Concordance among Measurements Obtained by Three Pulse Oximeters Currently Used by Health Professionals
Introduction: Oxygen saturation is considered as the 5th vital sign. Presently, there exist fixed and wireless pulse oximeters, being the latter most widely used in the last years. Some of them have no possibility of calibration. This situation leads the health staff to adopt therapeutic attitud...
Main Authors: | , , , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
JCDR Research and Publications Private Limited
2014-08-01
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Series: | Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://jcdr.net/articles/PDF/4763/8874_F(T)_PF1(AJAK)_PFA(AK).pdf |
Summary: | Introduction: Oxygen saturation is considered as the 5th vital sign.
Presently, there exist fixed and wireless pulse oximeters, being
the latter most widely used in the last years. Some of them have
no possibility of calibration. This situation leads the health staff to
adopt therapeutic attitudes which can be wrong. Therefore, it is
extremely important to know if these wireless oximeters show a
right concordance as regards measurements, since it is of great
interest in daily clinical practice.
Objective: To evaluate concordance among measurements
obtained by three different pulse oximeters currently used by
health professionals.
Materials and Methods: This is an observational, descriptive
and cross-sectional study related to the concordance of the
results obtained in measurements collected by three different
pulse oximeters (one monitor and two wireless oximeters) which
are available and in use in this hospital unit. The sample size
calculation was performed for a concordance above 0.81 and
an estimation error which did not exceed 0.20. The intraclass
correlation index (ICI) was used to establish the concordance
whereas the Landis-Koch criteria were used to interpret the
results. Systematic errors were analyzed using the Bland-Altman
plot.
Results: The overall concordance among the three pulse
oximeters analyzed resulted in 0.88, a value considered as
“good” according to the Landis-Koch criteria.
Conclusion: The results obtained show that in daily clinical
practice both wireless pulse oximeters analyzed can be used
with a certain reliability, taking into account the limitations of this
research. |
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ISSN: | 2249-782X 0973-709X |