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Cerebral Tissue Oxygen Saturation Measurements in Perinatal Asphyxia Cases Treated with Therapeutic Hypothermia.

Halil KazanasmazAbdulsamed AkanÖmer YalçınMuhammed Turgut ÖlçücüSelehattin OnarÖzlem Kazanasmaz
Published in: Therapeutic hypothermia and temperature management (2023)
Cerebral tissue oxygen saturation (CrSO 2 ) measured with near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) technology has recently become the subject of several research studies. The aim of this study was to investigate the diagnostic value of CrSO 2 measurements in perinatal asphyxia (PA) cases. The study included a patient group of 42 PA cases, who were to be applied with therapeutic hypothermia (TH), and a control group of 42 healthy term newborns. PA cases were determined as moderate or severe encephalopathy (Sarnat score stage II or III) in clinical evaluation. In both groups, left (CrSO 2 L) and right (CrSO 2 R) NIRS measurements were taken for 10 minutes on the scalp. The arithmetic mean value of measurements was calculated and compared. The mean measurements were CrSO 2 R 67.38 ± 9.39 and CrSO 2 L 66.73 ± 7.76 in the patient group, and CrSO 2 R 80.28 ± 8.04 and CrSO 2 L 79.14 ± 8.49 in the control group. The mean CrSO 2 R and CrSO 2 L measurements of the patient group were statistically significantly lower than those of the control group ( p  < 0.001). In the Pearson correlation analysis, a significant correlation was determined in the patient group between cord blood gas pH and CrSO 2 R ( r : 0.539, p  < 0.001) and CrSO 2 L ( r : 0.54, p  < 0.001). For a cutoff value of CrSO 2 L ≤ 72%, the positive predictive value was 80 and the negative predictive value was 84.6. For a cutoff value of CrSO 2 R ≤ 74%, the positive predictive value was 79.5 and the negative predictive value was 82.5. Low CrSO 2 measurements obtained with the NIRS method in PA cases to be applied with TH together with cord blood gas parameters can be considered a helpful parameter in diagnosis.
Keyphrases
  • cord blood
  • case report
  • pregnant women
  • cardiac arrest
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • preterm infants
  • gestational age