Literature DB >> 1890446

Use of long catheters for multipatient anesthetic monitoring at high respiratory frequencies.

J C Turner1.   

Abstract

Anesthetic gases from several patients can be monitored simultaneously with a centrally located mass spectrometer. Such monitoring requires catheters from patient to spectrometer that are several meters long. Scamman (J Clin Monit 1988; 4:227-229) found that when the respiratory frequency is high, as with infants, the CO2 signal from the patient is unacceptably distorted during passage down the catheter. This is due to Taylor dispersion of the input signal. An outline of the theory of Taylor dispersion is given. The equations describe the interaction between the velocity distribution (which, in laminar flow, is parabolic) and the radial diffusion of CO2. This interaction keeps a tracer signal together in a pulse, as it moves down the tube with the mean velocity, spreading somewhat as it proceeds. How much does an initially sharp signal become blurred? The spread of such a signal when it reaches the detector, measured in time, can be expressed in various ways. Measurement is complicated, however, by the fact that the gas pressure may fall by as much as a factor of 10 along the line. The resultant expansion and acceleration of the gas cannot be ignored. A full treatment of this complication is given elsewhere, but the following simple equation is described: delta t = 3.54 x 10(-3) l [(1 + R2)/(1 - R2)]1/2. Typically, the spread time is up to a quarter of a second for catheters of 50 m, such as used by Scamman. This is comparable with the period of CO2 rise and fall for infants and explains the serious distortion in wave form that Scamman+ found.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1890446     DOI: 10.1007/bf01619266

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Monit        ISSN: 0748-1977


  4 in total

1.  Mechanical influences on the capnogram.

Authors:  J Schena; J Thompson; R K Crone
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  1984-08       Impact factor: 7.598

2.  The uses of long sampling probes in respiratory mass spectrometry.

Authors:  N J Davies; D M Denison
Journal:  Respir Physiol       Date:  1979-08

3.  Multipatient anesthetic mass spectrometry: rapid analysis of data stored in long catheters.

Authors:  G M Ozanne; W G Young; W J Mazzei; J W Severinghaus
Journal:  Anesthesiology       Date:  1981-07       Impact factor: 7.892

4.  Accuracy of a central mass spectrometer system at high respiratory frequencies.

Authors:  F L Scamman
Journal:  J Clin Monit       Date:  1988-07
  4 in total
  2 in total

1.  Mass spectrometry: performance of long catheters.

Authors:  J G Lerou; J van Egmond
Journal:  J Clin Monit       Date:  1993-01

2.  Response time studies of a new, portable mass spectrometer.

Authors:  P A Delaney; G M Barnas; C F Mackenzie
Journal:  J Clin Monit       Date:  1997-05
  2 in total

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