Pulmonology Flashcards
EVALUATION OF PULMONARY GAS EXCHANGE
Pulse Oximetry
Noninvasive and indirect measurement of arterial O2 saturation (SaO2) estimated by light absorption characteristics of oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin in peripheral blood.
- Limitations:
a. Measures oxygen saturation, not O2 delivery to tissues
b. Insensitive to hyperoxia. See eFig. 25.1 for oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve.
c. Artificially increased by: Carboxyhemoglobin levels >1% to 2%
d. Artificially decreased by: Intravenous dyes, opaque nail polish, and methemoglobin levels>1%
e. Unreliable when pulse signal is poor: Hypothermia, hypovolemia,
shock, edema, movement artifact
Capnography
- Measures CO2 concentration of expired gas by infrared or mass spectroscopy
- End-tidal CO2 (ETCO2) correlates with PaCO2 (usually within 5 mmHg in healthy subjects).
- Used to evaluate proper placement of an endotracheal tube, to monitor ventilation in mechanically ventilated patients, to assess effectiveness of CPR, and during polysomnography
Blood gases
- Arterial blood gas (ABG): Most accurate way to assess oxygenation (PaO2), ventilation (PaCO2), and acid–base status (pH and HCO3 ). See Chapter 28 for normal mean values.
- Venous blood gas (VBG): PvCO2 averages 6 to 8 mmHg higher than PaCO2; venous pH is slightly lower than arterial pH.
- Capillary blood gas (CBG): Correlation with ABG is generally best for pH, moderate for PCO2, and worst for PO2.
Analysis of Acid–Base Disturbances
Determine primary disturbance (metabolic versus respiratory), then assess for mixed disorder by calculating expected compensatory response.
What does pulse oximetry measure?
Arterial oxygen saturation (Sa02)
How is arterial oxygen saturation estimated in pulse oximetry?
By analyzing the light absorption characteristics of oxygenated and
deoxygenated hemoglobin in peripheral blood
What are the limitations of pulse oximetry?
a. It measures oxygen saturation, not oxygen delivery to tissues.
b. It is insensitive to hyperoxia (high oxygen levels).
c. It can be artificially increased by carboxyhemoglobin levels
>1% to 2%.
d. It can be artificially decreased by intravenous dyes, opaque nail polish, and methemoglobin levels
>1%.
e. It becomes unreliable when the pulse signal is poor due to factors like hypothermia, hypovolemia, shock, edema, or movement artifact.