RESPIRATORY INDUCTION PLETHYSMOGRAPHY (RESPITRACE) - AN EVALUATION OF ITS USE IN THE INFANT

Abstract
Respiratory induction plethysmography (Respitrace) is a recently described method for noninvasive respiratory monitoring in adults. Its calibration and use in 15 human infants are reported. Tidal volume, as measured by this method, was compared with the tidal volume integrated from a pneumotachygraph attached to a tightly fitted face mask. The 2 volumes had a correlation greater than 0.85 (P < 0.001) with a slope between 0.9 and 1.1. The results were similar in quiet and rapid eye movement sleep demonstrating that the method can accurately follow paradoxical inward rib cage movement. Accuracy decreased at respiratory rates above 80 breaths/min. When the minute ventilation was computed over the same sampling interval by both methods, the mean difference was +0.2 .+-. 3.4% (.+-. 1 SD) in quiet sleep and +0.8 .+-. 4.5% in rapid eye movement sleep. This is an accurate method of measuring long-term minute ventilation and tidal volume in small infants, provided that the calibration procedure and measurements are made in the same posture, and the infant''s respiratory rate is less than 80 breaths/min.

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