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- Anaesthetic_machine abstract "The anaesthetic machine (UK English) or anesthesia machine (US English) or Boyle's machine is used by anaesthesiologists, nurse anaesthetists, and anaesthesiologist assistants to support the administration of anaesthesia. The most common type of anaesthetic machine in use in the developed world is the continuous-flow anaesthetic machine, which is designed to provide an accurate and continuous supply of medical gases (such as oxygen and nitrous oxide), mixed with an accurate concentration of anaesthetic vapour (such as isoflurane), and deliver this to the patient at a safe pressure and flow. Modern machines incorporate a ventilator, suction unit, and patient monitoring devices.The original concept of Boyle's machine was invented by the British anaesthetist Henry Boyle (1875–1941) in 1917. Prior to this time, anaesthetists often carried all their equipment with them, but the development of heavy, bulky cylinder storage and increasingly elaborate airway equipment meant that this was no longer practical for most circumstances. The anaesthetic machine is usually mounted on anti-static wheels for convenient transportation.Simpler anaesthetic apparatus may be used in special circumstances, such as the TriService Apparatus, a simplified anaesthesia delivery system invented for the British armed forces, which is light and portable and may be used effectively even when no medical gases are available. This device has unidirectional valves which suck in ambient air which can be enriched with oxygen from a cylinder, with the help of a set of bellows. A large number of draw-over type of anaesthesia devices are still in use in India for administering an air-ether mixture to the patient, which can be enriched with oxygen. But the advent of the cautery has sounded the death knell to this device, due to the explosion hazard.Many of the early innovations in U.S. anaesthetic equipment, including the closed circuit carbon-dioxide absorber (aka: the Guedel-Foregger Midget) and diffusion of such equipment to anaesthetists within the United States can be attributed to Richard von Foregger and The Foregger Company.In dentistry a simplified version of the anaesthetic machine, without a ventilator or anaesthetic vaporiser, is referred to as a relative analgesia machine. By using this machine, the dentist can administer a mild inhalation sedation with nitrous oxide and oxygen, in order to keep his patient in a conscious state while depressing the feeling of pain.".
- Anaesthetic_machine thumbnail Maquet_Flow-I_anesthesia_machine.jpg?width=300.
- Anaesthetic_machine wikiPageExternalLink wip.html.
- Anaesthetic_machine wikiPageExternalLink www.frca.co.uk.
- Anaesthetic_machine wikiPageExternalLink www.lifelongcompany.com.
- Anaesthetic_machine wikiPageExternalLink an_machine.
- Anaesthetic_machine wikiPageExternalLink www.simanest.org.
- Anaesthetic_machine wikiPageExternalLink machine.htm.
- Anaesthetic_machine wikiPageID "630668".
- Anaesthetic_machine wikiPageRevisionID "642183441".
- Anaesthetic_machine caption "An anaesthetic machine. This particular machine is a "Flow-I" model, manufactured by Maquet, a division of Getinge Group, Getinge, Sweden.".
- Anaesthetic_machine companies "Leading companies using this industrial process".
- Anaesthetic_machine facility "hospitals and outpatient surgery centers".
- Anaesthetic_machine feedstock "inhalational anaesthetic agents, chiefly nitrous oxide and volatile anesthetics".
- Anaesthetic_machine hasPhotoCollection Anaesthetic_machine.
- Anaesthetic_machine inventor "William T. G. Morton is widely credited for demonstrating the technique of vaporization of diethyl ether. However, many others were involved in its development. Please refer to History of general anesthesia article for more details.".
- Anaesthetic_machine name "Anaesthetic machine".
- Anaesthetic_machine product "phase transition of feedstock from the liquid phase to the gas phase".
- Anaesthetic_machine sector "anesthesia".
- Anaesthetic_machine technologies Vaporization.
- Anaesthetic_machine type Physical_change.
- Anaesthetic_machine year "1846-10-16".
- Anaesthetic_machine subject Category:Anesthetic_equipment.
- Anaesthetic_machine subject Category:Dosage_forms.
- Anaesthetic_machine subject Category:Drug_delivery_devices.
- Anaesthetic_machine subject Category:Machines.
- Anaesthetic_machine type Artifact100021939.
- Anaesthetic_machine type Device103183080.
- Anaesthetic_machine type DrugDeliveryDevices.
- Anaesthetic_machine type Instrumentality103575240.
- Anaesthetic_machine type Machine103699975.
- Anaesthetic_machine type Machines.
- Anaesthetic_machine type Object100002684.
- Anaesthetic_machine type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Anaesthetic_machine type Whole100003553.
- Anaesthetic_machine comment "The anaesthetic machine (UK English) or anesthesia machine (US English) or Boyle's machine is used by anaesthesiologists, nurse anaesthetists, and anaesthesiologist assistants to support the administration of anaesthesia.".
- Anaesthetic_machine label "Anaesthetic machine".
- Anaesthetic_machine label "Aparelho de anestesia".
- Anaesthetic_machine label "Narkosegerät".
- Anaesthetic_machine sameAs Narkosegerät.
- Anaesthetic_machine sameAs Aparelho_de_anestesia.
- Anaesthetic_machine sameAs m.02yl7f.
- Anaesthetic_machine sameAs Q1316377.
- Anaesthetic_machine sameAs Q1316377.
- Anaesthetic_machine sameAs Anaesthetic_machine.
- Anaesthetic_machine wasDerivedFrom Anaesthetic_machine?oldid=642183441.
- Anaesthetic_machine depiction Maquet_Flow-I_anesthesia_machine.jpg.
- Anaesthetic_machine isPrimaryTopicOf Anaesthetic_machine.