Korean J Anesthesiol.  2005 Aug;49(2):167-171. 10.4097/kjae.2005.49.2.167.

Which Predictable Variables Identify Patients at Risk of Arterial Hypoxemia during One-Lung Ventilation?: Analysis of Preoperative and Intraoperative Variables

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seongnam, Korea. beatcrazykang@hanmail.net

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Two hundred seventy-eight patients undergoing thoracic surgery were retrospectively analyzed to determine whether which variable can predict the identification of patients at risk of arterial hypoxemia developing during one-lung ventilation (OLV).
METHODS
According to the value of SpO2, the patients were divided two groups. Group L (n = 62) had SpO2 values of less than 95%, whereas group H (n = 216) those of more than 95%. Preoperative and intraoperative data, including past medical history, current therapy, and usual preoperative and intraoperative tests, were collected and used as predictable variables for arterial hypoxemia during OLV by binary logistic regression (forward conditional method) subsequent to independent t-test and Chi-square test, as appropriate.
RESULTS
Preoperative (past medical history with pulmonary resection of a lobectomy in dependent lung, hypertension, arrhythmias, and predicted diffusion capacity for carbon monoxide < or = 70%) and intraoperative (arterial oxygen tension/inspiratory oxygen fraction during two-lung ventilation <528 mmHg, right thoracotomy) variables were considered as predictable factors that identified patients at risk of arterial hypoxemia during OLV.
CONCLUSION
Caution to the increased risk of arterial hypoxemia during OLV is needed in patients that have aforementioned preoperative and intraoperative variables.

Keyword

arterial hypoxemia; one-lung ventilation; preoperative and intraoperative predictable variables

MeSH Terms

Anoxia*
Arrhythmias, Cardiac
Carbon Monoxide
Diffusion
Humans
Hypertension
Logistic Models
Lung
One-Lung Ventilation*
Oxygen
Retrospective Studies
Thoracic Surgery
Ventilation
Carbon Monoxide
Oxygen
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