Opper S E, Fibuch E E, Tuohy G F
Department of Anesthesiology, St Luke's Hospital, Kansas City, MO 64111.
J Clin Monit. 1988 Apr;4(2):86-90. doi: 10.1007/BF01641807.
Transcutaneous oxygen electrodes have been used with success in neonates as indicators of arterial oxygenation, but with less success in adults because of differences in skin thickness and vascularity. In this study, a prototype transoral oxygen electrode was evaluated to determine if a heated mucous membrane would yield arterialized values of oxygen tension in adults. Using a miniaturized Clark electrode, we measured transoral oxygen tension (PtoO2) in 29 subjects at steady-state conditions. Simultaneously a sample was anaerobically obtained from a radial artery for measurement of arterial oxygen tension (PaO2). Data were analyzed using linear regression analysis, Student's t test, and analysis of variance. There was no statistically significant difference between nonwhite and white subjects or male and female subjects. There was a highly significant difference (P less than 0.001) between the pooled, matched values for PtoO2 versus PaO2, and the regression between the PtoO2 and the PaO2 was linear (slope 0.92, y-intercept -8.37, r = 0.62, P less than 0.003). The calculated ratio of PtoO2 to PaO2 was 0.83 +/- 0.03 (standard error). We concluded that the PtoO2 was linearly related to the PaO2, although its accuracy in reflecting PaO2 was low. This finding correlates with previously published data that suggested that the PtoO2 reflects tissue oxygen tension rather than arterialized oxygen tension. Gender and race appeared not to affect the function of the electrode in our study.