“…Clark-type electrodes are reported to provide a 90% response to an abrupt change in the value to be recorded, ranging from 20 to 25 s. [28] TcpO2 changes are comparable with photoelectric probes but seem to be slower with paramagnetic probes. [29,30] Therefore, it is uncertain whether the present results with Clark-type electrodes could be observed will all TcpO2 technologies. Cheyne-Stokes respiration (CSR), sometimes referred to as Hunter-Cheyne-Stokes breathing, is a type of breathing disorder characterized by cyclical episodes of apnea, followed by increasing then decreasing ventilation amplitude, resulting in sinusoidal changes in arterial pO2.…”