[Anesthesia equipment and respirators. Fundamentals]
- PMID: 8304583
[Anesthesia equipment and respirators. Fundamentals]
Abstract
The decrease of functional residual capacity during anaesthesia makes mechanical ventilation mandatory. Volume- and pressure-controlled modes should both be possible. Ventilator-assisted spontaneous respiration is rarely indicated during general anaesthesia, and this mode is therefore unnecessary for anaesthesia machines. From ecological and economical points of view, modern anaesthesia machines should be equipped with a circle system enabling administration of anaesthesia under rebreathing conditions with reduced fresh gas flow. Basic requirements are low gas leakage of the system, precise gas-flow dosage, especially at low flow rates, and integrated monitoring of in- and expiratory gases. In principle, older machines may also comply with these requirements if they are appropriately upgraded and properly maintained. There is reasonable doubt whether a further reduction of flow to less than 1 l/min fresh gas is of any benefit. To maintain patient safety without compromising practicability, a tremendous surplus of technical efforts is necessary. For easier management, fresh-gas-flow-compensated circle systems facilitating adjustment of tidal volume after changes of fresh gas flow are desirable. Precautions aimed at the prevention of ventilation with hypoxic gas mixtures are still insufficient: the oxygen failure devices (nitrous oxide flow shutoff valve) are only effective if oxygen pressure from the gas supply is low. Distinct improvements have been achieved with oxygen ratio systems, preventing the administration of hypoxic gas mixtures at fresh gas flows higher than 1 l/min.
Similar articles
-
[Anesthetic gas consumption and costs in a closed system with the PhysioFlex anesthesia equipment].Anaesthesist. 1993 Sep;42(9):638-43. Anaesthesist. 1993. PMID: 8214536 German.
-
[Efficiency of a mobile oxygen concentrator for mechanical ventilation in anesthesia. Studies with a metabolic lung model and early clinical results].Anaesthesist. 1995 Sep;44(9):643-50. Anaesthesist. 1995. PMID: 7485926 Clinical Trial. German.
-
[Mechanical ventilation in an anesthetic circle system using the lowest tidal volume--studies of 3 anesthesia ventilators in a lung model and an animal experiment].Anaesthesist. 1991 Nov;40(11):624-8. Anaesthesist. 1991. PMID: 1755533 German.
-
[Anesthesia systems].Anaesthesist. 1987 Aug;36(8):393-9. Anaesthesist. 1987. PMID: 3310726 Review. German.
-
[What are the changes in paediatric anaesthesia practice afforded by new anaesthetic ventilators?].Ann Fr Anesth Reanim. 2006 Apr;25(4):417-23. doi: 10.1016/j.annfar.2005.10.003. Epub 2005 Nov 28. Ann Fr Anesth Reanim. 2006. PMID: 16310339 Review. French.
Cited by
-
Development and performance assessment of new solar and fuel cell-powered oxygen generators and ventilators for COVID-19 patients.Int J Hydrogen Energy. 2021 Sep 24;46(66):33053-33067. doi: 10.1016/j.ijhydene.2021.07.101. Epub 2021 Jul 23. Int J Hydrogen Energy. 2021. PMID: 34518722 Free PMC article.