Pulse oximetry is a monitoring technique used for any traumatized or critically ill patient. Its use is obligatory intraoperatively in many countries (
2). This study found that pulse oximetry has good predictive value for pulse improvement at both hour 6 and hour 12 after angiography, for children until the age of 12 years. Additionally, the pulse oximeter is capable of predicting pulse improvement in all paths used for angiography.
In a study by Kwon et al. the ankle brachial index (ABI), pulse oximetry, and CT angiography were performed on 49 patients with lower extremity arterial disorders. These patients were divided into three groups: group one consisted of patients with critical ischemia of the extremities, group two consisted of patients with claudication, and group three consisted of patients who were asymptomatic. In this study there was statistically significant correlations between sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values between groups one and two, on whom open and endovascular surgeries were performed, and group three or the conservative group. Additionally, there was a significant correlation between pre-SpO
2 and pre-ABI in groups one and two and in the marked and unmarked groups (group three). Thus, pulse oximetry, which is similar to ABI, is a useful, simple, and noninvasive device for screening peripheral artery disease (
30).
In this study, the pulses of 23 of the 145 patients for whom the arterial path was used during angiography were not palpable at hour 6, although pulses were shown by the pulse oximeter immediately after angiography. However, only 8 of these 12 patients had no palpable pulse at hour 12 after angiography. Therefore, the pulse improved in 15 of these patients, which may be attributed to arterial spasms that improve over time. For these patients, heparin infusions may have prevented blood clot formation or thrombosis. Moreover, the arterial pulse was not palpable in 66 patients immediately after angiography, despite the use of the venous path. This could be due to nicking of the artery adjacent to the femoral vein by the needle tip during repeated attempts at phlebotomy, which possibly led to arterial spasms that resolved over time. Pain is another factor that can result in vasoconstriction of the peripheral arteries (
31). All 50 patients in this group, whose pulses were displayed by the pulse oximeter immediately after angiography, had palpable pulses at hour 12 after angiography, and heparin infusions prevented thrombosis. Of the 29 patients for whom both the arterial and venous paths were used for angiography, no palpable pulses were detected at hour 6 after angiography, although the pulse oximeter displayed pulses immediately after angiography. However, over time and with continuous heparin infusions, only 7 of these 12 patients had no palpable pulse at hour 12, while pulses improved in the remaining patients. Since the most probable cause of peripheral hypo-perfusion in critically ill patients is vasoconstriction (
32), the cause of impalpability of the pulse in many cases after angiography is vascular spasms when the vessel is not completely occluded. In this study, although digital palpation could not palpate the pulse, weak blood flow in the extremities was detected by the pulse oximeter, and these waves produced low signals (
4). This indicates that if the process of coagulation through heparin infusion during vascular spasms is inhibited, blood flow should return to the extremities as the spasms resolve, resulting in no need for thrombolytic drugs, such as heparin or TPA, and thereby negating the risks associated with these drugs.
In a study by Lima et al. a peripheral perfusion index of less than 1.4 can diagnose abnormal perfusions in critically ill patients. These changes correspond to clinical signs of perfusion changes and may reflect therapeutic interventions for improving peripheral perfusion (
2). Since the patients under study sustained perfusion impairment in the punctured extremities and in the cases for which the pulse oximeter could detect weak pulses, the O
2sat value ranged from 85% - 95%. This is because the pulse oximeter estimates O
2sat based on the difference between light absorption by oxygenated hemoglobin and reduced hemoglobin, which is directly correlated to the tissue perfusion rate (
2). Therefore, O
2sat could be indicated by a pulse oximeter and correlate to the wave range recorded by the pulse oximeter. This would be an interesting topic for future research.