Critical incidents detected by pulse oximetry during anaesthesia
- 1 May 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Canadian Journal of Anesthesia/Journal canadien d'anesthésie
- Vol. 35 (3) , 265-269
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf03010621
Abstract
Anaesthetists’ Society, Calgary, Alberta. The Critical Incident Technique was used to study anaesthetics given in a major tertiary care teaching hospital in order to define indications for monitoring with a pulse oximeter during anaesthesia. Anaesthetists were asked to use a pulse oximeter in every case and trained to report Critical incidents in order to determine if the oximeter can shorten the time to detection of these events. Four thousand seven hundred and ninety-seven anaesthetics were given during a four-month period in 1986-87. A Critical Incident was recorded when an unexpected physiologic deterioration requiring intervention by the anaesthetist to prevent a likely bad outcome was signalled first by the pulse oximeter. Critical Incidents were classified by patient characteristics, physiologic change, type of anaesthetic, and the type, length, and place of surgery. Reports were received in 65 per cent of cases, and a Critical Incident occurred in 191 (six per cent) of these. Desaturation was the commonest physiologic change (151) and was further classified as to severity (mild 85 -94 per cent saturation, moderate 75-84 percent, and severe 75 per cent). Desaturations during the maintenance phase of anaesthesia were milder but more frequent than those in the induction or emergence phases. There were no severe desaturations in elderly patients or those receiving regional anaesthesia. No group was free of Critical Incidents. Since undetected hypoxaemia may lead to disastrous complications we recommend that a pulse oximeter be used for every anaesthetic.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of Information Feedback and Pulse Oximetry on the Incidence of Anesthesia ComplicationsAnesthesiology, 1987
- The current status of pulse oximetryAnaesthesia, 1986
- TRANSCUTANEOUS OXYGEN DURING INDUCED HYPEROXEMIA AND HYPOXEMIA IN ADULT VOLUNTEERSAnesthesiology, 1986
- The Nellcor N‐101 pulse oximeterAnaesthesia, 1986
- Evaluation of arterial oxygenation during anaesthesiaCanadian Journal of Anesthesia/Journal canadien d'anesthésie, 1985
- Infrared Heat Lamps Interfere with Pulse OximetersAnesthesiology, 1984
- Evaluation of Pulse OximetryAnesthesiology, 1983
- Preventable Anesthesia MishapsAnesthesiology, 1978
- CLINICAL RECOGNITION OF HYPOXÆMIA UNDER FLUORESCENT LAMPSThe Lancet, 1966
- Studies in the reliability and validity of the critical incident technique.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1964