Continuous venous oximetry in surgical patients.

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

A prospective study was performed to evaluate the efficacy of continuous venous oximetry to supplement traditional hemodynamic monitoring in 39 critically ill surgical patients. There was no statistically significant difference in SvO2 between the continuous in vivo values and in vitro values (0.694 +/- 0.095 vs. 0.698 +/- 0.108). There was no statistically significant correlation between continuously measured SvO2 and PaO2 (r = 0.09, p greater than 0.5), SaO2 (r = 0.08, p greater than 0.5), or oxygen consumption (r = 0.46, p greater than 0.5). There was a slight but statistically significant correlation between continuously measured SvO2 and cardiac output (r = 0.40, p less than 0.025) and oxygen delivery (r = 0.49, p less than 0.005). There was a highly significant correlation between continuously measured SvO2 and oxygen utilization coefficient (r = -0.96, p less than 0.001). Continuously measured SvO2 is a reliable predictor of SvO2 measured intermittently by in vitro methods. In critically ill surgical patients, SvO2 does not correlate highly with the individual determinants of oxygen transport but rather correlates with the oxygen utilization coefficient and therefore reflects the overall balance between oxygen consumption and delivery.

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