Photoplethysmography for simultaneous recording of heart and respiratory rates in newborn infants.

Ten newborn infants, born at 25-41 wk of gestation and nursed in a neonatal intensive care unit or in a neonatal intermediate care unit, underwent monitoring of heart and respiratory rates with a new technique using an optical sensor, 0-60 d postnatally. The aim of this study was to compare the heart and respiratory rates recorded in infants by photoplethysmography with a probe positioned on three monitoring sites, namely the leg, buttock and interscapular region, with the rates recorded by ECG and transthoracic impedance, respectively. The recordings were compared in order to determine which individual heart beats and respiratory cycles were recorded with one or both relevant techniques. A high degree of association (r =0.99) was found between the respiratory rates recorded by photoplethysmography and by transthoracic impedance. Recordings of heart rates by ECG were also highly associated with the photoplethysmographic rates as measured at two (r = 0.99) of the three monitoring sites. It is concluded that heart and respiratory rates in infants can be monitored satisfactorily by the new method based on photoplethysmography. This method offers the advantage of recording several physiological parameters non-invasively with a single probe during the neonatal period.