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Pulse oximeters
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Perhaps
you have used a pulse oximeter and been satisfied with the reading
that it gave you, but do you really understand how and why pulse
oximeters work? Yes, a pulse oximeter can tell you how much oxygen
is your blood. And yes, this can help you regulate how much medical
oxygen you need to take, but how does the contraption work?
Let us start from the very beginning… with your blood. Blood
that has a lot of oxygen in it is brighter red than oxygen with
very little oxygen in it. Blood with little oxygen will appear a
much darker red, more bluish.
If you take a look at your hand, you will see bluish veins and
reddish arteries. Your arteries are what send oxygenated blood (bright
reddish in color) from your heart to the rest of your body. Your
veins are what take your blood back (now a darker, more bluish color),
once the oxygen has been dispersed.
Hemoglobin plays a very big part in your circulatory system. Hemoglobin
is an oxygen transport metalloprotein in the red blood cells. It
transports oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body, including
the muscles, organs, and all the cells. Oxygen binds to four sites
on the hemoglobin – when all four sites are full, the hemoglobin
is fully saturated.
Fully saturated hemoglobin does not absorb light in the same way
that unsaturated hemoglobin absorbs light. A hemoglobin fully saturated
with oxygen absorbs every color but red – therefore red is
reflected and that is the color that we see. This is why well-oxygenated
blood looks red.
Alright, so how do pulse oximeters fit in with all of this? Well,
pulse oximeters are non-invasive. You generally place a pulse oximeter
over your fingertip or earlobe. Each pulse oximeter has a light
source and a detector.
As you recall from above, hemoglobin that is fully saturated with
oxygen reflects light differently than hemoglobin that is not. Therefore,
when the light source of the pulse oximeter is shined through your
finger, the color of your blood is detected and the oxygen saturation
level is discovered.
This is only a relatively condensed version of how pulse oximeters
work. If you want a more specific explanation, you should ask your
doctor or care provider.
There are some very effective pulse oximeters on the market today
– they are very reliable and efficient. Some can be used for
constant readings, while other pulse oximeters are used only for
check-up readings.
It is important to note, though, that regardless of the reading
that your pulse oximeter tells you, you should never change the
flow of oxygen coming from your oxygen unit unless your caregiver
and/or doctor has okayed it.
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