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Anesthetic Machine For Student

Anesthesia, or anaesthesia (from Greek ἀν-, an-, "without"; and αἴσθησις, aisthēsis, "sensation"),[1] is a temporary state that causes unconsciousness, loss of memory, lack of pain and muscle relaxation. Anesthesia is a unique intervention, in that it does not offer any particular benefit, rather it allows others to do things that might be beneficial. The best anesthetic, therefore is the one with the lowest risk to the patient that still achieves the end points required to complete the procedure. A general anesthetic will cause a person to sleep but the body can still mount a fight-or-flight (stress) response to surgical stimulation leading to a harmful condition called shock. Muscles will also contract under anesthetic making surgical procedures impossible. Since the needs of anesthesia are multifaceted, so are the end points which are traditionally described as hypnosis (medically meaning unconsciousness and amnesia), analgesia and muscle relaxation. To reach multiple end points one or more drugs are commonly used (such as general anesthetics, hypnotics, sedatives, paralytics, narcotics and analgesics) each of which serves a specific purpose in creating a safe anesthetic. The types of anesthesia are broadly classified into general anesthesia, sedation and regional anesthesia. General anesthesia refers to the suppression of activity in the central nervous system, resulting in unconsciousness and total lack of sensation. Sedation (or dissociative anesthesia) uses agents that inhibit transmission of nerve impulses between higher and lower centers of the brain inhibiting anxiety and the creation of long-term memories. Regional anesthesia renders a larger area of the body insensate by blocking transmission of nerve impulses between a part of the body and the spinal cord. It is divided into peripheral and central blockades. Peripheral blockade inhibits sensory perception within a specific location on the body, such as when a tooth is "numbed" or when a nerve block is given to stop sensation from an entire limb. Central blockades place the local anesthetic around the spinal cord (such as with spinal and epidural anesthesia) removing sensation to any area below the level of the block. There are both major and minor risks of anesthesia. Examples of major risks include death, heart attack and pulmonary embolism whereas minor risks can include postoperative nausea and vomiting and readmission to hospital. The likelihood of a complication occurring is proportional to the relative risk of a variety of factors related to the patient's health, the complexity of the surgery being performed and the type of anesthetic. Of these factors, the person's health prior to surgery (stratified by the ASA physical status classification system) has the greatest bearing on the probability of a complication occurring. Patient's typically wake within minutes of an anesthetic being terminated and regain their senses within hours. An exception being a condition called long-term post-operative cognitive dysfunction. It is characterized by persistent confusion lasting weeks or months and is more common in those undergoing cardiac surgery and in the elderly. The first public demonstration of general anesthesia was in 1842 by a Boston dentist named William T.G. Morton at the Massachusetts General Hospital. Dr. Morton gave an ether anesthetic for the removal of a neck tumor by surgeon John Collins Warren (the first editor of the New England Journal of Medicine and dean of Harvard Medical School). About a decade later, cocaine was introduced as the first viable local anesthetic. It wasn't until the 1930s that Dr. Harvey Cushing tied the stress response to higher mortality rates and began using local anesthetic for hernia repairs in addition to general anesthesia.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
252 views37 pages

