ORAL/NASAL CANNULAPROBLEM TO BE SOLVED: To provide a nasal cannula and an oral/nasal cannula capable of supplying oxygen and accurately taking the sample of carbon dioxide from expiration.LEVITSKY GERSHONゲルション レヴィツキー
United States Patent USD843561 Note: If you have problems viewing the PDF, please make sure you have the latest version ofAdobe Acrobat. Back to full text
A nasal/oral cannula for collecting a flow of exhaled gases and its method of manufacture are disclosed. The cannula comprises an elongated tubular body having a first and a second
maybe cause filling it with water and waiting for it to dry takes too much time. Other than that - excellent product, new operation system added pipe dry function after use and several other features. This is my second RVC830A unit and it is better than the first one in just about ever...
HFNC, High Flow Nasal Cannula; NIV, Non Invasive Ventilation; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; PaO2, partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood; FiO2, fraction of inspired oxygen; RT-PCR, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; CT, cycle threshold. a It was detected immediately...
A nasal cannula comprising a hollow main body having opposed first and second openings formed therein and the main body defining an internal chamber. A partition divides the internal chamber into first and second flow compartments. A flow passageway of a first nasal prong communicates with the firs...
Decrease the flow setting to improve trans‐nasal pulmonary aerosol delivery via "high‐flow nasal cannula" to infants and toddlers Objectives Trans‐nasal pulmonary aerosol delivery for infants and toddlers has recently gained popularity, however, the reported lung deposition is low. W... J Li,L...
Use of high flow nasal cannula in critically ill infants, children, and adults: A critical review of the literature Background: High flow nasal cannula (HFNC) systems utilize higher gas flow rates than standard nasal cannulae. The use of HFNC as a respiratory support mod... JH Lee,KJ Rehd...
although the tail-suspended rat model has been used frequently as a simulated weightlessness model to characterize the pharmacokinetics of drugs4,10,20,34,38. The use of only male and relatively young adult rats may limit the scope of discovery in real practice because astronauts are generally no...
Of them, 32 patients received oxygen by nasal prong at a rate of 2 to 5 L, 12 patients via high-flow nasal cannula at a rate of 10–15 L/min, and the remaining 03 were on non-invasive ventilator support. In addition, 42 patients (89.3%) were reported to have had intravenous ...