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A new tool for the validation of umbilical cord acid–base data
Author(s) -
Kro GAB,
Yli BM,
Rasmussen S,
Norèn H,
AmerWåhlin I,
Saugstad OD,
StrayPedersen B,
Rosén KG
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
bjog: an international journal of obstetrics and gynaecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.157
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1471-0528
pISSN - 1470-0328
DOI - 10.1111/j.1471-0528.2010.02711.x
Subject(s) - umbilical cord , percentile , medicine , umbilical artery , arterial ph , population , anesthesia , cardiology , surgery , fetus , statistics , mathematics , pregnancy , biology , genetics , environmental health , anatomy
Please cite this paper as: Kro G, Yli B, Rasmussen S, Norèn H, Amer‐Wåhlin I, Didrik Saugstad O, Stray‐Pedersen B, Rosén K. A new tool for the validation of umbilical cord acid–base data. BJOG 2010;117:1544–1552. Objective  To identify the distribution of carbon dioxide tension (pCO 2 ) relative to pH in validated umbilical cord acid–base data. Design  Observational study. Setting  European hospital labour wards. Population  Data for 36 432 term newborns were obtained from three sources: two trials of fetal monitoring with electrocardiography (ECG; the Swedish randomised controlled trial and the European Union Fetal ECG trial) and data from Mölndal Hospital. Methods  From the total study population, cases with missing values or obvious typing errors were excluded. The remaining data were validated based on specified criteria. Percentiles of arterial pCO 2 by pH were calculated using multilevel regression modelling. Main outcome measures  Umbilical cord pH, pCO 2 and base deficit. Results  Acid–base values were considered invalid in one out of seven cases. Percentiles for arterial pCO 2 corresponding to specified values of arterial pH were developed from the validated data of 26 690 cases. Conclusions  Percentiles for arterial pCO 2 for a specified arterial pH can be used as a tool to identify cases with erroneously low pCO 2 values, and thus avoid an incorrect interpretation of the newborn’s acid–base status.

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