Kidney Res Clin Pract.  2013 Mar;32(1):32-38.

Correlation between peripheral venous and arterial blood gas measurements in patients admitted to the intensive care unit: A single-center study

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Internal Medicine, Kosin University College of Medicine, Busan, Korea. danieljoseph@hanmail.net

Abstract

BACKGROUND
The objective of this study was to examine the correlation between arterial blood gas (ABG) and peripheral venous blood gas (VBG) samples for all commonly used parameters in patients admitted to a medical intensive care unit (ICU).
METHODS
A single-center, prospective trial was carried out in a medical ICU in order to determine the level of correlation of ABG and peripheral VBG measurements. A maximum of five paired ABG-VBG samples were obtained per patient to prevent a single patient from dominating the data set.
RESULTS
Regression equations were derived to predict arterial values from venous values as follows: arterial pH=-1.108+1.145xvenous pH+0.008xPCO2-0.012xvenous HCO3+0.002xvenous total CO2 (R2=0.655), arterial PCO2=88.6-10.888xvenous pH+0.150xPCO2+0.812xvenous HCO3+0.124xvenous total CO2 (R2=0.609), arterial HCO3=-89.266+12.677xvenous pH+0.042xPCO2+0.675xvenous HCO3+0.185xvenous total CO2 (R2=0.782). The mean ABG minus peripheral VBG differences for pH, PCO2, and bicarbonates were not clinically important for between-person heterogeneity.
CONCLUSION
Peripheral venous pH, PCO2, bicarbonates, and total CO2 may be used as alternatives to their arterial equivalents in many clinical contexts encountered in the ICU.

Keyword

Bicarbonates; Blood gas analysis; Correlation; Intensive care units

MeSH Terms

Bicarbonates
Blood Gas Analysis
Humans
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
Critical Care
Intensive Care Units
Prospective Studies
Bicarbonates
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