Transcutaneous carbon dioxide monitoring during prolonged apnoea with high‐flow nasal oxygen

Author:

Pape Pernille1ORCID,Piosik Zofia M.12,Kristensen Camilla M.1,Dirks Jesper1,Rasmussen Lars S.13,Kristensen Michael S.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anaesthesia, Centre of Head and Orthopaedics Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

2. Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Nordsjaellands Hospital Hilleroed Denmark

3. Department of Clinical Medicine University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe duration of apnoeic oxygenation with high‐flow nasal oxygen is limited by hypercapnia and acidosis and monitoring of arterial carbon dioxide level is therefore essential. We have performed a study in patients undergoing prolonged apnoeic oxygenation where we monitored the progressive hypercapnia with transcutaneous carbon dioxide. In this paper, we compared the transcutaneous carbon dioxide level with arterial carbon dioxide tension.MethodsThis is a secondary publication based on data from a study exploring the limits of apnoeic oxygenation. We compared transcutaneous carbon dioxide monitoring with arterial carbon dioxide tension using Bland–Altman analyses in anaesthetised and paralysed patients undergoing prolonged apnoeic oxygenation until a predefined limit of pH 7.15 or PCO2 of 12 kPa was reached.ResultsWe included 35 patients with a median apnoea duration of 25 min. Mean pH was 7.14 and mean arterial carbon dioxide tension was 11.2 kPa at the termination of apnoeic oxygenation. Transcutaneous carbon dioxide monitoring initially slightly underestimated the arterial tension but at carbon dioxide levels above 10 kPa it overestimated the value. Bias ranged from −0.55 to 0.81 kPa with limits of agreement between −1.25 and 2.11 kPa.ConclusionTranscutaneous carbon dioxide monitoring provided a clinically acceptable substitute for arterial blood gases but as hypercapnia developed to considerable levels, we observed overestimation at high carbon dioxide tensions in patients undergoing apnoeic oxygenation with high‐flow nasal oxygen.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,General Medicine

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