Gas mixture control system for oxygen therapy in pre-term infants
© 2014 IEEE. Pre-term infants - less than 37 weeks gestational age - usually had immature lungs' development, which resulted of poor oxygen saturation in red blood cells. A blood oxygen saturation level was measured in percent of Peripheral capillary oxygen saturation (SpO2). Medical doctors ne...
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th-mahidol.336782018-11-09T09:09:19Z Gas mixture control system for oxygen therapy in pre-term infants Phattaradanai Kiratiwudhikul Pornchai Chanyagorn Mahidol University Computer Science © 2014 IEEE. Pre-term infants - less than 37 weeks gestational age - usually had immature lungs' development, which resulted of poor oxygen saturation in red blood cells. A blood oxygen saturation level was measured in percent of Peripheral capillary oxygen saturation (SpO2). Medical doctors needed to order an oxygen therapy to maintain SpO2 of the infants between 90-95% while SpO2 of normal infants is 99-100%. Oxygen therapy was a procedure to stimulate lung functions and to maintain life. A registered nurse (RN) was responsible for adjusting levels of a fractional of inspired oxygen (FiO2) from 21% to 100% which was a proportion of oxygen gas provided to the infants periodically. In real situation, the adjustment could only be made as often as every 20-30 minutes, which might not be adequate. This caused ineffectiveness of an oxygen therapy and result in a longer hospital stay. A critical error of this adjustment could also cause blindness due to oxygen toxicity or dead due to hypoxia. This research was to develop a reliable embedded system that allowed automatically control of FiO2 according to an order of SpO2 by medical doctors. As a result, risks of oxygen toxicity and hypoxia could be minimized. The system also allowed medical doctors to use recorded data for future care planning in oxygen therapy. 2018-11-09T02:09:19Z 2018-11-09T02:09:19Z 2014-02-17 Conference Paper Proceedings of 2014 International Conference on Smart Computing, SMARTCOMP 2014. (2014), 289-294 10.1109/SMARTCOMP.2014.7043870 2-s2.0-84946531367 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/33678 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84946531367&origin=inward |
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© 2014 IEEE. Pre-term infants - less than 37 weeks gestational age - usually had immature lungs' development, which resulted of poor oxygen saturation in red blood cells. A blood oxygen saturation level was measured in percent of Peripheral capillary oxygen saturation (SpO2). Medical doctors needed to order an oxygen therapy to maintain SpO2 of the infants between 90-95% while SpO2 of normal infants is 99-100%. Oxygen therapy was a procedure to stimulate lung functions and to maintain life. A registered nurse (RN) was responsible for adjusting levels of a fractional of inspired oxygen (FiO2) from 21% to 100% which was a proportion of oxygen gas provided to the infants periodically. In real situation, the adjustment could only be made as often as every 20-30 minutes, which might not be adequate. This caused ineffectiveness of an oxygen therapy and result in a longer hospital stay. A critical error of this adjustment could also cause blindness due to oxygen toxicity or dead due to hypoxia. This research was to develop a reliable embedded system that allowed automatically control of FiO2 according to an order of SpO2 by medical doctors. As a result, risks of oxygen toxicity and hypoxia could be minimized. The system also allowed medical doctors to use recorded data for future care planning in oxygen therapy. |
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Mahidol University Phattaradanai Kiratiwudhikul Pornchai Chanyagorn |
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Phattaradanai Kiratiwudhikul Pornchai Chanyagorn |
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Phattaradanai Kiratiwudhikul |
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Gas mixture control system for oxygen therapy in pre-term infants |
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Gas mixture control system for oxygen therapy in pre-term infants |
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Gas mixture control system for oxygen therapy in pre-term infants |
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Gas mixture control system for oxygen therapy in pre-term infants |
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Gas mixture control system for oxygen therapy in pre-term infants |
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gas mixture control system for oxygen therapy in pre-term infants |
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2018 |
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