Abstract

BackgroundNear-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) is being increasingly used to investigate regional oxygenation (rSO2) and perfusion in areas such as the abdomen in preterm infants prone to feeding intolerance. Lower abdominal rSO2 values are extremely variable, high sensitivity and currently low specificity tools. The liver, a solid organ, could provide a more reliable site for splanchnic oxygenation and perfusion monitoring. AimsCompare liver and lower abdomen rSO2 values in stable preterm infants in response to feeding. Study designWe prospectively evaluated the correlation between rSO2 over the liver and lower abdomen in 16 preterm infants born between 28 and 32 weeks' gestational age using 48 h of continuous NIRS data. Outcome measuresMean liver and lower abdomen rSO2 values. ResultsThe overall mean liver rSO2 were higher than the overall mean lower abdomen values, 78.4 ± 7.1 vs. 65.1 ± 24.9 respectively. Time series analysis showed a mean maximum cross correlation between the liver and lower abdomen of 0.28 (SD ± 0.03; p < 0.001); the liver signal lagged the lower abdomen by an average of 5.4 s (SD ± 1.2 s, Range 0–16 s). Mixed models analysis showed that during bolus feeding, liver values increased 10 to 30 min after the start of feeding (p < 0.01) while lower abdomen increased from 20 to 60 min after the start of feeding (p < 0.05) and liver values were less variable than lower abdomen values. ConclusionLiver rSO2 appears to be a more stable surrogate for splanchnic oxygenation and perfusion than lower abdomen rSO2.

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