Selected article for: "circuit valve and low vte alarm"

Author: Micha Sam Brickman Raredon; Clark Fisher; Paul Heerdt; Ranjit Deshpande; Steven Nivison; Elaine Fajardo; Shamsuddin Akhtar; Thomas Raredon; Laura E. Niklason
Title: Pressure-Regulated Ventilator Splitting (PReVentS): A COVID-19 Response Paradigm from Yale University
  • Document date: 2020_4_6
  • ID: mqj071gp_113
    Snippet: Circuit Occlusion/Stuck Valve: The effects of a circuit occlusion are also dependent on the occlusion location (again, see Appendix S1). However, any occlusions on a patient circuit between the inspiratory T-piece and the expiratory T-piece will have no effect on the ventilation of other patients sharing the ventilator. All circuit occlusions will trigger the low VTe alarm, and some will trigger an occlusion alarm as well......
    Document: Circuit Occlusion/Stuck Valve: The effects of a circuit occlusion are also dependent on the occlusion location (again, see Appendix S1). However, any occlusions on a patient circuit between the inspiratory T-piece and the expiratory T-piece will have no effect on the ventilation of other patients sharing the ventilator. All circuit occlusions will trigger the low VTe alarm, and some will trigger an occlusion alarm as well.

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