The sensitivity of room-air pulse oximetry in the detection of hypercapnia☆
To view the full text, please login as a subscribed user or purchase a subscription. Click here to view the full text on ScienceDirect.

Fig. 1
Scatterplot of room-air pulse oximetry values versus Paco2 values. Graph includes 342 of 349 patients; 7 patients with room-air pulse oximetry values from 52% to 74% and Paco2 values from 57 to 85 mm Hg are not shown.
Abstract
Objective
To estimate the sensitivity of room-air pulse oximetry in the detection of moderate hypercapnia.
Methods
In this retrospective case-control study, charts were reviewed from patients with and without moderate hypercapnia (Paco2 >50 mm Hg), as determined by analysis of arterial blood gas samples obtained in the ED. Test characteristics (sensitivity, specificity, and likelihood ratios [LR) for room-air pulse oximetry ≤96% to detect hypercapnia were calculated, as were confidence intervals.
Results
A total of 349 charts were eligible for abstraction—92 cases and 257 controls. A room-air pulse oximetry reading ≤96% detected 88 of 92 cases of hypercapnia. Test characteristics were as follows (with 95% confidence interval): sensitivity, 0.96 (0.89-0.99); specificity, 0.39 (0.33-0.45), LR of a room-air pulse oximetry value >96%, 0.1 (0.04-0.3); and LR of a room-air pulse oximetry value ≤96%, 1.6 (1.4-1.7).
Conclusion
Room-air pulse oximetry detects moderate hypercapnia with high sensitivity.
To access this article, please choose from the options below
Purchase access to this article
Claim Access
If you are a current subscriber with Society Membership or an Account Number, claim your access now.
Subscribe to this title
Purchase a subscription to gain access to this and all other articles in this journal.
Institutional Access
Visit ScienceDirect to see if you have access via your institution.
☆Financial Support: University of Maryland Statewide Health Network, Other Tobacco-Related Diseases Research Grant, Baltimore, MD.
Related Articles
Searching for related articles..
