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Reproducibility of the CO rebreathing technique with a lower CO dose and a shorter rebreathing duration at sea level and at 2320 m of altitude.
- Source :
-
Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation . Nov2020, Vol. 80 Issue 7, p590-599. 10p. - Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Total hemoglobin mass (Hbmass) is routinely assessed in studies by the carbon monoxide (CO) rebreathing. Its clinical application is often hindered due to the consequent rise in carboxyhemoglobin (%HbCO) and the concern of CO toxicity. We tested the reproducibility of the CO rebreathing with a CO dose of 0.5 mL/kg body mass (CO0.5) compared to 1.5 mL/kg (CO1.5) and when shortening the CO rebreathing protocol. Therefore, CO rebreathing was performed 1×/day in eight healthy individuals on four consecutive days. On each day, either CO0.5 (CO0.5-1 and CO0.5-2) or CO1.5 (CO1.5-1 and CO1.5-2) was administered. Venous blood samples to determine %HbCO and quantify Hbmass were obtained prior to, and at 6 (T6), 8 (T8) and 10 min (T10) of CO rebreathing. This protocol was tested at sea level and at 2320 m to investigate the altitude-related measurement error. At sea level, the mean difference (95% limits of agreement) in Hbmass between CO0.5-1 and CO0.5-2 was 26 g (–26; 79 g) and between CO1.5-1 and CO1.5-2, it was 17 g (–18; 52 g). The respective typical error (TE) corresponded to 2.4% (CO0.5) and 1.5% (CO1.5), while it was 6.5% and 3.0% at 2320 m. With CO0.5, shortening the CO rebreathing resulted in a TE for Hbmass of 4.4% (T8 vs. T10) and 14.1% (T6 vs T10) and with CO1.5, TE was 1.6% and 5.8%. In conclusion, the CO dose and rebreathing time for the CO rebreathing procedure can be decreased at the cost of a measurement error ranging from 1.5-14.1%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- *HEMOGLOBINS
*CARBON monoxide
*BODY mass index
*ANEMIA
*BLOOD sampling
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 00365513
- Volume :
- 80
- Issue :
- 7
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 146906678
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00365513.2020.1818282