Biomedical instrumentation & technology / Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation
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Biomed Instrum Technol · Jul 2004
Comparative StudyHigh-frequency chest compression: effect of the third generation compression waveform.
High-frequency chest compression (HFCC) therapy has become the prevailing form of airway clearance for patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) in the United States. The original square waveform was replaced in 1995 with a sine waveform without published evidence of an equality of effectiveness. The recent development of a triangle waveform for HFCC provided the opportunity to compare the functional and therapeutic effects of different waveforms. ⋯ The mean increase was 20%+ range of 4% to 41%. P value was <.001. Future studies of HFCC should investigate the other effects of the sine and triangle waveforms, as well as the neglected square waveform, on mucus clearance and determine the best frequencies for each waveform, disease, and patient.
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Mild hypothermia has been shown to provide protective effects in patients with ischemia (e.g. acute stroke and heart attack), but traditional methods for inducing, maintaining, and reversing hypothermia are slow, difficult to administer and control, and uncomfortable for patients. An innovative method produces mild, wholebody hypothermia (32 degrees C to 34 degrees C) by use of an endovascular heat exchanger placed into the inferior vena cava. A closed-loop system accurately changes core body temperature with average cool-down rates of 4.8 degrees C per hour, tight-target temperature control of +/- 0.1 degree C, and average rewarm rates of 1.9 degrees C per hour. ⋯ Flexible, bellow-shaped segments along the length of the catheter allow precise maneuvering within blood vessels. Heparin, covalently bonded to the catheter, helps control thrombogenicity. This novel design has potential clinical applications in cerebrovascular surgery, acute stroke, acute myocardial infarction, cardiac arrest, and fever control.