• Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Oct 2008

    Correlation between central venous oxygen saturation and oxygen delivery changes following fluid therapy.

    • A Yazigi, H Abou-Zeid, S Madi-Jebara, F Haddad, G Hayek, and K Jabbour.
    • Department of Anesthesia and Surgical Intensive Care, Hotel-Dieu de France Hospital, Saint-Joseph University, Beirut, Lebanon. ritalama@idm.net.lb
    • Acta Anaesthesiol Scand. 2008 Oct 1;52(9):1213-7.

    BackgroundThe rationale for using central venous oxygen saturation (ScvO(2)) in various clinical scenarios is that it reflects the balance between oxygen delivery (DO(2)) and demands. In this study, we evaluated the correlation between ScvO(2) and DO(2) changes (Delta Do(2), DeltaScvO(2)) in patients receiving fluid therapy following coronary surgery. We also correlated the changes of mean arterial pressure (Delta MAP) and central venous pressure (Delta CVP), with Delta DO(2).MethodsSixty consecutive sedated and mechanically ventilated adult patients, with cardiac index ResultsCardiac index (1.9+/-0.2 vs 2.3+/-0.5 ml/min/m(2)), MAP (83+/-11 vs 94+/-13 mm Hg) and CVP (5.7+/-3 vs 7.1+/-3 mmHg) were significantly higher at T1 compared with T0. The correlation of Delta DO(2) with DeltaScvO(2) was positive, significant (r=0.41; P=0.004) and superior to its correlation with Delta MAP (r=0.30; P=0.01) or Delta CVP (r=0.03; P=0.78).ConclusionA significant correlation between ScvO(2) and DO(2) changes was found in patients receiving fluid therapy following coronary surgery. ScvO(2) could be used as an indicator to track DO(2) and to guide volume loading.

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