Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Use of the oxygen reserve index/FiOas a non-invasive index to estimate venous admixture in anesthetized dogs.
- Journal:
- Frontiers in veterinary science
- Year:
- 2024
- Authors:
- Bellini, Luca et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Animal Medicine · Italy
- Species:
- dog
Abstract
The oxygen reserve index (ORi) is a novel, non-invasive parameter that estimates arterial oxygen partial pressure (PaO) during hyperoxia when the fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO) is elevated. This study aimed to assess the utility of the ORi/FiOratio as an index for quantifying F-shunt, serving as an estimate of venous admixture. Anesthetic records were reviewed from 44 dogs undergoing general anesthesia and requiring arterial catheterization. ORi was measured via a CO-oximeter using a probe on the tongue. Paired measurements of PaO, obtained by blood gas analysis, and ORi were taken at various FiOlevels to achieve an ORi between 0 and 1. Venous admixture was quantified by F-shunt. Spearman's correlation coefficient assessed the relationship between ORi/FiOand F-shunt. Youden's index identified the optimal cut-off point to predict a physiological F-shunt (≤ 10%). A total of 77 paired observations were collected, revealing a moderate negative correlation between F-shunt and ORi/FiO(rho = -0.59, < 0.001). An ORi/FiOcut-off of 1.2 demonstrated 80% sensitivity for identifying dogs with an F-shunt ≤10%, with a ROC curve area above 80%. However, the index was less effective at distinguishing dogs with higher shunt fractions. The ORi/FiOindex identifies dogs with low F-shunt during anesthesia with strong sensitivity and predictive accuracy, potentially ruling out the occurrence of ventilation-perfusion inequality. However, it cannot replace blood gas analysis for quantifying venous admixture.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39834930/