Background: Postoperative hypoxaemia may be detected by pulse oximetry monitoring of the arterial haemoglobin saturation (SpO2). The SpO2-values obtained on the preoperative night are presumed to represent baseline values for the patients. The aim of this study was to evaluate the possible difference between nocturnal SpO2-values in the patient's home and in the hospital before operation.
Methods: We included 20 patients, 60 years or older, who underwent continuous monitoring of SpO2 on one night in the patient's home and on the night following hospitalisation before surgery. The alarms were turned off and the values were not accessible to the hospital staff. The SpO2 value was stored every 10 s. We described the general oxygen saturation level using the median of all valid values and we calculated the number of valid SpO2-values at 3 levels: above 90%, between 86 and 90%, and below 86%.
Results: The number of valid SpO2-values at home and in the hospital were 2186 and 2330, respectively; the median value was 96% on both occasions. Only 0.36% of the values were below 91% on the two occasions and there were no statistically significant differences between the number of SpO2-values at any of the considered levels.
Conclusion: Arterial oxygen saturation values measured on the preoperative night in the hospital seem reliable as baseline values for elderly patients.