Arterial blood gas derived variables as estimates of intrapulmonary shunt in critically ill children

1985 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 1029-1033 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. MICHAEL DEAN ◽  
RANDALL C. WETZEL ◽  
MARK C. ROGERS
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Sritam Mohanty ◽  
Rangaraj Setlur ◽  
Jyoti Kumar Sinha

Introduction: Arterial blood gas (ABG) analysis is the gold standard method and frequently performed intervention to evaluate acid-base status along with adequacy of ventilation and oxygenation among patients with predominantly critical / acute diseases. Aims And Objectives: The aim of this study is to evaluate the correlation of VBG analysis and pulse oximetry (SpO2) with ABG analysis in critically ill patients. Materials And Methods:Intensive Care Unit (ICU), Command Hospital (Eastern Command), Kolkata, Adult patients requiring arterial blood gas analysis, JAN 2018 –JUNE 2019, 100 critically ill patients and Age – 18yrs and older, Sex – Either sex. Conclusion: In this study population of critically ill patients, pH and pCO2 on VBG analysis correlated with pH and pCO2 on ABG analysis. The SpO2 correlated well with pO2 on ABG analysis


2011 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy L. Dzierba ◽  
Prasad Abraham

Acid−base disorders are common in the critically ill. Arterial blood gas (ABG) analysis is frequently used to identify and manage acid−base disturbances. Using a systematic problem-solving approach to acid−base disturbances will facilitate the identification and assess the progression and severity of the metabolic and respiratory abnormality. The intent of this review is to examine acid−base physiology and regulation, provide a method to evaluate a patient’s acid−base disorder, and provide therapeutic interventions.


Author(s):  
Emma M. Chang ◽  
Andrew Bretherick ◽  
Gordon B. Drummond ◽  
J Kenneth Baillie

Abstract Background Accurate measurement of pulmonary oxygenation is important for classification of disease severity and quantification of outcomes in clinical studies. Currently, tension-based methods such as P/F ratio are in widespread use, but are known to be less accurate than content-based methods. However, content-based methods require invasive measurements or sophisticated equipment that are rarely used in clinical practice. We devised two new methods to infer shunt fraction from a single arterial blood gas sample: (1) a non-invasive effective shunt (ES) fraction calculated using a rearrangement of the indirect Fick equation, standard constants, and a procedural inversion of the relationship between content and tension and (2) inferred values from a database of outputs from an integrated mathematical model of gas exchange (DB). We compared the predictive validity—the accuracy of predictions of PaO2 following changes in FIO2—of each measure in a retrospective database of 78,159 arterial blood gas (ABG) results from critically ill patients. Results In a formal test set comprising 9,635 pairs of ABGs, the median absolute error (MAE) values for the four measures were as follows: alveolar-arterial difference, 7.30 kPa; PaO2/FIO2 ratio, 2.41 kPa; DB, 2.13 kPa; and ES, 1.88 kPa. ES performed significantly better than other measures (p < 10-10 in all comparisons). Further exploration of the DB method demonstrated that obtaining two blood gas measurements at different FIO2 provides a more precise description of pulmonary oxygenation. Conclusions Effective shunt can be calculated using a computationally efficient procedure using routinely collected arterial blood gas data and has better predictive validity than other analytic methods. For practical assessment of oxygenation in clinical research, ES should be used in preference to other indices. ES can be calculated at http://baillielab.net/es.


2012 ◽  
Vol 113 (4) ◽  
pp. 541-548 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tracey L. Bryan ◽  
Sean van Diepen ◽  
Mohit Bhutani ◽  
Miriam Shanks ◽  
Robert C. Welsh ◽  
...  

The development of intrapulmonary shunts with increased cardiac output during exercise in healthy humans has been reported in several recent studies, but mechanisms governing their recruitment remain unclear. Dobutamine and dopamine are inotropes commonly used to augment cardiac output; however, both can increase venous admixture/shunt fraction (Qs/Qt). It is possible that, as with exercise, intrapulmonary shunts are recruited with increased cardiac output during dobutamine and/or dopamine infusion that may contribute to the observed increase in Qs/Qt. The purpose of this study was to examine how dobutamine and dopamine affect intrapulmonary shunt and gas exchange. Nine resting healthy subjects received serial infusions of dobutamine and dopamine at incremental doses under normoxic and hyperoxic (inspired O2fraction = 1.0) conditions. At each step, alveolar-to-arterial Po2difference (A-aDo2) and Qs/Qt were calculated from arterial blood gas samples, intrapulmonary shunt was evaluated using contrast echocardiography, and cardiac output was calculated by Doppler echocardiography. Both dobutamine and dopamine increased cardiac output and Qs/Qt. Intrapulmonary shunt developed in most subjects with both drugs and paralleled the increase in Qs/Qt. A-aDo2was unchanged due to a concurrent rise in mixed venous oxygen content. Hyperoxia consistently eliminated intrapulmonary shunt. These findings contribute to our present understanding of the mechanisms governing recruitment of these intrapulmonary shunts as well as their impact on gas exchange. In addition, given the deleterious effect on Qs/Qt and the risk of neurological complications with intrapulmonary shunts, these findings could have important implications for use of dobutamine and dopamine in the clinical setting.


1986 ◽  
Vol 26 (7) ◽  
pp. 684
Author(s):  
Curtis D. Stokes ◽  
Steve Blevins ◽  
Joan C. Stoklosa ◽  
Kathleen Cotter ◽  
Kim C. Goh ◽  
...  

2009 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 279-281 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tim Astles

Anaemia in the critically ill remains a contentious issue. Despite adoption of lower haemoglobin levels as transfusion triggers, many patients on intensive care units (ICUs) still require blood transfusions during their illness. One factor that contributes to the critically ill becoming anaemic is regular phlebotomy. Over a two week period, all blood tests performed on patients in a busy, teaching hospital ICU were surveyed to allow calculation of the total volume of blood that had been taken. On average, 52.4 mL of blood was taken per patient per day, and 366.8 mL per patient per week. The most frequently performed tests were arterial blood gas analyses, performed on average 5.8 times per patient per day (range 0–21 times per day). Arterial blood gas analysis alone accounted for taking of 29 mL of blood per patient per day, ie 203 mL per patient per week. Several methods for reducing the amount of blood taken from ICU patients have been identified and discussed. By implementing some of these simple changes in our institution, it would be possible to reduce the volume of blood taken by 43%.


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