Time duration of oxygen adaptation immediately after birth; monitoring by pulse oximeter in perinatal period of the infants at Charoenkrung Pracharak Hospital

© 2015, Medical Association of Thailand. All rights reserved. Background: Oxygen Saturation is one of the important data to determine patient status and worldwide applied in several situations. Evaluation about status of immediate perinatal period of the infant usually uses clinical assessment, Apga...

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التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
المؤلفون الرئيسيون: Suparach Suwattanaphim, Sirisanpang Yodavuhd, Supalarp Puangsa-Art
مؤلفون آخرون: Charoen Krung Pracharak Hospital
التنسيق: مقال
منشور في: 2018
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الوصول للمادة أونلاين:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/36752
الوسوم: إضافة وسم
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المؤسسة: Mahidol University
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spelling th-mahidol.367522018-11-23T18:01:02Z Time duration of oxygen adaptation immediately after birth; monitoring by pulse oximeter in perinatal period of the infants at Charoenkrung Pracharak Hospital Suparach Suwattanaphim Sirisanpang Yodavuhd Supalarp Puangsa-Art Charoen Krung Pracharak Hospital Mahidol University Medicine © 2015, Medical Association of Thailand. All rights reserved. Background: Oxygen Saturation is one of the important data to determine patient status and worldwide applied in several situations. Evaluation about status of immediate perinatal period of the infant usually uses clinical assessment, Apgar scoring, which had been used for a long time without other scientific measurement. Pulse oximeter, the non-invasive measurement of oxygen saturation, may play role for oxygen saturation evaluation in newborn that immediately change from intra to extra uterine environment. Objective: Monitoring the time duration that immediately born infants by normal labor or Cesarean section modes, used to archived target oxygen saturation (SpO<inf>2</inf>) and looking for the other factors that influence oxygen saturation adaptation. Material and Method: The data of the 553 infants born in Charoenkrung Pracharak Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand between October 2012 and April 2013 were collected. The 204 healthy newborns that met all criteria were studied. All infants were recorded pulse oximeter from the second to the tenth minute after birth. They were grouped by several factors such as maternal gravidity, gestational age, mode of delivery, Apgar score, birth weight, and sex. Time interval to achieve target oxygen saturation (SpO<inf>2</inf> ≥90%) was collected for analysis. Results: The oxygen saturation of infants immediately after birth showed an increase. Median time interval was 6.5 (2-10) minutes for 90% saturation and 7 (2-10) minutes for 95% saturation, respectively. Only mode of delivery showed statistical significant time difference (p<0.001). A Cox proportional hazards analysis of the Kaplan-Meier curves demonstrated that infants born by cesarean delivery took significantly longer time to reach a stable SpO<inf>2</inf> ≥90% than infants born by vaginal delivery (95% CI = 1.28 to 2.74; p<0.01). Conclusion: A newly born infant has to take 6.5 minutes (2-10) after birth to adjust their oxygen saturation to reach normal higher level of extra uterine life, median SpO<inf>2</inf> of 90%. Furthermore, mode of delivery makes a significant difference of oxygen saturation status; the cesarean route takes significantly longer time than the vaginal route to achieve SpO<inf>2</inf> ≥90%. 2018-11-23T11:01:02Z 2018-11-23T11:01:02Z 2015-01-01 Article Journal of the Medical Association of Thailand. Vol.98, No.7 (2015), 656-663 01252208 01252208 2-s2.0-84938124843 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/36752 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84938124843&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Suparach Suwattanaphim
Sirisanpang Yodavuhd
Supalarp Puangsa-Art
Time duration of oxygen adaptation immediately after birth; monitoring by pulse oximeter in perinatal period of the infants at Charoenkrung Pracharak Hospital
description © 2015, Medical Association of Thailand. All rights reserved. Background: Oxygen Saturation is one of the important data to determine patient status and worldwide applied in several situations. Evaluation about status of immediate perinatal period of the infant usually uses clinical assessment, Apgar scoring, which had been used for a long time without other scientific measurement. Pulse oximeter, the non-invasive measurement of oxygen saturation, may play role for oxygen saturation evaluation in newborn that immediately change from intra to extra uterine environment. Objective: Monitoring the time duration that immediately born infants by normal labor or Cesarean section modes, used to archived target oxygen saturation (SpO<inf>2</inf>) and looking for the other factors that influence oxygen saturation adaptation. Material and Method: The data of the 553 infants born in Charoenkrung Pracharak Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand between October 2012 and April 2013 were collected. The 204 healthy newborns that met all criteria were studied. All infants were recorded pulse oximeter from the second to the tenth minute after birth. They were grouped by several factors such as maternal gravidity, gestational age, mode of delivery, Apgar score, birth weight, and sex. Time interval to achieve target oxygen saturation (SpO<inf>2</inf> ≥90%) was collected for analysis. Results: The oxygen saturation of infants immediately after birth showed an increase. Median time interval was 6.5 (2-10) minutes for 90% saturation and 7 (2-10) minutes for 95% saturation, respectively. Only mode of delivery showed statistical significant time difference (p<0.001). A Cox proportional hazards analysis of the Kaplan-Meier curves demonstrated that infants born by cesarean delivery took significantly longer time to reach a stable SpO<inf>2</inf> ≥90% than infants born by vaginal delivery (95% CI = 1.28 to 2.74; p<0.01). Conclusion: A newly born infant has to take 6.5 minutes (2-10) after birth to adjust their oxygen saturation to reach normal higher level of extra uterine life, median SpO<inf>2</inf> of 90%. Furthermore, mode of delivery makes a significant difference of oxygen saturation status; the cesarean route takes significantly longer time than the vaginal route to achieve SpO<inf>2</inf> ≥90%.
author2 Charoen Krung Pracharak Hospital
author_facet Charoen Krung Pracharak Hospital
Suparach Suwattanaphim
Sirisanpang Yodavuhd
Supalarp Puangsa-Art
format Article
author Suparach Suwattanaphim
Sirisanpang Yodavuhd
Supalarp Puangsa-Art
author_sort Suparach Suwattanaphim
title Time duration of oxygen adaptation immediately after birth; monitoring by pulse oximeter in perinatal period of the infants at Charoenkrung Pracharak Hospital
title_short Time duration of oxygen adaptation immediately after birth; monitoring by pulse oximeter in perinatal period of the infants at Charoenkrung Pracharak Hospital
title_full Time duration of oxygen adaptation immediately after birth; monitoring by pulse oximeter in perinatal period of the infants at Charoenkrung Pracharak Hospital
title_fullStr Time duration of oxygen adaptation immediately after birth; monitoring by pulse oximeter in perinatal period of the infants at Charoenkrung Pracharak Hospital
title_full_unstemmed Time duration of oxygen adaptation immediately after birth; monitoring by pulse oximeter in perinatal period of the infants at Charoenkrung Pracharak Hospital
title_sort time duration of oxygen adaptation immediately after birth; monitoring by pulse oximeter in perinatal period of the infants at charoenkrung pracharak hospital
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/36752
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