Paediatric Respiratory Reviews
Volume 4, Issue 1 , Pages 9-14, March 2003

Oxygen monitoring in preterm babies: too high, too low?

  • Win Tin

      Affiliations

    • Consultant Paediatrician and Neonatologist, Department of Paediatrics and Neonatal Medicine, The James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough, UK
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence to: Win Tin. Tel.: +44-1642-854834; Fax: +44-1642-854830
  • ,
  • Sue Walker

      Affiliations

    • Advanced Neonatal Nurse Practitioner, Department of Paediatrics and Neonatal Medicine, The James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough, UK
  • ,
  • Camilla Lacamp

      Affiliations

    • Clinical Fellow in Paediatrics and Neonatology, Department of Paediatrics and Neonatal Medicine, The James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough, UK

Abstract 

A small randomised trial in 1952 showed that excess oxygen use might well be causing a major epidemic of retinal blindness in preterm babies. That single study of just 65 babies was enough to throw doubt on a longstanding treatment strategy of oxygen therapy and highlighted just how powerful a tool the randomised controlled trial could be. Confirmatory evidence from a co-operative trial 4 years later involving 212 babies banished all residual doubt and we should reproach ourselves that we have still not learnt after 50 years how to optimise oxygen delivery to the preterm baby, making further use of this powerful research tool. Two well-conducted trials have recently shown that avoiding subclinical hypoxaemia (a fractional SaO2 of less than 92%) in babies more than a month old does nothing to improve later growth or development. It is now time the same question was asked of babies less than a month old. This is particularly important in babies of less than 28 weeks’ gestation, who currently remain at serious risk of chronic lung disease and permanent retinal damage.

Keywords:  retinopathy of prematurity, oxygen therapy, oxygen saturation, pulse oximetry

 

PII: S1526-0542(02)00307-X

doi:10.1016/S1526-0542(02)00307-X

Paediatric Respiratory Reviews
Volume 4, Issue 1 , Pages 9-14, March 2003