• Title/Summary/Keyword: 만성정신질환

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Nocturnal Arterial Oxygen Saturation Monitoring in Patients with Respiratory Disease (호흡기 질환 환자들에서 야간 동맥혈 산소포화도 감시 성적)

  • Choi, In-Seon;Yang, Jae-Beom;Kim, Young-Chul;Chung, Ik-Joo;Kang, Yu-Ho;Koh, Yeoung-Il;Park, Sang-Seon;Lee, Min-Su;Park, Kyung-Ok
    • Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases
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    • v.41 no.2
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    • pp.103-110
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    • 1994
  • To find out the predictors of nocturnal arterial oxygen desaturation in patients with respiratory diseases, transcutaneous oxygen saturation($StcO_2$) monitoring studies using a pulse oximeter were performed during sleep in 20 patients. $StcO_2$ was decreased more than 4% from the baseline value in 18 patients(90%) and more than 10%("Desaturator") in 8(40%). Five of the seven patients(71.4%) with awake $PaO_2$<60mmHg and three of the thirteen patients(23.1%) with awake $PaO_2{\geq}60mmHg$ were "desaturators". The awake $PaO_2/FIO_2$ and $PaO_2/PAO_2$ could distinguish "desaturator" from "nondesaturator", and $PaO_2,\;SaO_2$ or $StcO_2$ could not. These results suggest that the nocturnal oxygen desaturation depends on the severity of the underlying disease rather than the baseline $PaO_2$. Anthropomorphic and lung function factors could not separate between "desaturator" and "non-desaturator", and about a quater of patients with a wake $PaO_2{\geq}60mmHg$ developed significant desaturation. Therefore, it is necessary to monitor the nocturnal arterial oxygen saturation in patients with respiratory diseases regardless of their severity of airflow obstruction or awake $PaO_2$.

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