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Umbilical artery catheter blood sampling volume and velocity: Impact on cerebral blood volume and oxygenation in very‐low‐birthweight infants
Author(s) -
Roll Claudia,
Hüning Britta,
Käunicke Matthias,
Krug Jens,
Horsch Sandra
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
acta pædiatrica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1651-2227
pISSN - 0803-5253
DOI - 10.1111/j.1651-2227.2006.tb02182.x
Subject(s) - medicine , blood volume , blood sampling , anesthesia , oxygenation , middle cerebral artery , gestational age , cerebral blood volume , umbilical artery , volume (thermodynamics) , catheter , cerebral blood flow , fetus , cardiology , surgery , pregnancy , ischemia , physics , quantum mechanics , biology , genetics
Aim: Blood sampling from umbilical artery catheters decreases cerebral blood volume and cerebral oxygenation. The aim of this study was to assess the impact of sampling volume and velocity. Methods: Forty‐eight infants, median birthweight 965 g (480–1500 g), median gestational age 27 wk (23–34 wk), were studied during routine blood sampling from umbilical artery catheters. The sampling procedure was performed following a strict protocol for draw‐up volume (1.6 ml), sampling volume (1.7 ml or 0.2 ml), re‐injection volume (1.6 ml) and flushing volume (0.6 ml), time of aspiration (40 s or 80 s), re‐injection (30 s) and flushing (6 s). In each infant, sampling volume and aspiration time were subject to sequential variation in a randomized fashion (1.7 ml/40 s, 1.7 ml/80 s, 0.2 ml/30 s). Using near‐infrared spectroscopy, changes in concentrations of cerebral oxygenated and deoxygenated haemoglobin were measured, and changes in cerebral blood volume and cerebral oxygenation were calculated. Results: During all three sampling procedures, oxygenated haemoglobin decreased significantly from baseline, whereas deoxygenated haemoglobin did not change. Correspondingly, a decrease in cerebral blood volume and cerebral oxygenation occurred. This decrease was not affected significantly by extending the sampling time from 40 s to 80 s, whereas it was blunted by reducing the amount of blood withdrawn. Conclusion: Blood sampling from umbilical artery catheters induces a decrease in cerebral blood volume and cerebral oxygenation. The magnitude of the decrease depends on the blood volume withdrawn but not on sampling velocity.