Pulse Oximeter 

1. Principle of Pulse Oximetry

Pulse oximetry is based on two core principles:

A. Spectrophotometry

  • Uses differential absorption of light by:
    • Oxyhemoglobin (HbO₂) absorbs more infrared light (940 nm)
    • Deoxyhemoglobin (Hb) absorbs more red light (660 nm)

B. Beer–Lambert Law

Relates light absorption to concentration of Hb.


C. Pulsatile Flow Detection (Photoplethysmography)

  • Differentiates:
    • AC component arterial pulsatile blood
    • DC component venous blood, tissue, bone

 Only arterial component used gives SpO₂


2. What Does Pulse Oximeter Measure?

  • SpO₂ (Peripheral oxygen saturation)
    % of Hb bound to oxygen
  • Pulse rate

3. Components of Pulse Oximeter

A. Light Source

  • Two LEDs:
    • Red (660 nm)
    • Infrared (940 nm)

B. Photodetector

  • Detects transmitted/reflected light

C. Microprocessor

  • Calculates ratio SpO₂

D. Display Unit

  • Shows SpO₂, pulse rate, waveform

4. Types of Pulse Oximeters

A. Based on Technique

  1. Transmission Type
    • Probe on opposite sides (finger, ear)
    • Most common
  1. Reflectance Type
    • Same side emitter + detector
    • Used in:
      • Forehead
      • Neonates

B. Based on Clinical Use

  • Fingertip (portable)
  • Bedside ICU monitor
  • Handheld
  • Wearable

5. Oxygen Dissociation Curve & SpO₂ Interpretation

SpO₂

PaO₂

90%

~60 mmHg

75%

~40 mmHg

Flat upper part (>90%)

  • Large PaO₂ change minimal SpO₂ change

Steep part (<90%)

  • Small drop in PaO₂ large fall in SpO₂ 

6. Accuracy & Limitations 

Normal Accuracy

  • Reliable between 70–100%
  • Error ±2%

Factors Causing False Readings

A. False LOW SpO₂

  • Motion artifact
  • Poor perfusion (shock, hypothermia)
  • Nail polish (dark colors)
  • Ambient light interference
  • Venous pulsations

B. False NORMAL / HIGH SpO₂ (DANGEROUS)

  1. Carbon monoxide poisoning
    • COHb absorbs like HbO₂
    • SpO₂ falsely normal
    • Actual hypoxia present
  1. Methemoglobinemia
    • Fixed reading ~85% regardless of true saturation

C. Other Limitations

  • Severe anemia unreliable oxygen delivery assessment
  • Dyshemoglobinemias not detected
  • Cannot measure:
    • PaO₂
    • CO₂
    • Acid-base status

7. Plethysmographic Waveform 

Waveform Components

  • Reflects arterial pulsations
  • Can assess:
    • Perfusion
    • Volume status (dynamic variation)


Pleth Variability Index (PVI)

  • Indicates fluid responsiveness
  • Useful in:
    • Mechanically ventilated patients

8. Advanced Pulse Oximetry

A. Co-oximetry

  • Measures:
    • HbO₂
    • Hb
    • COHb
    • MetHb

B. Masimo SET Technology

  • Reduces motion artifact
  • Better accuracy in ICU

9. ICU Pitfalls 

SpO₂ ≠ Oxygenation always

  • Example:
    • SpO₂ 100% but severe anemia poor oxygen delivery

SpO₂ lag behind PaO₂

  • Especially in rapid deterioration

Never rely in shock alone

  • Use:
    • ABG
    • Lactate
    • Clinical context

10. SpO₂ vs SaO₂ vs PaO₂ 

Parameter

Meaning

Method

SpO₂

Peripheral saturation

Pulse oximeter

SaO₂

Arterial saturation

ABG

PaO₂

Dissolved oxygen

ABG

11. Pleth Variability Index (PVI) 

Definition

  • PVI = Dynamic variation in pleth amplitude during respiratory cycle

PVI=PImax (PImax −PImin ) ×100

Where:

  • PI = Perfusion Index (pulse strength)

A. Perfusion Assessment

Waveform

Interpretation

Tall, well-formed

Good perfusion

Low amplitude

Hypovolemia / shock

Absent/flat

Severe hypoperfusion

B. Respiratory Variation 

In mechanically ventilated patients:

  • Inspiration venous return stroke volume pleth amplitude
  • Expiration venous return amplitude

 This cyclic variation = dynamic preload indicator


 Physiological Basis of PVI

Based on heart–lung interaction

During positive pressure ventilation:

  • Inspiration:
    • intrathoracic pressure
    • venous return
    • stroke volume
  • Expiration:
    • Opposite effect

➡️ Greater variation = preload dependent patient

Interpretation of PVI 

PVI Value

Interpretation

<10%

Likely not fluid responsive

10–15%

Grey zone

>15%

Fluid responsive (high probability)

Conditions for Accurate PVI 

Must have:

  • Controlled mechanical ventilation
  • Regular rhythm (no AF)
  • Tidal volume ≥ 8 ml/kg
  • No spontaneous breathing
  • Adequate perfusion

Perfusion Index (PI) 

Perfusion Index (PI) is a numerical value derived from the pulse oximeter that reflects the strength of peripheral perfusion.

 It represents the ratio of:

  • Pulsatile blood flow (arterial)
    to
  • Non-pulsatile components (venous + tissue)
  • High PI large pulsations good perfusion
  • Low PI small pulsations poor perfusion

Normal Values of PI

PI Value

Interpretation

<0.4

Very poor perfusion

0.4 – 1

Low perfusion

1 – 5

Normal

>5

Strong perfusion

Wide variability depending on:

  • Site (finger vs ear)
  • Temperature
  • Patient condition

Factors Affecting PI

A. Physiological Factors

Increase PI

  • Vasodilation (sepsis early phase, anesthesia)
  • Warm environment
  • Good cardiac output

Decrease PI

  • Shock (hypovolemic, cardiogenic)
  • Vasoconstriction (cold, vasopressors)
  • Hypothermia

B. Technical Factors

  • Probe position
  • Motion artifact
  • External pressure on probe

Clinical Applications of PI 

A. Assessment of Peripheral Perfusion

  • Tissue perfusion
  • Shock severity

Example:

  • Septic shock:
    • Early high PI (vasodilation)
    • Late low PI (vasoconstriction)

B. Early Shock Detection

  • PI falls before BP drops 

Useful in:Trauma,ICU monitoring

C. Monitoring Response to Therapy

  • Fluid resuscitation PI
  • Vasopressors PI (due to vasoconstriction)

D. Regional Anesthesia 

Successful block PI

Mechanism:

  • Sympathetic blockade vasodilation perfusion

Used in:

  • Spinal anesthesia
  • Peripheral nerve block success
  • PI = amplitude
  • PVI = variation of amplitude

Limitations of PI 

A. Site-specific

  • Reflects only local perfusion, not global

B. Affected by External Factors

  • Temperature
  • Vasopressors
  • Probe issues

C. Not a Direct Measure of Cardiac Output

  • Cannot replace advanced monitoring

ICU Pitfalls

Normal PI ≠ Adequate perfusion globally

  • Example:
    • Septic shock (vasodilated) high PI but poor perfusion


Low PI may be due to vasoconstriction, not hypovolemia

  • Example:
    • Noradrenaline use

Advanced Concept: PI & Microcirculation

  • PI indirectly reflects microvascular blood flow
  • Correlates with:
    • Peripheral perfusion index (clinical)
    • Tissue oxygenation