Anesthetic Machine For Student

Anesthesia, or anaesthesia (from Greek ἀν-, an-, "without"; and αἴσθησις, aisthēsis, "sensation"),[1] is a temporary state that causes unconsciousness, loss of memory, lack of pain and muscle relaxation. Anesthesia is a unique intervention, in that it does not offer any particular benefit, rather it allows others to do things that might be beneficial. The best anesthetic, therefore is the one with the lowest risk to the patient that still achieves the end points required to complete the procedure. A general anesthetic will cause a person to sleep but the body can still mount a fight-or-flight (stress) response to surgical stimulation leading to a harmful condition called shock. Muscles will also contract under anesthetic making surgical procedures impossible. Since the needs of anesthesia are multifaceted, so are the end points which are traditionally described as hypnosis (medically meaning unconsciousness and amnesia), analgesia and muscle relaxation. To reach multiple end points one or more drugs are commonly used (such as general anesthetics, hypnotics, sedatives, paralytics, narcotics and analgesics) each of which serves a specific purpose in creating a safe anesthetic. The types of anesthesia are broadly classified into general anesthesia, sedation and regional anesthesia. General anesthesia refers to the suppression of activity in the central nervous system, resulting in unconsciousness and total lack of sensation. Sedation (or dissociative anesthesia) uses agents that inhibit transmission of nerve impulses between higher and lower centers of the brain inhibiting anxiety and the creation of long-term memories. Regional anesthesia renders a larger area of the body insensate by blocking transmission of nerve impulses between a part of the body and the spinal cord. It is divided into peripheral and central blockades. Peripheral blockade inhibits sensory perception within a specific location on the body, such as when a tooth is "numbed" or when a nerve block is given to stop sensation from an entire limb. Central blockades place the local anesthetic around the spinal cord (such as with spinal and epidural anesthesia) removing sensation to any area below the level of the block. There are both major and minor risks of anesthesia. Examples of major risks include death, heart attack and pulmonary embolism whereas minor risks can include postoperative nausea and vomiting and readmission to hospital. The likelihood of a complication occurring is proportional to the relative risk of a variety of factors related to the patient's health, the complexity of the surgery being performed and the type of anesthetic. Of these factors, the person's health prior to surgery (stratified by the ASA physical status classification system) has the greatest bearing on the probability of a complication occurring. Patient's typically wake within minutes of an anesthetic being terminated and regain their senses within hours. An exception being a condition called long-term post-operative cognitive dysfunction. It is characterized by persistent confusion lasting weeks or months and is more common in those undergoing cardiac surgery and in the elderly. The first public demonstration of general anesthesia was in 1842 by a Boston dentist named William T.G. Morton at the Massachusetts General Hospital. Dr. Morton gave an ether anesthetic for the removal of a neck tumor by surgeon John Collins Warren (the first editor of the New England Journal of Medicine and dean of Harvard Medical School). About a decade later, cocaine was introduced as the first viable local anesthetic. It wasn't until the 1930s that Dr. Harvey Cushing tied the stress response to higher mortality rates and began using local anesthetic for hernia repairs in addition to general anesthesia.
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Introductory Lecture Series: The Anesthesia Machine

PORNSIRI WANNADILOK

Objectives

Anesthesia Machine Ventilators Scavenging Systems System Checkout

Flow meter bellow

ventilator

vaporizer

Corrugated tube

APL valve

Soda lime

Scavenging system

The Anesthesia Machine


High Intermediate Low Pressure Circuit

High Pressure System

Receives gasses from the high pressure E cylinders attached to the back of the anesthesia machine (2200 psig for O2, 745 psig for N2O) Consists of:
Hanger Yolk (reserve gas cylinder holder) Check valve (prevent reverse flow of gas) Cylinder Pressure Indicator (Gauge) Pressure Reducing Device (Regulator)

Usually not used, unless pipeline gas supply is off

Cylinder Characteristics Color State Contents (L) Empty Weight (kg)

E Size Compressed Gas Cylinders


Oxygen White (green) Gas 625 5.90 6.76 2000 Nitrous Oxide Blue Carbon Dioxide Gray Liquid and gas Liquid and gas 1590 5.90 8.80 750 1590 5.90 8.90 838

Air Black/White (yellow) Gas 625 5.90

Full Weight (kg) Pressure Full (psig)

1800

Hanger Yolk

Hanger Yolk: orients and supports the cylinder, providing a gas-tight seal and ensuring a unidirectional gas flow into the machine Index pins: Pin Index Safety System (PISS) is gas specificprevents accidental rearrangement of cylinders (e.g.. switching O2 and N2O)

Pressure Reducing Device

Reduces the high and variable pressures found in a cylinder to a lower and more constant pressure found in the anesthesia machine (45 psig) Reducing devices are preset so that the machine uses only gas from the pipeline (wall gas), when the pipeline inlet pressure is 50 psig.

