Noninvasive monitoring of tissue hemoglobin using UV-VIS diffuse reflectance spectroscopy: a pilot study.


Autoria(s): Bender, JE; Shang, AB; Moretti, EW; Yu, B; Richards, LM; Ramanujam, N
Data(s)

21/12/2009

Formato

23396 - 23409

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20052047

192701

Opt Express, 2009, 17 (26), pp. 23396 - 23409

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/4243

1094-4087

Idioma(s)

ENG

en_US

Relação

Opt Express

Optics Express

Optics Express

Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

We conducted a pilot study on 10 patients undergoing general surgery to test the feasibility of diffuse reflectance spectroscopy in the visible wavelength range as a noninvasive monitoring tool for blood loss during surgery. Ratios of raw diffuse reflectance at wavelength pairs were tested as a first-pass for estimating hemoglobin concentration. Ratios can be calculated easily and rapidly with limited post-processing, and so this can be considered a near real-time monitoring device. We found the best hemoglobin correlations were when ratios at isosbestic points of oxy- and deoxyhemoglobin were used, specifically 529/500 nm. Baseline subtraction improved correlations, specifically at 520/509 nm. These results demonstrate proof-of-concept for the ability of this noninvasive device to monitor hemoglobin concentration changes due to surgical blood loss. The 529/500 nm ratio also appears to account for variations in probe pressure, as determined from measurements on two volunteers.

Palavras-Chave #Biomarkers #Blood Chemical Analysis #Blood Loss, Surgical #Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted #Feasibility Studies #Hemoglobins #Humans #Oxygen #Pilot Projects #Postoperative Hemorrhage #Reproducibility of Results #Sensitivity and Specificity #Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet