Elsevier

Respiratory Medicine

Volume 95, Issue 8, August 2001, Pages 655-660
Respiratory Medicine

Regular Article
The clinical utility of arterialized earlobe capillary blood in the assessment of patients for long-term oxygen therapy

https://doi.org/10.1053/rmed.2001.1118Get rights and content
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Abstract

The prescription of long-term oxygen (LTOT) is underpinned by the measurement of arterial P O2, generally obtained by radial artery puncture. This test is commonly associated with patient discomfort and a test that is reliable, well-tolerated and non-invasive would be advantageous. Cutaneous oximetry has not proved sufficiently accurate. Arterialized earlobe capillary sampling has been proposed, with some authors stating that it is under-utilized. However, to date studies have yielded conflicting results and the clinical utility remains uncertain. Our regional oxygen service based at a specialist respiratory hospital undertook a prospective study of consecutive patients with chronic respiratory disease undergoing assessment for LTOT. Simultaneous radial artery and arterialized earlobe sampling was performed. Rigorous steps were taken to ensure optimal arterialization of the earlobe samples. Agreement between arterial and arterialized P O2andP CO2was compared using the Bland–Altman method. One hundred patients were studied. Procedural difficulties (insufficient sample or air in sample) were similar for both procedures, however clotting occurred more frequently in arterialized earlobe samples. Sixty-four sample pairs were available for comparison. The bias and limits of agreement between arterialized and arterial P O2were wide, mean (±2 SD), −0·48 (−2·05–1·09) kPa. The bias and limits of agreement for P CO2were smaller. Using the absolute criterion (arterial P O2<7·3 kPa), 9/55 (16%) patients would receive oxygen inappropriately based on the arterialized earlobe sample. Conversely, no patients would have been denied LTOT. Radial artery puncture gave rise to significantly greater discomfort (P<0·0001) and level of concern (P<0·0001). Patient preference strongly favoured arterialized earlobe sampling. However, despite rigorous attention to arterialization earlobe sampling was insufficiently accurate to replace radial artery puncture in the prescription of LTOT.

Keywords

blood gas analyses, arterialized earlobe capillary blood, radial artery puncture, long term oxygen.

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Correspondence should be addressed to Dr T. Eaton, Department of Respiratory Services, Green Lane Hospital, Auckland 3, New Zealand. Fax: 64 9 6310712; E-mail: [email protected]