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- 2017
Characterization of the bias between oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry and calculated by an arterial blood gas analyzer in critically ill neonatesKeywords: Pulse oximetry, neonatal oxygenation, oxygen saturation Abstract: Continuous monitoring of oxygenation with pulse oximetry is the standard of care for critically ill neonates. A better understanding of its measurement bias compared to arterial oxygen saturation could be helpful both for the clinician and researcher. Towards that end, we examined the electronic database from a large neonatal ICU. From a 24-month period we identified 23,032 paired SpO 2-SaO 2 measurements from 1,007 infants who were receiving supplemental oxygen during mechanical ventilation. We found that SpO 2 was consistently higher than SaO 2. The size of the bias was fairly constant when SpO 2 was between 75-93%, above which it dropped steadily. The median size of this bias was 1% SpO 2 during hyperoxemia (SpO 2 97-100%) with a median variation of 1.3% above and below. During periods of hypoxemia (SpO 2 75-85%) and normoxemia (SpO 2 89-93%) the bias was approximately 5% SpO 2, with a median variation of 5% above and below
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