This prevents gas use from the cylinder even if the cylinder is left open (i.e. saves the cylinder for backup if the wall gas pipeline fails)

Pressure Reducing Device

Cylinders should be kept closed routinely. Otherwise, if the wall gas fails, the machine will automatically switch to the cylinder supply without the anesthetist being aware that the wall supply has failed (until the cylinder is empty too).

Intermediate Pressure System

Receives gasses from the regulator or the hospital pipeline at pressures of 4055 psig Consists of:
Pipeline inlet connections Pipeline pressure indicators Piping Gas power outlet Master switch Oxygen pressure failure devices Oxygen flush Additional reducing devices Flow control valves

Pipeline Inlet Connections

Mandatory N2O and O2, usually have air and suction too Inlets are noninterchangeable due to specific threading as per the Diameter Index Safety System (DISS) Each inlet must contain a check valve to prevent reverse flow (similar to the cylinder yolk)

Oxygen Pressure Failure Devices

Machine standard requires that an anesthesia machine be designed so that whenever the oxygen supply pressure is reduced below normal, the oxygen concentration at the common gas outlet does not fall below 19%

Oxygen Pressure Failure Devices

A Fail-Safe valve is present in the gas line supplying each of the flowmeters except O2. This valve is controlled by the O2 supply pressure and shuts off or proportionately decreases the supply pressure of all other gasses as the O2 supply pressure decreases Historically there are 2 kinds of fail-safe valves
Pressure sensor shut-off valve (Ohmeda) Oxygen failure protection device (Drager)

Oxygen supply pressure opens the valve as long as it is above a pre-set minimum value (e.g.. 20 psig). If the oxygen supply pressure falls below the threshold value the valve closes and the gas in that limb (e.g.. N2O), does not advance to its flow-control valve.

Pressure Sensor Shut-Off Valve

Oxygen Failure Protection Device (OFPD)

Based on a proportioning principle rather than a shut-off principle The pressure of all gases controlled by the OFPD will decrease proportionately with the oxygen pressure

Oxygen Supply Failure Alarm

The machine standard specifies that whenever the oxygen supply pressure falls below a manufacturer-specified threshold (usually 30 psig) a medium priority alarm shall blow within 5 seconds.

Limitations of Fail-Safe Devices/Alarms

Fail-safe valves do not prevent administration of a hypoxic mixture because they depend on pressure and not flow.
These devices do not prevent hypoxia from accidents such as pipeline crossovers or a cylinder containing the wrong gas

Limitations of Fail-Safe Devices/Alarms

These devices prevent hypoxia from some problems occurring upstream in the machine circuitry (disconnected oxygen hose, low oxygen pressure in the pipeline and depletion of the oxygen cylinder) Equipment problems that occur downstream (for example leaks or partial closure of the oxygen flow control valve) are not prevented by these devices.

Receives O2 from pipeline inlet or cylinder reducing device and directs high, unmetered flow directly to the common gas outlet (downstream of the vaporizer) Machine standard requires that the flow be between 35 and 75 L/min The ability to provide jet

Oxygen Flush Valve (O2+)

ventilation
Hazards

May cause barotrauma Dilution of inhaled anesthetic

Second-Stage Reducing Device

Located just upstream of the flow control valves Receives gas from the pipeline inlet or the cylinder reducing device and reduces it further to 26 psig for N2O and 14 psig for O2 Purpose is to eliminate fluctuations in pressure supplied to the flow indicators caused by fluctuations in pipeline pressure

Low Pressure System

Extends from the flow control valves to the common gas outlet Consists of:
Flow meters Vaporizer mounting device Check valve Common gas outlet

Flowmeter assembly

When the flow control valve is opened the gas enters at the bottom and flows up the tube elevating the indicator

The indicator floats freely at a point where the downward force on it (gravity) equals the upward force caused by gas molecules hitting the bottom of the float

