Transcutaneous blood gas monitoring and tissue perfusion during common femoral thromboendarterectomy

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Background: Improving tissue perfusion can improve clinical outcomes in surgical patients, where monitoring may aid clinicians in detecting adverse conditions and guide interventions. Transcutaneous monitoring (TCM) of oxygen (tcpO2) and carbon dioxide (tcpCO2) is a well-proven technology and could potentially serve as a measure of local circulation, perfusion and metabolism, but the clinical use is not thoroughly explored. The purpose of this proof-of-concept study was to investigate whether TCM of blood gasses could detect changes in perfusion during major vascular surgery. Methods: Ten patients with peripheral arterial disease scheduled for lower limb major arterial revascularization under general anaesthesia were consecutively included. TcpO2 and tcpCO2 were continuously recorded from anaesthesia induction until skin closure with a TCM monitor placed on both legs and the thorax. Peripheral oxygen saturation was kept ≥94% and mean arterial blood pressure ≥65 mmHg. The primary outcomes were changes in tcpO2 and tcpCO2 related to arterial clamping and declamping during the procedure and analyzed by paired statistics. Results: Femoral artery clamping resulted in a significant decrease in tcpO2 (−2.1 kPa, IQR-4.2; −0.8), p=.017)), followed by a significant increase in response to arterial declamping (5.5 kPa, IQR 0–7.3), p=.017)). Arterial clamping resulted in a statistically significant increase in tcpCO2 (0.9 kPa, IQR 0.3–5.4), p=.008)) and a significant decrease following declamping (−0.7 kPa, IQR −2.6; −0.2), p=.011)). Conclusion: Transcutaneous monitoring of oxygen and carbon dioxide is a feasible method for detection of extreme changes in tissue perfusion during arterial clamping and declamping, and its use for improving patient outcomes should be explored. Clinical Trials identifier: NCT04040478. Registered on July 31, 2019.

Original languageEnglish
JournalScandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation
Volume82
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)334-340
Number of pages7
ISSN0036-5513
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Medisinsk Fysiologisk Forenings Forlag (MFFF).

    Research areas

  • hemodynamic monitoring, microcirculation, peripheral perfusion, transcutaneous blood gas, Transcutaneous monitoring

ID: 323984608