Brian Hall, Jason Bryant, Peter Winch, Joseph D Tobias
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Oropharyngeal and Tongue Pulse Oximetry in 2 Critically Ill Pediatric Patients: A Case Report.
Pulse oximetry has become a standard of care to monitor oxygenation. Absent or inaccurate readings can occur with varied patient states. We present preliminary experience with a modification of a standard pulse oximetry using readily available equipment (oral airway and a tongue blade) to allow for continuous pulse oximetry from the oral cavity and tongue in 2 critically ill pediatric patients when standard application of pulse oximetry was not feasible or nonfunctional. These modifications can assist in the care of critically ill patients, allowing for adaptability in monitoring techniques when other options are unavailable.
期刊介绍:
A & A Case Reports, our new online journal publishing Case Reports, related Editorial Commentary, and Correspondence. Anesthesia & Analgesia 1 and Anesthesiology 2 recently announced that they were suspending publication of Case Reports. One reason is that Case Reports typically reduce the Impact Factor of a journal because they are rarely cited. Regardless of the merits of Impact Factor as a metric of journal worth, journals and their editors necessarily consider Impact Factor in strategic planning. At the same time, Case Reports are appreciated by readers for describing “real life” management of difficult or unusual cases not often encountered by practitioners. In a recent issue of Anesthesia & Analgesia, Steven Shafer1 identified many Case Reports whose publication launched productive careers dedicated to solving the puzzle posed by an unusual observation in a single patient.