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Near-patient measurements of methemoglobin, oxygen saturation, and total hemoglobin: evaluation of a new instrument for adult and neonatal intensive care.
Crit Care Med. 1995 Jan; 23(1):193-201.CC

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

a) To evaluate the performance of a compact, new instrument that uses disposable cuvettes to measure total hemoglobin concentration, oxygen content, and the relative concentrations of oxy- and methemoglobin in 50-microL blood samples; b) to determine whether the instrument can be used for near-patient assessment of methemoglobinemia; and c) to ascertain whether problems commonly encountered in neonatal blood samples affect the instrument's performance.

DESIGN

Prospective study, in which the test instrument was compared with a standard method. Samples of whole blood with and without bilirubin, fetal hemoglobin, and hemolysis were analyzed on the new (test) instrument and on a widely used cooximeter (OSM3 hemoximeter, Radiometer; reference instrument).

SETTING

In vitro analyses of blood samples in clinical and university laboratories.

MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS

There was a close linear correlation between the methomoglobin measurements of the test instrument and those measurements of the reference instrument (slope = 0.989; r2 = .989). The average difference in mean assay values between the reference instrument and the test instrument was -0.59%, i.e., < 1% methemoglobin. Repeated measurements indicated the precision was 0.5% methemoglobin. Complete hemolysis of the sample reduced the methemoglobin reading by only 0.40%. Adding bilirubin (10 to 11 mg/dL [171 to 188.1 mumol/L]), increased the methemoglobin reading by 0.23%, increased the oxyhemoglobin reading by 0.45%, and increased total hemoglobin by 0.21 g/dL. Fetal hemoglobin also had minimal effects on the readings.

CONCLUSIONS

The test instrument is fast and easy to operate. No sample preparation or pipetting is required. To operate the instrument, the user simply connects a syringe containing the blood sample to one of the disposable cuvettes, injects 50 microL of blood into the cuvette, and inserts the cuvette into the instrument. The test instrument automatically detects the presence of the cuvette, analyzes the sample, and displays the results in < 10 secs. The findings in this study indicate that the test instrument has sufficient accuracy for near-patient testing in intensive care units. The errors introduced by hemolysis, fetal hemoglobin, and bilirubin were too small to be of clinical importance. Thus, the test instrument is essentially unaffected by complications commonly encountered in neonatal blood. The capacity of the test instrument to measure methemoglobin makes it particularly useful if inhaled nitric oxide therapy becomes a standard clinical practice.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Pediatrics, University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio 78284-7812.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

7528117

Citation

Gong, A K.. "Near-patient Measurements of Methemoglobin, Oxygen Saturation, and Total Hemoglobin: Evaluation of a New Instrument for Adult and Neonatal Intensive Care." Critical Care Medicine, vol. 23, no. 1, 1995, pp. 193-201.
Gong AK. Near-patient measurements of methemoglobin, oxygen saturation, and total hemoglobin: evaluation of a new instrument for adult and neonatal intensive care. Crit Care Med. 1995;23(1):193-201.
Gong, A. K. (1995). Near-patient measurements of methemoglobin, oxygen saturation, and total hemoglobin: evaluation of a new instrument for adult and neonatal intensive care. Critical Care Medicine, 23(1), 193-201.
Gong AK. Near-patient Measurements of Methemoglobin, Oxygen Saturation, and Total Hemoglobin: Evaluation of a New Instrument for Adult and Neonatal Intensive Care. Crit Care Med. 1995;23(1):193-201. PubMed PMID: 7528117.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Near-patient measurements of methemoglobin, oxygen saturation, and total hemoglobin: evaluation of a new instrument for adult and neonatal intensive care. A1 - Gong,A K, PY - 1995/1/1/pubmed PY - 1995/1/1/medline PY - 1995/1/1/entrez SP - 193 EP - 201 JF - Critical care medicine JO - Crit Care Med VL - 23 IS - 1 N2 - OBJECTIVES: a) To evaluate the performance of a compact, new instrument that uses disposable cuvettes to measure total hemoglobin concentration, oxygen content, and the relative concentrations of oxy- and methemoglobin in 50-microL blood samples; b) to determine whether the instrument can be used for near-patient assessment of methemoglobinemia; and c) to ascertain whether problems commonly encountered in neonatal blood samples affect the instrument's performance. DESIGN: Prospective study, in which the test instrument was compared with a standard method. Samples of whole blood with and without bilirubin, fetal hemoglobin, and hemolysis were analyzed on the new (test) instrument and on a widely used cooximeter (OSM3 hemoximeter, Radiometer; reference instrument). SETTING: In vitro analyses of blood samples in clinical and university laboratories. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: There was a close linear correlation between the methomoglobin measurements of the test instrument and those measurements of the reference instrument (slope = 0.989; r2 = .989). The average difference in mean assay values between the reference instrument and the test instrument was -0.59%, i.e., < 1% methemoglobin. Repeated measurements indicated the precision was 0.5% methemoglobin. Complete hemolysis of the sample reduced the methemoglobin reading by only 0.40%. Adding bilirubin (10 to 11 mg/dL [171 to 188.1 mumol/L]), increased the methemoglobin reading by 0.23%, increased the oxyhemoglobin reading by 0.45%, and increased total hemoglobin by 0.21 g/dL. Fetal hemoglobin also had minimal effects on the readings. CONCLUSIONS: The test instrument is fast and easy to operate. No sample preparation or pipetting is required. To operate the instrument, the user simply connects a syringe containing the blood sample to one of the disposable cuvettes, injects 50 microL of blood into the cuvette, and inserts the cuvette into the instrument. The test instrument automatically detects the presence of the cuvette, analyzes the sample, and displays the results in < 10 secs. The findings in this study indicate that the test instrument has sufficient accuracy for near-patient testing in intensive care units. The errors introduced by hemolysis, fetal hemoglobin, and bilirubin were too small to be of clinical importance. Thus, the test instrument is essentially unaffected by complications commonly encountered in neonatal blood. The capacity of the test instrument to measure methemoglobin makes it particularly useful if inhaled nitric oxide therapy becomes a standard clinical practice. SN - 0090-3493 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/7528117/Near_patient_measurements_of_methemoglobin_oxygen_saturation_and_total_hemoglobin:_evaluation_of_a_new_instrument_for_adult_and_neonatal_intensive_care_ L2 - https://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00003246-199501000-00030 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -