4.3 Article

Abdominal Near Infrared Spectroscopy can be reliably used to measure splanchnic oxygenation changes in preterm infants

Journal

JOURNAL OF PERINATOLOGY
Volume 43, Issue 6, Pages 716-721

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41372-022-01576-2

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This study assessed the reliability of using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) to monitor gut oxygenation. The results showed that gut perfusion improved in infants who received blood transfusion, as measured by NIRS, while no changes were seen in the control group. Therefore, NIRS is a reliable method to measure splanchnic tissue oxygenation.
OBJECTIVE: Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) allows assessment of regional tissue oxygen delivery and extraction. There are doubts regarding reliability of gut NIRS measurements. This study assesses reliability of NIRS for monitoring gut oxygenation. STUDY DESIGN: Splanchnic tissue haemoglobin index (sTHI), tissue oxygenation index (sTOI) and fractional tissue oxygen extraction (sFTOE) changes during blood transfusion were measured using NIRS and compared to stable control infants. Infants were grouped into 3 chronological age groups: 1-7, 8-28 and >= 29 days of life. RESULTS: sTHI, sTOI significantly increased, and sFTOE reduced following blood transfusion in all age group infants (n = 59), with no changes seen in control infants (n = 12). Baseline characteristics including gestational age and feed volumes did not differ between groups. CONCLUSION: Gut perfusion measured by NIRS improved in infants who received blood transfusion, a change not seen in the control group, thus suggesting NIRS is a reliable method to measure splanchnic tissue oxygenation.

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