Overnight Pulse Oximetry Test to Evaluate Oxygen Levels
2022-08-10
By Brandon Peters
If you are suspected of having a sleep disorder like obstructive sleep apnea, your medical provider may recommend that you undergo overnight pulse oximetry, a commonly used screening test that evaluates blood oxygen levels. This testing is also used to qualify for home oxygen use.
What happens with this test? How is the information used? Learn about oximetry and how it might be helpful to evaluate your breathing in sleep.
What Is Pulse Oximetry?
Overnight oximetry is a simple test that can easily be done at home. It provides basic information that may be useful in initially evaluating whether you have one of the more common sleep disorders, sleep apnea.
The test typically involves applying a plastic clip over the end of your finger. Imagine a large clothespin or plastic sleeve that encloses your fingertip. This clip may be held in place with a piece of tape, but it is not painful to have on and it can be removed easily.
It is usually connected via a cable to a small box that records the data overnight. If you use continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), it can be connected to this device to record the data. Newer devices may adhere directly to the skin and provide similar measurements.
Within the overnight oximeter sensor is a red light. This red light shines through your finger or the surface of your skin.
Often on the other side, or sometimes parallel to the emitting light, is a sensor that can measure your pulse (or heart rate) and the oxygen content of your blood. The latter is determined by the color of your blood, which will vary with the amount of oxygen that it contains.
Highly oxygenated blood is redder, while blood that is poor in oxygen is bluer. This changes the frequency of the light wavelength that is reflected back to the sensor.
During the Test
Pulse oximetry data are recorded continuously over the course of the night and will result in a graph. Your medical provider will be able to review it and determine if there are abnormal drops in your oxygen levels called desaturations. This may occur recurrently in sleep apnea.
It is also possible for the oxygen levels to be sustained at lower levels, especially in the setting of underlying lung disease like chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or emphysema.
Oxygen desaturations may be associated with increases in your heart rate. These events may suggest the presence of sleep apnea because it involves periodic pauses in your breathing and drops in the oxygen level of your blood that lead to a spike of cortisol (stress hormone) that impacts the heart.
Interpreting Results
In general, it is considered abnormal if the oxygen levels fall below 88% in adults or below 90% in children. If the levels are below 88 percent a condition called hypoxemia may be diagnosed. These levels can be very low, and generally, desaturations to less than 80% are considered severe.
These drops in the blood oxygen levels may require treatment. If the underlying cause is due to sleep apnea, then CPAP or bilevel therapy may be effective.
However, in the absence of sleep apnea, the use of supplemental oxygen as delivered via tubing to a nasal cannula from an oxygen concentrator or oxygen tank may be needed to resolve the abnormality.
Overnight Oximetry Pros and Cons
Oximeters only provide a limited amount of information. In addition, there are subtleties involved in sleep disorders that may not be able to detect. For example, sleep position and sleep stages may impact the degree of oxygen changes.Simple devices cannot identify these contributions.
Overnight oximetry alone is not adequate to diagnose sleep apnea and cannot be used for insurance purposes to qualify for treatment such as CPAP.
Nevertheless, overnight oximetry may be useful in identifying some people who warrant further testing, such as polysomnography or more extensive home sleep apnea testing. It can also be helpful to ensure that sleep apnea treatment is effective and that oxygen desaturations that were noted on prior diagnostic testing have resolved.
If you are suspected of having a sleep disorder like obstructive sleep apnea, your medical provider may recommend that you undergo overnight pulse oximetry, a commonly used screening test that evaluates blood oxygen levels. This testing is also used to qualify for home oxygen use.
What happens with this test? How is the information used? Learn about oximetry and how it might be helpful to evaluate your breathing in sleep.

