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Title: Transcutaneous PCO2 monitoring on adult patients in the ICU and the operating room. Author: Tremper KK, Shoemaker WC, Shippy CR, Nolan LS. Journal: Crit Care Med; 1981 Oct; 9(10):752-5. PubMed ID: 6793314. Abstract: Studies were performed on 44 patients who were monitored continuously with transcutaneous carbon dioxide (PtcCO2) sensors. The patients were monitored intermittently with arterial and mixed venous blood gases and full hemodynamic and oxygen transport data. Twenty of the studies were performed intraoperatively. A total of 411 data sets revealed a correlation coefficient, r, between arterial and transcutaneous PCO2 of 0.80 when the patients were not in low flow shock, i.e., cardiac index (CI) greater than 1.5 L/min x M2. On the basis of these data, the authors have found the normal arterial-transcutaneous carbon dioxide gradient, delta CO2, (delta CO2 = PtcCO2 -- PaCO2) to be 23 +/- 11 torr. The PtcCO2 monitor was found to be a valuable trend monitor of arterial CO2 tensions of adults during adequate cardiac function in the ICU and the operating room. Twenty-four data sets were collected while 3 patients were monitored during severe shock (CI less than 1.5 L/min x M2). PtcCO2 trended inversely with changes in CI during shock and did not follow PaCO2 (r = --0.85). During shock, delta CO2 = 61 %/- 25 torr. The severity of shock could be roughly determined by comparing the PtcCO2 values with arterial CO2 tensions.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]