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Is venous blood a more reliable description of acid-base state following simulated hypo- and hyperventilation?

TLDR
In this article, the acid-base status of arterial and peripheral venous blood was measured in emergency medicine patients without permanent arterial catheters, where the pain and anxiety associated with arterial punctures can cause ventilatory changes.
Abstract
ABGs are performed in acute conditions as the reference method for assessing the acid-base status of blood. Hyperventilation and breath-holding are common ventilatory changes that occur around the time of sampling, rapidly altering the ‘true’ status of the blood. This is particularly relevant in emergency medicine patients without permanent arterial catheters, where the pain and anxiety of arterial punctures can cause ventilatory changes. This study aimed to determine whether peripheral venous values could be a more reliable measure of blood gases following acute changes in ventilation. To allow for characterisation of ventilatory changes typical of acutely ill patients, but without the confounding influence of perfusion or metabolic disturbances, 30 patients scheduled for elective surgery were studied in a prospective observational study. Following anaesthesia, and before the start of the surgery, ventilator settings were altered to achieve a + 100% or − 60% change in alveolar ventilation (‘hyper-’ or ‘hypoventilation’), changes consistent with the anticipation of a painful arterial puncture commonly encountered in the emergency room. Blood samples were drawn simultaneously from indwelling arterial and peripheral venous catheters at baseline, and at 15, 30, 45, 60, 90 and 120 s following the ventilatory change. Comparisons between the timed arterial (or venous) samples were done using repeated-measures ANOVA, with post-hoc analysis using Bonferroni’s correction. Arterial blood pH and PCO2 changed rapidly within the first 15–30s after both hyper- and hypoventilation, plateauing at around 60s (∆pH = ±0.036 and ∆PCO2 = ±0.64 kPa (4.7 mmHg), respectively), with peripheral venous values remaining relatively constant until 60s, and changing minimally thereafter. Mean arterial changes were significantly different at 30s (P < 0.001) when compared to baseline, in response to both hyper- and hypoventilation. This study has shown that substantial differences in arterial and peripheral venous acid-base status can be due to acute changes in ventilation, commonly seen in the ER over the 30s necessary to sample arterial blood. If changes are transient, peripheral venous blood may provide a more reliable description of acid-base status.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Trending peripheral venous PCO2 in patients with respiratory failure using mathematically arterialised venous blood gas samples.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare the trending of venous carbon dioxide partial pressure (pCO2) with mathematically arterialised pCO2 (p CO2ca) and further evaluate whether pCO 2ca follows change in arterial p CO 2a more accurately.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of two methods for converting central venous values of acid-base status to arterial values in critically ill patients.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare two methods, a statistical and a physiological method, to explain arterio-venous acid-base status discrepancies in patients with acute circulatory failure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mathematically arterialised venous blood is a stable representation of patient acid–base status at steady state following acute transient changes in ventilation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated a physiological-based mathematical method to transform peripheral venous blood acid-base values into mathematically arterialised equivalents following acute, transient changes in ventilation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of mathematically arterialised venous blood gas sampling with arterial, capillary, and venous sampling in adult patients with hypercapnic respiratory failure: a single-centre longitudinal cohort study

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors compared the performance of ABG, capillary and venous sampling in a patient cohort referred to start non-invasive ventilation (NIV) and found that ABG had the highest first-time success rate (88%) and was less painful than arterial sampling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of Mild Physiological Effects of Surgical Masks and N95 Respirators over 60 Minutes at Rest.

TL;DR: In this article , the short-term physiological effects of both barrier types over 60min at rest, including face microclimate temperature, end-tidal gases, and venous blood acid-base variables, were assessed.
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