4.6 Article

Pulse Oximetry with Two Infrared Wavelengths without Calibration in Extracted Arterial Blood

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 18, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s18103457

Keywords

oxygen saturation; pulse oximetry; infrared; Beer-Lambert Law; calibration

Funding

  1. Israel Innovation Authority

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Oxygen saturation in arterial blood (SaO(2)) provides information about the performance of the respiratory system. Non-invasive measurement of SaO(2) by commercial pulse oximeters (SpO(2)) make use of photoplethysmographic pulses in the red and infrared regions and utilizes the different spectra of light absorption by oxygenated and de-oxygenated hemoglobin. Because light scattering and optical path-lengths differ between the two wavelengths, commercial pulse oximeters require empirical calibration which is based on SaO(2) measurement in extracted arterial blood. They are still prone to error, because the path-lengths difference between the two wavelengths varies among different subjects. We have developed modified pulse oximetry, which makes use of two nearby infrared wavelengths that have relatively similar scattering constants and path-lengths and does not require an invasive calibration step. In measurements performed on adults during breath holding, the two-infrared pulse oximeter and a commercial pulse oximeter showed similar changes in SpO(2). The two pulse oximeters showed similar accuracy when compared to SaO(2) measurement in extracted arterial blood (the gold standard) performed in intensive care units on newborns and children with an arterial line. Errors in SpO(2) because of variability in path-lengths difference between the two wavelengths are expected to be smaller in the two-infrared pulse oximeter.

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