Comparison of absolute cerebral haemoglobin concentration in neonates measured directly and by the oxygen swing method both based on near infrared spectrophotometry

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Abstract

The total cerebral haemoglobin concentration (tHb in μmol/l) as a major indicator of the oxygen transport capacity is investigated in neonates. Two methods to determine tHb by near infrared spectrophotometry (NIRS) have evolved so far: The first method requires a slow oxygenation change with reference to arterial oxygen saturation (tHbo-method). The second method is based on a geometrical principle and a two channel NIRS instrument (tHbg- method). The aim of this study was to compare both methods quantitatively. 15 clinically stable preterm infants needing supplemental oxygen were included in this study. For each method the measurements of three infants were excluded due to unsatisfactory measurement quality. The remaining 9 neonates had a mean gestational age of 29 (range 25.1 to 31.4) weeks, birthweight of 1272 (740 to 1690) g and a postnatal age of 2.6 (0.5 to 5) days. In each infant 6 tHbo measurements were carried out. During each tHbo measurement the mean of the' continuously available tHbg (Cerebral Redox Monitor 2020, Johnson and Johnson Medical) was calculated. The mean of all successful tHbo and corresponding tHbg was determined for each infant. The mean tHbg was 151 μmol/l (range 62 to 223 μmol/l) and the mean tHbo was 59 μmol/1 (27 to 113 μmol/l). The regression line between the two methods was tHbg = 1.34 x tHbo + 72 μmol/l. The r was 83.6%. The correlation suggests, that both methods can be applied to measure tHb. However, it has to be taken into account that the tHbg-method returns significantly higher values than the tHbo-method.

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Wolf, M., Keel, M., Schenk, D., Dietz, V., Von Siebenthal, K., Wolf, U., … Bucher, H. U. (1998). Comparison of absolute cerebral haemoglobin concentration in neonates measured directly and by the oxygen swing method both based on near infrared spectrophotometry. In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology (Vol. 454, pp. 125–129). Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-4863-8_15

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