Guest guest Posted December 13, 2007 Report Share Posted December 13, 2007 good points kenny. i did extensive research on pulse ox for a ce class i presented at 2004 texas ems conference. i found that these machines are designed for the in hospital environment and below ambient temp of 40 f or above ambient temps of 100 f they lose accuracy. also very fast or very slow heart rates cause them to be inaccurate. dont get me started on fingernail polish. i painted a female paramedic nails 9 different colors and black was the only color which affected the reading (dropped it from 99 to 92) As for EMI/RFI (radios.etc) the other day i took a 18 y/o female to the hospital to was " texting " on her cell and holding it in the hand which had the pulse ox probe. this dropped the reading from 99 to 90. when i talked her into stopping (quite the trick) it went back to 99. jimmy davis Kenny Navarro wrote: >>> So we are going to " treat the machine and not the patient " ? <<< WOW. How did you come to that conclusion based on the information I provided? Did you read the parts about " treatment guidelines " and " variation depending on the circumstances encountered. " What our guidelines encourage is treatment decisions based on physical exams and the machines. Certainly you are not suggesting that we rid ourselves of glucometers and sphygmomanometers and ECG monitors and waveform capnographers. >>> Everybody knows that Pulse Ox are mostly inaccurate in really low down sick patients and doesn't give you enough information to allow good decision making.<<< Most manufacturers claim accuracy to be between within 2% and 4% of actual values for readings above 70%.(1,2) During periods of desaturation below 70%, the accuracy is substantially reduced.(3,4) This seems to me an unimportant limitation, since most patients who desaturate to such a low level are treated as aggressively as possible, regardless of whether the true saturation is 40% or 60%. I have never seen a hypoxic patient with a normal pulse oximetry reading. The above-mentioned studies (and others) seem to support my experiences. Interestingly, one researcher has successfully demonstrated that the differences in pulse oximeter readings between the right hand and one foot could be used as a screening tool to aid in the diagnosis of critical congenital heart disease.(5) Now, that is impressive accuracy! With Love, Kenny Navarro Dallas References 1. Tobin MJ. Respiratory monitoring. JAMA 1990;264(2):244�251. 2. Severinghaus JW. History and recent developments in pulse oximetry. Scand J Clin Invest Suppl 1993;214:105�111. 3. Faconi S. Reliability of pulse oximetry in hypoxic infants. J Pediatr 1988;112(3):424�427. 4. Severinghaus JW, Naifeh KH, Koh SO. Errors in 14 pulse oximeters during profound hypoxemia. J Clin Monit 1989;5(2):72�81. 5. de Wahl Granelli A, Mellander M, Sunneg�rdh J, Sandberg K, Ostman- I. Screening for duct-dependant congenital heart disease with pulse oximetry: a critical evaluation of strategies to maximize sensitivity. Acta Paediatr. 2005 Nov;94(11):1590-1596. --------------------------------- Be a better friend, newshound, and know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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