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  • From home to intensive care units, innovations in pulse oximetry are susceptible to improve the monitoring and management of patients developing acute respiratory failure, and particularly those with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). They include self-monitoring of oxygen saturation (SpO(2)) from home, continuous wireless SpO(2) monitoring on hospital wards, and the integration of SpO(2) as the input variable for closed-loop oxygen administration systems. The analysis of the pulse oximetry waveform may help to quantify respiratory efforts and prevent intubation delays. Tracking changes in the peripheral perfusion index during a preload-modifying maneuver may be useful to predict preload responsiveness and rationalize fluid therapy.
Subject
  • Intensive care medicine
  • Cardiovascular physiology
  • Organ failure
  • Diagnostic intensive care medicine
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