What Is Pulse Oximetry?
Overnight oximetry is a simple test that can easily be done at home. It provides basic information that may be useful in initially evaluating whether you have one of the more common sleep disorders, sleep apnea.
The test typically involves applying a plastic clip over the end of your finger. Imagine a large clothespin or plastic sleeve that encloses your fingertip. This clip may be held in place with a piece of tape, but it is not painful to have on and it can be removed easily.
It is usually connected via a cable to a small box that records the data overnight. If you use continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), it can be connected to this device to record the data. Newer devices may adhere directly to the skin and provide similar measurements.
Within the overnight oximeter sensor is a red light. This red light shines through your finger or the surface of your skin.
Often on the other side, or sometimes parallel to the emitting light, is a sensor that can measure your pulse (or heart rate) and the oxygen content of your blood. The latter is determined by the color of your blood, which will vary with the amount of oxygen that it contains.
Highly oxygenated blood is redder, while blood that is poor in oxygen is bluer. This changes the frequency of the light wavelength that is reflected back to the sensor.

During the Test
Pulse oximetry data are recorded continuously over the course of the night and will result in a graph. Your medical provider will be able to review it and determine if there are abnormal drops in your oxygen levels called desaturations. This may occur recurrently in sleep apnea.
It is also possible for the oxygen levels to be sustained at lower levels, especially in the setting of underlying lung disease like chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or emphysema.
Oxygen desaturations may be associated with increases in your heart rate. These events may suggest the presence of sleep apnea because it involves periodic pauses in your breathing and drops in the oxygen level of your blood that lead to a spike of cortisol (stress hormone) that impacts the heart.
Interpreting Results
In general, it is considered abnormal if the oxygen levels fall below 88% in adults or below 90% in children. If the levels are below 88 percent a condition called hypoxemia may be diagnosed. These levels can be very low, and generally, desaturations to less than 80% are considered severe.
These drops in the blood oxygen levels may require treatment. If the underlying cause is due to sleep apnea, then CPAP or bilevel therapy may be effective.
However, in the absence of sleep apnea, the use of supplemental oxygen as delivered via tubing to a nasal cannula from an oxygen concentrator or oxygen tank may be needed to resolve the abnormality.

Overnight Oximetry Pros and Cons
Oximeters only provide a limited amount of information. In addition, there are subtleties involved in sleep disorders that may not be able to detect. For example, sleep position and sleep stages may impact the degree of oxygen changes.Simple devices cannot identify these contributions.
Overnight oximetry alone is not adequate to diagnose sleep apnea and cannot be used for insurance purposes to qualify for treatment such as CPAP.
Nevertheless, overnight oximetry may be useful in identifying some people who warrant further testing, such as polysomnography or more extensive home sleep apnea testing. It can also be helpful to ensure that sleep apnea treatment is effective and that oxygen desaturations that were noted on prior diagnostic testing have resolved.
Related News
Pulse oximeter can help you check your body
2023-05-09 397How do pulse oximeters work?
2023-04-03 549Why is the SpO2 reading on the pulse oximeter fluctuate between 92 and 97? Is this normal?
2023-03-30 566Different measurement positions lead to different measurement results
2023-03-24 446Blood Oximeter: A New Concept Family Doctor
2023-03-23 433Significance of monitoring BIS for anesthetized patients
2023-02-21 533Which gases need to be detected when the patient is anesthetized
2023-02-20 508Clinical application scenarios of the patient monitor?
2023-02-16 419What are the types of disposable spo2 probe?
2023-01-06 607How does blood oxygen hypoxia do?
2022-12-14 516The correct use of SpO2 sensor method?
2022-12-13 547Theory of measuring human blood pressure
2022-11-10 509What is a hyperbaric oxygen chamber?
2022-10-27 467What causes an irregular heartbeat?
2022-10-25 478What reason is human body temperature low?
2022-10-24 439Who is oxygen therapy suitable for?
2022-10-20 455How should blood oxygen do low?
2022-10-19 430UM2012 Patient Monitor has successfully passed the EMC test
2022-11-07 703What is the normal range of respiratory rate?
2022-10-17 33015 products from UTECH Medical obtained FSC issued by the European Union
2022-11-04 663