Performance of Portable Ventilators at Temperature Extremes
Abstract
In the current theater of operation, medical devices are often shipped and stored at ambient conditions. The effect of storage at hot and cold temperature extremes on ventilator performance is unknown. We evaluated three portable ventilators currently in use or being evaluated for use by the Department of Defense (731, Impact Instrumentation; T1, Hamilton Medical; and ReVel, CareFusion) at temperature extremes in a laboratory setting. The ventilators were stored at temperatures of 60 degC and -35 deg C for 24 hours and were allowed to acclimate to room temperature for 30 minutes prior to evaluation. The T1 required an extra 15-30 minutes of acclimation to room temperature before the ventilator would deliver breaths. All delivered tidal volumes at room temperature and temperature extremes were less than the +/- 10% American Society for Testing and Materials standard with the ReVel. Delivered tidal volumes at the pediatric settings were less than the +/- 10% threshold at both temperatures and at room temperature with the 731. Storage at extreme temperature affected the performance of the portable ventilators tested. This study showed that portable ventilators may need an hour or more of acclimation time at room temperature after storage at temperature extremes to operate as intended.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Mar 30, 2015
- Accession Number
- ADA616565
Entities
People
- Dario Rodriquez Jr.
- Jay A. Johannigman
- Michael C. Petro
- Richard D Branson
- Thomas C Blakeman
- Tyler J. Britton
Organizations
- University of Cincinnati