Takuo Aoyagi: discovery of pulse oximetry
- PMID: 18048890
- DOI: 10.1213/01.ane.0000269514.31660.09
Takuo Aoyagi: discovery of pulse oximetry
Abstract
In the 1930s and 1940s, photo cells permitted German, English, and American physiologists to construct ear oximeters with red and infrared light, requiring calibration. In 1940 Squire recognized that changes of red and infrared light transmission caused by pneumatic tissue compression permitted saturation to be computed. In 1949 Wood used this idea to compute absolute saturation continuously from the ratios of optical density changes with pressure in an ear oximeter. In 1972 Takuo Aoyagi, an electrical engineer at Nihon Kohden company in Tokyo, was interested in measuring cardiac output noninvasively by the dye dilution method using a commercially available ear oximeter. He balanced the red and infrared signals to cancel the pulse noise which prevented measuring the dye washout accurately. He discovered that changes of oxygen saturation voided his pulse cancellation. He then realized that these pulsatile changes could be used to compute saturation from the ratio of ratios of pulse changes in the red and infrared. His ideas, equations and instrument were adapted, improved and successfully marketed by Minolta about 1978, stimulating other firms to further improve and market pulse oximeters worldwide in the mid 1980s. Dr. Aoyagi and associates provided a detailed history for this paper.
References
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- Squire JR. Instrument for measuring quantity of blood and its degree of oxygenation in the web of the hand. Clin Sci 1940;4:331–9
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- Millikan GA. The oximeter: an instrument for measuring continuously oxygen saturation of arterial blood in man. Rev Sci Instrum 1942;13:434–44
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- Wood EH. Oximetry. In: Glasser O, ed. Medical physics, Vol 2. Chicago: Year Book Publishers, 1950:664–80
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- Aoyagi T. Pulse oximetry: its invention, theory, and future. J Anesth 2003;17:259–66
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- Aoyagi T, Kishi M, Yamaguchi K, Nakajima S, Hirai H, Takase H, Kuse A. [New pulsed-type earpiece oximeter (author’s transl)]. Kokyu To Junkan 1975;23:709–13
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