J Korean Soc Emerg Med.  2010 Feb;21(1):67-72.

Non-invasive Hemoglobin Measurement in Emergency Patients

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Emergency Medicine, Inje University Ilsan Paik Hospital, Goyang, Korea. jspark@paik.ac.kr
  • 2Department of Emergency Medicine, Inje University Seoul Paik Hospital, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

PURPOSE
At present, the hemoglobin count is one of the most commonly performed clinical laboratory tests in the emergency department. However, the conventional method is invasive and permits only intermittent assessments. The aim of this study was to determine whether non-invasive hemoglobin measurements (SpHb) produce comparably accurate results to laboratory hemoglobin tests (tHb) in patients presented to the emergency department.
METHODS
From May to July 2009, 217 patients who required hemoglobin tests after presenting to the emergency department of a hospital were enrolled. We measured hemoglobin values using the conventional method (tHb), and the non-invasive method (SpHb). The study population was classified into two groups: 'non-bleeding' and 'bleeding'. The concordance between tHb and SpHb was analyzed by the Pearson's correlation coefficient.
RESULTS
A total of 217 data pairs were collected from 217 subjects, 193(88.9%) non-bleeding patients, 24(11.1%) bleeding patients. A total of 114 subjects were male (52.5%). The Pearson's correlation coefficient between tHb and SpHb was 0.814(p=0.000). In the 'non-bleeding' and 'bleeding' groups, the Pearson's correlation coefficients between tHb and SpHb were 0.779(p=0.000) and 0.788(p=0.000) respectively.
CONCLUSION
Non-invasive SpHb measurement provides clinically acceptable accuracy compared to the conventional laboratory method (tHb) in the setting of the emergency department.

Keyword

Hemoglobin; Hemoglobinometry; Emergency medicine

MeSH Terms

Emergencies
Emergency Medicine
Hemoglobinometry
Hemoglobins
Hemorrhage
Humans
Male
Hemoglobins
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