KUMJ | VOL. 20 | NO. 1 | ISSUE 77 | JANUARY - MARCH, 2022
Diagnostic Accuracy of Drop Hydrogen Peroxide Test as a Novel Bedside Diagnostic Test to Differentiate Transudative and Exudative Pleural Effusion Against Light’s Criteria
Vaidya N, Sapkota P, Chaurasia S, Thapa B, Bhandari N, Bhattarai I
Abstract: Background
Diagnostic evaluation of pleural fluid according to Light’s criteria to differentiate
between exudative and transudative fluid takes 1 or 2 working days. For rapid clinical
management, especially in critically ill patients, a simpler bedside diagnostic test can
be done which has similar diagnostic accuracy as that of Light’s Criteria.
Objective
To determine the diagnostic accuracy of Drop Hydrogen Peroxide test to differentiate
exudative and transudative pleural effusion in comparison to Light’s criteria.
Method
A concurrent validity test was performed using a convenient sampling technique
including patients presenting to the Department of Internal Medicine from January
to September 2021, who had pleural effusion. Two milliliters of tapped pleural fluid
of patients who underwent aseptic thoracocentesis was collected in a test tube to
which one to two drops of 20% hydrogen peroxide was added. Presence of bubbles
suggested an exudative type of fluid. Rest of the tapped pleural fluid was sent to the
laboratory for further evaluation by Light’s criteria, which was compared with the
results by Drop Hydrogen Peroxide Test.
Result
There were 83 patients who had pleural effusion, of them a total of 43 patients had
transudative pleural effusion while 40 patients had exudative pleural effusion based
on Light’s criteria and 37 patients had transudative pleural effusion while 46 patients
had exudative pleural effusion based on drop hydrogen peroxide test.
Conclusion
The drop hydrogen peroxide test allows cost effective and prompt evaluation of the
type of pleural effusion is exudative or transudative, thereby making it a convenient
diagnostic bedside test.
Keyword : Diagnostic tests, Exudates and Transudates, Hydrogen peroxide, Pleural effusion, Thoracocentesis