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Comparison of pulsed versus continuous oxygen delivery using realistic adult nasal airway replicas

Portable oxygen concentrators (POCs) typically include pulse flow (PF) modes to conserve oxygen. The primary aims of this study were to develop a predictive in vitro model for inhaled oxygen delivery using a set of realistic airway replicas, and to compare PF for a commercial POC with steady flow (S...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International journal of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease 2017-01, Vol.12, p.2559-2571
Main Authors: Chen, John Z, Katz, Ira M, Pichelin, Marine, Zhu, Kaixian, Caillibotte, Georges, Noga, Michelle L, Finlay, Warren H, Martin, Andrew R
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Portable oxygen concentrators (POCs) typically include pulse flow (PF) modes to conserve oxygen. The primary aims of this study were to develop a predictive in vitro model for inhaled oxygen delivery using a set of realistic airway replicas, and to compare PF for a commercial POC with steady flow (SF) from a compressed oxygen cylinder. Experiments were carried out using a stationary compressed oxygen cylinder, a POC, and 15 adult nasal airway replicas based on airway geometries derived from medical images. Oxygen delivery via nasal cannula was tested at PF settings of 2.0 and 6.0, and SF rates of 2.0 and 6.0 L/min. A test lung simulated three breathing patterns representative of a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patient at rest, during exercise, and while asleep. Volume-averaged fraction of inhaled oxygen (F O ) was calculated by analyzing oxygen concentrations sampled at the exit of each replica and inhalation flow rates over time. POC pulse volumes were also measured using a commercial O conserver test system to attempt to predict F O for PF. Relative volume-averaged F O using PF ranged from 68% to 94% of SF values, increasing with breathing frequency and tidal volume. Three of 15 replicas failed to trigger the POC when used with the sleep breathing pattern at the 2.0 setting, and four of 15 replicas failed to trigger at the 6.0 setting. F O values estimated from POC pulse characteristics followed similar trends but were lower than those derived from airway replica experiments. For the POC tested, PF delivered similar, though consistently lower, volume-averaged F O than SF rates equivalent to nominal PF settings. Assessment of PF oxygen delivery using POC pulse characteristics alone may be insufficient; testing using airway replicas is useful in identifying possible cases of failure and may provide a better assessment of F O .
ISSN:1178-2005
1176-9106
1178-2005
DOI:10.2147/COPD.S141976