Pulse oximetry screening to detect critical congenital heart diseases in asymptomatic neonates
Autor: | Ramar Praveen, Navreet Singh, Saurabh Karmani, Abhishek Pandey, Kirandeep Sodhi, J. Ratheesh Kumar, S. Gopalakrishnan |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Pediatrics medicine.medical_specialty medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry 030106 microbiology Physical examination General Medicine Gold standard (test) False positivity Tertiary care hospital Predictive value Asymptomatic 03 medical and health sciences Pulse oximetry 0302 clinical medicine Signal extraction medicine Original Article 030212 general & internal medicine medicine.symptom business |
Zdroj: | Med J Armed Forces India |
ISSN: | 0377-1237 |
Popis: | Background Critical congenital heart diseases (CCHDs), 10% to 25% of all CHD, are duct-dependent defects that are life threatening without intervention in the neonatal period or infancy. One third of neonates with CCHDs are discharged home undetected and have a poorer outcome. Pulse oximetry screening before discharge is increasingly being used to diagnose CCHDs in developed countries. Methods This prospective observational study conducted at a tertiary care hospital from September 2016 to March 2019 screened all asymptomatic intramural neonates after 24 hours of life using a Masimo pulse oximeter with signal extraction technology using the standard American Academy of Pediatrics algorithm. A positive screen was followed by a confirmatory echocardiography (gold standard) and a negative screen by clinical examination at 6, 10 and 14 weeks and identification of readmissions during the study period. Results A total of 1855 neonates (82.99% of the eligible 2235 neonates) underwent screening at a mean (SD) age at screening of 32.4 (6.8) hours and took a mean (SD) time of 3.5 (1.2) minutes. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive value of pulse oximetry screening for detection of CCHDs in asymptomatic neonates was 75% (95% CI: 28.91% to 96.59%), 99.29% (95% CI: 98.79% to 99.60%), 18.75% (95% CI: 5.80% to 43.80%) and 99.94% (95% CI: 99.66 to 99.99%), respectively. Conclusion Pulse oximetry screening of asymptomatic neonates between 24 and 48 hours of life improved the detection of CCHDs with high specificity and negative predictive value, moderate sensitivity and a reasonably low false positivity rate. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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