Abstract
In an effort to reduce the number of blood sampling, trauma, blood loss due to invasive procedures for serum bilirubin determination, Yamanouchi & Minolta Co. developed a transcutaneous device for measuring subcutaneous bilirubin. This small hand held, spectrophotometric, fiberoptic zenon lightmeasures in 1 second the color intensity of the skin & subcutaneous tissue. It gives a numerical index which was shown to correlate well with the total serum bilirubin concentration of Japanese (Yamanouchi) & with white infants (Lucey). We used the same methodology in black & Hispanic term infants to see if skin color will affect the correlation. None received phototherapy. A total of 112 measurements were done on 71 black term infants (Wt. 2510-4000 gm, age 11-207 hrs, Bil. 1.6-17.7mg%) at 4 different sites. The correlation was best at mid-sternum with correlation coefficient r=0.80 p 0.001 & the standard error of estimate 1.83. In 24 Hispanic infants (69 measurements, Wt. 2530-3970 gm, age 20-132 hrs, Bil. 4.6-15.6 mg%), the best site of correlation was mid-sternum with r=0.64, p 0.001 & standard error of estimate 1.84. The correlation was good in black infants but not as good as in Japanese infants (r= 0.93). This suggests that dark skin made some difference. The correlation was less than adequate in Hispanic infants, (r=0.64) probably because their skin color varies. Considering the cost of conventional serum bilirubin determination (av. $54/test) Tc Bilirubinometry is not only cost effective but also painless & time saving.
Log in or create a free account to read this content
Gain free access to this article, as well as selected content from this journal and more on nature.com
or
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Vangyanichyakorn, K., Sun, S., Abubaker, A. et al. 1455 TRANSCUTANEOUS BILIRUBINOMETRY IN BLACK & HISPANIC INFANTS. Pediatr Res 15 (Suppl 4), 685 (1981). https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-198104001-01484
Issue date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-198104001-01484
This article is cited by
-
Transcutaneous bilirubinometry in the newborn infant: State of the art
Journal of Clinical Monitoring (1986)