828282
中图分类号
R614 [麻醉学];
学科分类号
100217 ;
摘要
A retrospective evaluation of simultaneous tests of oximeters of various manufacturers in volunteer subjects disclosed greater errors at low saturations in subjects with low hemoglobin (Hb) concentrations. Forty-three pulse oximcters of 12 manufacturers studied over a period of 10 months showed that, at a mean arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2) level of 54.5%, as Hb concentration fell, average pulse oximeter (SpO2) bias increased approximately linearly from 0 at Hb > 14 g/dl to about -14% at 8 < Hb < 9 g/dl. At SaO2 = 53.6%, the mean bias (SaO2-SpO2) of 13 oximcters of 5 manufacturers averaged -15.0% (n = 43) in a subject with Hb = 8 g/dl, but -6.4% (n = 390) in nonanemic subjects. The additional bias in the anemic subject increased with desaturation. It was 0.13% at SaO2 = 98.5% (n = 13), -1.31% at 87.5% (n = 38), -2.71% at 75.1% (n = 38), -5.18% at 61.3% (n = 26), and -9.95% at 53.6% (n = 41); n is the product of the number of oximeters and number of tests in each saturation range. The instruments that showed the greatest errors at low saturations in nonanemic subjects also showed the greatest additional errors associated with anemia (the range between manufacturers of anemic incremental error at about 53% being from -3.2 to -14.5%) and conformed well to the relationship bias (anemic) = 1.35 × bias (normal)-8.18% (r = 0.94; Sy·x = 3.3%). The error due to anemia was zero at 97% SaO2 and became evident when SaO2 fell below 75%. © 1990 Little, Brown and Company.
引用
收藏
页码:85 / 88
页数:4
相关论文
共 3 条
[1]  
Lee S.E., Tremper K.K., Barker S.J., Effects of anemia on pulse oximetry and continuous mixed venous oxygen saturation monitoring in dogs, Anesth Analg, 67, (1988)
[2]  
Severinghaus J.W., Naifeh K.H., Accuracy of response of six pulse oximeters to profound brief steady hypoxia, Anesthesiology, 67, pp. 551-558, (1987)
[3]  
Severinghaus J.W., Naifeh K.H., Koh S.O., Errors in 14 pulse oximeters during profound hypoxia, J Clin Monit, 5, pp. 72-81, (1989)