Table 15.
Modality | Reliability in cats | Comments |
---|---|---|
Respiratory rate | ± | Respiratory rate is not a good indicator of efficiency of air movement into and out of the lungs. Respiratory rate does not indicate that patient is inspiring or absorbing adequate oxygen |
Mucous membrane color | − | Human eyes cannot detect meaningful changes in oxygenation until patient becomes cyanotic (SpO2 = ~70–80%) |
Tidal volume | + | Difficult to determine breath volume by visually assessing reservoir bag or chest movement due to small patient size |
Pulse oximeter without waveform | + | Without a waveform it is difficult to assess signal quality. Does not indicate patient is breathing |
Pulse oximeter with waveform | ++ | A steady waveform is indicative of good signal quality; many factors affect signal quality including exposure to ambient light, tissue compression, drying of tissue (See Figure 23 for SpO2 troubleshooting tips). Does not indicate patient is breathing |
Capnometer (no waveform) | + | Difficult to assess accuracy of monitor without waveform |
Capnograph with waveform | +++ | Waveform analysis provides invaluable insight into respiratory function and equipment malfunction (eg, stuck unidirectional valves in a circle system) |
Arterial blood gases | ++++ | Gold standard for evaluating ventilation. Obtaining sample can be difficult; requires specialized equipment. Rarely used in clinical practice |
− = Not reliable; + = poor reliability; ++++ = very reliable; SpO2 = oxygen saturation of hemoglobin in arterial blood