A comparison of cerebral oxygenation as measured by the NIRO 300 and the INVOS 5100 Near-Infrared Spectrophotometers
β Scribed by M. Thavasothy; M. Broadhead; C. Elwell; M. Peters; M. Smith
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 324 KB
- Volume
- 57
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2409
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β¦ Synopsis
Summary
In this study cerebral oxygenation was measured using the NIRO 300 and the INVOS 5100 spectrophotometers in 10 healthy adult volunteers, exposed to varying degrees of hyperoxia and hypoxia. The results showed similar baseline values for tissue oxygenation index and regional cerebral oxygen saturation with mean (SD) values being 64.9% (5.1) and 62.3% (6.0), respectively. The overall bias was β2.1%, with the INVOS 5100 underβreading cerebral oxygenation compared to the NIRO 300, with limits of agreement of __Β±__14.7%. Both monitors demonstrated similar changes in response to hyperoxia and hypocapnia (coefficient of variance for F~I~o~2~ 0.45β=β10.0%, F~I~o~2~ 1.0β=β10.1%, hypocapniaβ=β14.5%). The reasons for the bias and variability may relate to differences in the methodological approaches of the two monitors. The correlation between the monitors in response to changes in cerebral oxygenation implies that they may be useful as trend monitors in clinical practice.
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