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Measurement of tissue oxygen saturation levels using portable near‐infrared spectroscopy in clinically healthy dogs
Author(s) -
Hall Kelly E.,
Powell Lisa L.,
Beilman Greg J.,
Shafer Karin R.,
Skala Vickie K.,
Olmstead Elizabeth A.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of veterinary emergency and critical care
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.886
H-Index - 47
eISSN - 1476-4431
pISSN - 1479-3261
DOI - 10.1111/j.1476-4431.2008.00369.x
Subject(s) - medicine , biceps , nuclear medicine , oxygen saturation , sartorius muscle , muscle tissue , oxygen , biomedical engineering , anatomy , chemistry , organic chemistry
Objective– To establish a reference interval for tissue oxygen saturation (StO 2 ) levels measured by a portable near‐infrared spectroscope and determine site(s) for reproducibly measuring StO 2 levels in dogs. Design– Prospective experimental study. Setting– Veterinary teaching hospital. Animals– Seventy‐eight healthy dogs. Measurements and Main Results– A portable device that quantitatively measures StO 2 levels directly in muscle tissue using near‐infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) was topically applied to shaved sites over 4 muscle bodies. Readings from the sartorius muscle were obtained 100% of the time. The digital extensors and biceps femoris muscles provided similar readings, but less consistently obtained StO 2 values (70% and 67%, respectively). Mean StO 2 levels measured over these 3 sites were not statistically different from one another. When readings from these 3 sites were combined, a mean ±1 SD of 92.9±7.4% was obtained. The epaxial muscles produced a significantly lower mean ±1 SD (68.5±22.4%), and readings were obtained only 60% of the time. Conclusions– In dogs, a mean ±1 SD of 92.9±7.4% can be used to investigate clinical applications of NIRS. The sartorius muscle most consistently allows for detection of StO 2 levels (100%). The epaxial muscles are not consistent or reliable for obtaining StO 2 readings and are not recommended for clinical application of near‐infrared spectroscope. Sex does not significantly affect StO 2 readings at any site. Body condition score only affects readings obtained from the sartorius muscle.

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