Author/Authors :
Razi، Ebrahim نويسنده , , Nasiri، Omid نويسنده Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran, , , Akbari، Hossein نويسنده , , Razi، Armin نويسنده Department of Internal Medicine, School of Medicine, Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran ,
Abstract :
Background: Arterial blood gas (ABG) analysis is useful in evaluation of the
clinical condition of critically ill patients; however, arterial puncture or insertion
of an arterial catheter may cause many complications. The aim of this study was
to determine whether venous blood gas (VBG) values can be used as an
alternative to arterial blood gas measurements in patients under mechanical
ventilation.
Materials and Methods: This study was carried out on patients admitted to the
Intensive Care Unit of Kashan Beheshti Hospital. Blood for VBG analysis was
obtained from the cubital vein, while for ABG analysis blood was taken
simultaneously from the radial artery. ABG and VBG samples were obtained
simultaneously, and indexes of pH, PCO2, HCO3, base excess (BE), PO2 and O2
saturation level were analyzed.
Results: A total of 102 pair of simultaneous venous and arterial blood samples
were obtained from 102 patients (mean age 58.4±21.5 years). Seventy (69%)
were males. The mean difference between arterial and venous values was 0.04
for pH, 5.6 mm/Hg for PCO2, -0.32 mmol/l for HCO3, -1.03 mmol/l for BE,
53.6 mm/Hg for PO2, and 23.5 % for O2 saturation. The Pearson correlation
coefficients between arterial and venous values for pH, PCO2, HCO3, BE, PO2
and O2 saturation were 0.874, 0.835, 0.768, 0.810, 0.287, and 0.310, respectively.
Linear regression equations for the estimation of pH, PCO2, HCO3, BE, PO2
and O2 saturation were as follows: arterial pH=1.927+0.745×venous pH
[r=0.801, p < 0.001]; PCO2=6.470+0.706×venous PCO2 [r=0.835, p < 0.001]; arterial
HCO3=7.455+0.681×venous HCO3 [r=0.768, p < 0.001]; arterial BE=-
0.952+0.736×venous BE [r=0.810, p < 0.001]; arterial PO2=70.374+0.620×venous
PO2 [r=0.287, p=0.003]; arterial venous saturation= 89.753+0.082×venous O2
saturation [r=0.317, p = 0.001].
Conclusion: Venous blood gases, especially pH, Base excess, and PCO2 levels
have relatively good correlation with ABG values. Because this correlation is
not close, VBG cannot substitute ABG in mechanically ventilated patients.