Technical validation of the EMMA capnometer under hyperbaric conditions

End-tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO ) monitoring is essential for monitoring intubated critical care patients, yet its use in hyperbaric environments can be problematic. We postulated that the EMMA mainstream capnometer may function accurately under hyperbaric conditions. Stage 1. The EMMA mainstream cap...

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Published inDiving and hyperbaric medicine Vol. 53; no. 2; pp. 100 - 110
Main Authors Tucker, Alicia, Smart, David
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Australia The Journal of the South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society and the European Underwater and Baromedical Society 30.06.2023
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Summary:End-tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO ) monitoring is essential for monitoring intubated critical care patients, yet its use in hyperbaric environments can be problematic. We postulated that the EMMA mainstream capnometer may function accurately under hyperbaric conditions. Stage 1. The EMMA mainstream capnometer was tested at 101 kPa against a reference side-stream capnometer, Philips IntelliVue M3015B microstream, using 10 customised reference gases of various carbon dioxide (CO₂) concentrations (2.47%-8.09%, or 18.5-60.7 mmHg at 101 kPa) in either air or oxygen. Stage 2. The functionality and accuracy of the EMMA capnometer was tested under hyperbaric conditions, 121-281 kPa, using the same test gases. At 101 kPa, the EMMA capnometer measured CO₂ at levels lower than expected (mean of differences = -2.5 mmHg (95% CI -2.1 to -2.9, P < 0.001)). The Philips capnometer measured CO₂ more closely to expected CO₂ (mean of differences = -1.1 mmHg (95% CI -0.69 to -1.4, P < 0.001). Both devices demonstrated a significant linear relationship with expected CO₂. The EMMA capnometer functioned up to the maximum test pressure (281 kPa). The device over-read CO₂ measurements at pressures > 141 kPa. Although variance increased at pressures in the therapeutic range for hyperbaric treatments, a significant linear relationship between expected and EMMA measured CO₂ was demonstrated. The EMMA capnometer tolerated pressures to 281 kPa, but its display was limited to CO₂ < 99 mmHg. This study validated EMMA capnometer function to 281 kPa in the hyperbaric environment. The device over-read CO₂ measurements at pressures >141 kPa, however there was a linear relationship between expected and measured CO₂. The EMMA capnometer may be clinically useful for monitoring expired CO₂ in patients undergoing hyperbaric oxygen treatment.
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ISSN:1833-3516
2209-1491
2209-1491
DOI:10.28920/dhm53.2.100-110