* Note that a leak in the oxygen

In the presence of a flowmeter leak (either at the O ring or the glass of the flow tube) a hypoxic mixture is less likely to occur if the O2 flowmeter is downstream of all other flowmeters In A and B a hypoxic mixture can result because a substantial portion of oxygen flow passes through the leak, and all nitrous oxide is directed to the common gas outlet

Arrangement of the FlowIndicator Tubes

flowmeter tube can cause a hypoxic mixture, even when oxygen is located in the downstream position

Proportioning Systems

Mechanical

integration of the N2O and O2 flowcontrol valves Automatically intercedes to maintain a minimum 25% concentration of oxygen with a maximum N2O:O2 ratio of 3:1

Limitations of Proportioning Systems

Machines equipped with proportioning systems can still deliver a hypoxic mixture under the following conditions:

Wrong supply gas Defective pneumatics or mechanics (e.g.. The Link-25 depends on a properly functioning second stage regulator) Leak downstream (e.g.. Broken oxygen flow tube) Inert gas administration: Proportioning systems generally link only N2O and O2

Vaporizers

A vaporizer is an instrument designed to change a liquid anesthetic agent into its vapor and add a controlled amount of this vapor to the fresh gas flow

Methods of regulating output concentration Concentration calibrated (e.g. variable bypass) Measured flow
Method of vaporization

Classification of Vaporizers

Flow-over Bubble through Injection


Temperature compensation

Thermocompensation Supplied heat

Generic Bypass Vaporizer

Flow from the flowmeters enters the inlet of the vaporizer The function of the concentration control valve is to regulate the amount of flow through the bypass and vaporizing chambers
Splitting Ratio = flow though vaporizing chamber/flow through bypass chamber

Factors That Influence Vaporizer Output

Flow Rate: The output of the vaporizer is generally less than the dial setting at very low (< 200 ml/min) or very high (> 15 L/min) flows Temperature: Automatic temperature compensating mechanisms in bypass chambers maintain a constant vaporizer output with varying temperatures Back Pressure: Intermittent back pressure (e.g. positive pressure ventilation causes a higher vaporizer output than the dial setting)

Factors That Influence Vaporizer Output

Atmospheric Pressure: Changes in atmospheric pressure affect variable bypass vaporizer output as measured by volume % concentration, but not (or very little) as measured by partial pressure (lowering atmospheric pressure increases volume % concentration and vice versa) Carrier Gas: Vaporizers are calibrated for 100% oxygen. Carrier gases other than this result in decreased vaporizer output.

The Circuit: Circle System

Arrangement is variable, but to prevent re-breathing of CO2, the following rules must be followed:

Unidirectional valves between the patient and the reservoir bag Fresh-gas-flow cannot enter the circuit between the expiratory valve and the patient Adjustable pressurelimiting valve (APL) cannot be located between the patient and the inspiratory valve

Circle System

Advantages:
Relative stability of inspired concentration Conservation of respiratory moisture and heat Prevention of operating room pollution PaCO2 depends only on ventilation, not fresh gas flow Low fresh gas flows can be used

Disadvantages:
Complex design = potential for malfunction High resistance (multiple one-way valves) = higher work of breathing

The Adjustable Pressure Limiting (APL) Valve

User adjustable valve that releases gases to the scavenging system and is intended to provide control of the pressure in the breathing system Bag-mask Ventilation: Valve is usually left partially open. During inspiration the bag is squeezed pushing gas into the inspiratory limb until the pressure relief is reached, opening the APL valve. Mechanical Ventilation: The APL valve is excluded from the circuit when the selector switch is changed from manual to automatic ventilation

Scavenging Systems

Protects the breathing circuit or ventilator from excessive positive or negative pressure.

Scavenging Systems

Checking Anesthesia Machines


8 Categories of check: Emergency ventilation equipment High-Pressure system Low-Pressure system Scavenging system Breathing system Manual and automatic ventilation system Monitors Final Position

The end

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