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J Clin Monit Comput


Title:Determination of breath isoprene allows the identification of the expiratory fraction of the propofol breath signal during real-time propofol breath monitoring
Author(s):Hornuss C; Dolch ME; Janitza S; Souza K; Praun S; Apfel CC; Schelling G;
Address:"Department of Anaesthesiology, Klinikum der Universitat Munchen, Marchioninistr. 15, 81377, Munich, Germany, cyrill.hornuss@med.uni-muenchen.de"
Journal Title:J Clin Monit Comput
Year:2013
Volume:20130323
Issue:5
Page Number:509 - 516
DOI: 10.1007/s10877-013-9452-7
ISSN/ISBN:1573-2614 (Electronic) 1387-1307 (Linking)
Abstract:"Real-time measurement of propofol in the breath may be used for routine clinical monitoring. However, this requires unequivocal identification of the expiratory phase of the respiratory propofol signal as only expiratory propofol reflects propofol blood concentrations. Determination of CO2 breath concentrations is the current gold standard for the identification of expiratory gas but usually requires additional equipment. Human breath also contains isoprene, a volatile organic compound with low inspiratory breath concentration and an expiratory concentration plateau. We investigated whether breath isoprene could be used similarly to CO2 to identify the expiratory fraction of the propofol breath signal. We investigated real-time breath data obtained from 40 study subjects during routine anesthesia. Propofol, isoprene, and CO2 breath concentrations were determined by a combined ion molecule reaction/electron impact mass spectrometry system. The expiratory propofol signal was identified according to breath CO2 and isoprene concentrations and presented as median of intervals of 30 s duration. Bland-Altman analysis was applied to detect differences (bias) in the expiratory propofol signal extracted by the two identification methods. We investigated propofol signals in a total of 3,590 observation intervals of 30 s duration in the 40 study subjects. In 51.4 % of the intervals (1,844/3,590) both methods extracted the same results for expiratory propofol signal. Overall bias between the two data extraction methods was -0.12 ppb. The lower and the upper limits of the 95 % CI were -0.69 and 0.45 ppb. Determination of isoprene breath concentrations allows the identification of the expiratory propofol signal during real-time breath monitoring"
Keywords:"*Algorithms Anesthetics, Intravenous/administration & dosage/analysis Breath Tests/*methods Butadienes/*analysis Computer Systems Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted/methods Drug Monitoring/*methods *Exhalation Hemiterpenes/*analysis Humans Injections, Intraveno;"
Notes:"MedlineHornuss, Cyrill Dolch, Michael E Janitza, Silke Souza, Kimberly Praun, Siegfried Apfel, Christian C Schelling, Gustav eng Clinical Trial Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Netherlands 2013/03/26 J Clin Monit Comput. 2013 Oct; 27(5):509-16. doi: 10.1007/s10877-013-9452-7. Epub 2013 Mar 23"

 
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