Oxygen Saturation Test
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What is the test?
Your red blood cells must
carry sufficient oxygen through your arteries to all of your internal
organs to keep you alive. Normally, when red blood cells pass through
the lungs, 95%-100% of them are loaded, or "saturated," with oxygen
to carry. If you have lung disease or other types of medical conditions,
fewer of your red blood cells may be carrying their usual load of oxygen,
and your oxygen saturation might be lower than 95%. Your blood oxygen
level can be measured in two ways.
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How do I prepare for the
test?
There is no preparation necessary.
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What happens
when the test is performed?
An estimate of your oxygen
saturation can be made easily and painlessly with a clip that fits
on your finger. This clip shines a light through one side of your finger;
a detector measures the light that comes through the other side. This
machine can make a good guess about your oxygen saturation because
blood cells that are saturated with oxygen absorb and reflect light
differently than those that are not. Blood cells are a bright red when
they are loaded with oxygen, and they change to a bluish color when
they are no longer carrying a full load. (This is why arteries are
red and veins are blue in color.) This machine cannot give a perfect
measurement of your oxygen saturation; it can give only a rough estimate,
and its measurement can be affected by things as simple as red nail
polish on your finger.
A better test for measuring
your oxygen saturation is an arterial blood gas test. For this test,
a small sample of blood must be drawn directly out of an artery. Most
routine blood tests use blood that is drawn out of a vein, so this
test is a little different. The artery that is sampled most often is
the radial artery in your wrist, the one you can feel when you take
your pulse. To draw blood from this artery, your doctor or a technician
feels your pulse before inserting the needle. Some patients find that
it hurts a little more to have blood taken from an artery instead of
a vein, but the procedure takes only a few seconds. Your arterial blood
can be directly tested for its oxygen level, and other tests (such
as the level of carbon dioxide and the pH of the blood) can be done
as well.
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What risks are there
from the test?
Measurement made with a fingerclip
has no risks. The risks of an arterial blood gas test are very small.
Even temporary injury to your artery is unlikely to cause a problem,
because most patients pump blood to their hand through more than one
artery.
Before drawing your blood,
your doctor may do a brief physical examination to make sure that you
still get good blood flow to your hand even when one wrist artery is
blocked. To do this test, the doctor presses down first on both sides
of your wrist to block blood flow, until your hand becomes pale. Then
he or she lifts off the pressure from one side to see if that is enough
to let your hand turn pink again.
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Must
I do anything special after the test is over?
You will need to have pressure
held over the artery for a few minutes after the blood is drawn, because
arteries are more likely than veins to bleed afterward.
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How
long is it before the result of the test is known?
The results of the arterial
blood gas test are processed very quickly and are available within
15 minutes in most laboratories. The fingerclip estimate of oxygen
is available immediately.
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