Title of article :
Assessment of Systemic and Cerebral Oxygen Saturation during Diagnostic Bronchoscopy: A Prospective, Randomized Study
Author/Authors :
Vasko, Attila Department of Pulmonology - University of Debrecen - Faculty of Medicine - Health and Medical Science Centre - Debrecen - Hungary , Kova´cs, Sa´ndor Institute of Sectoral Economics and Methodology - Faculty of Economics and Business - Department of Research Methodology and Statistics - University of Debrecen - Debrecen - Hungary , Fu¨lesdi , Be´la Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care - University of Debrecen - Faculty of Medicine - Health and Medical Science Centre - Debrecen, Hungary , Molna´r, Csilla Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care - University of Debrecen - Faculty of Medicine - Health and Medical Science Centre - Debrecen, Hungary
Abstract :
Background. Arterial hypoxemia occurs in about 2.5–69% of cases during fiberoptic bronchoscopy and may necessitate administration of supplemental oxygen. Whether routine supplementary administration is indicated for all patients is a debated issue. In this prospective randomized study, we assessed the incidence of systemic desaturation (SpO2 <90% or a >4% decrease
lasting for more than 60 s) and wanted to find out whether cerebral desaturation occurs in parallel with systemic changes. Patients
and Methods. 92 consecutive patients scheduled for diagnostic bronchoscopy were randomly assigned to the no oxygen (O2-
group), 2 l/min supplemental O2, or 4 l/min supplemental O2 groups. Primary end points were systemic and cerebral desaturation
rate during the procedure. Secondary end points were to delineate the main risk factors of systemic and cerebral desaturation.
Results. In the entire cohort, systemic desaturation occurred in 18.5% of patients (n � 17), corresponding to 5 patients (16%) in the
O2 (−)group, 6 patients (19%) in the 2 l/min group, and 6 patients (20%) in 4 l/min group, respectively. In the O2 (−) group, the
probability of desaturation was 41.7 times higher than that in the 2 l/min group (p � 0.014 s), while there was no difference in the
probabilities of desaturation between the 2 l/min and 4 l/min groups (p � 0.22). Cerebral desaturation (more than 20% rSO2
decrease compared to baseline) did not occur in any patients in the three groups. Systemic desaturation developed earlier, and
recovery after desaturation was longer in the O2 (−) group. Male gender, smoking, and systemic oxygen saturation at baseline and
FEV1% were the most significant factors contributing to systemic desaturation during bronchoscopy. Conclusions. Administration of supplemental oxygen does not prevent systemic desaturation during flexible bronchoscopy, but may contribute to the
shortening of desaturation episodes and faster normalization of oxygen saturation. According to our results, 2 l/min supplemental oxygen should routinely be administered to patients throughout the procedure. -is trial is registered with NCT04002609.
Keywords :
Systemic , Cerebral Oxygen Saturation , Diagnostic Bronchoscopy , Randomized Study , Arterial hypoxemia occurs
Journal title :
Emergency Medicine International