Results 241 to 250 of about 185,335 (290)

A syringe pump tester

Journal of Medical Engineering & Technology, 1986
The equipment described allows the accuracy of a syringe pump to be tested quickly and conveniently. A digital micrometer assembly clips in place of the disposable syringe and transmits readings to a separate unit which displays flow rates in ml/h. Initial readings of pump output are given in 30 s, with readings to a higher accuracy within 4 min.
M, Nieman, A L, Evans, A, Shaw
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Syringe pumps

2018
This is a detailed description of how to make and assembly our open sourse syringe pump.
Kilsgaard, Bjørn Sjøgren   +1 more
openaire   +1 more source

Syringe Pump Design

Engineering in Medicine, 1986
With the evolution of special care baby, intensive care, and coronary care units over the last decade, there has developed a need for greater accuracy in the control of increasingly potent infusions. The design of bedside syringe pump infusers that administer the contents of a syringe to a patient at a constant and predetermined rate will be ...
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SYRINGE PUMP SAFETY LOCK

The Lancet, 1988
A safety lock which consists of an adjustable mechanical barrier 1 which prevents accidental syringe pump overruns so avoiding large drug or fluid overdose.
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Warming of infusion syringes caused by electronic syringe pumps

Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica, 2003
Purpose: To evaluate inadvertent warming of the infusion syringe in four different types of electronic syringe pumps.Methods: Ambient temperature and syringe surface temperature were simultaneously measured by two electronic temperature probes in four different models of commercially available syringe pumps.
A, Cornelius   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Intravenous pumps and syringe drivers

2005
Abstract Many infusions are given by gravity-assisted drip sets, which give a flow rate dependent on the height of the reservoir above the patient, the length of the tubing, the bore of the intravenous cannula, the density and viscosity of the fluid being delivered, and the patient’s venous pressure.
Patrick Magee, Mark Tooley
openaire   +1 more source

Fluid delivery from infusion-pump syringes

American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy, 1995
Fluid-delivery rates of five small-volume infusion-pump syringes were compared. The study consisted of a comparison of the infusion-pump syringes in their respective infusion pumps (1) set for continuous delivery at 1 mL/hr, (2) set for continuous delivery at 3 mL/hr, and (3) set to deliver 1-mL bolus volumes during continuous delivery at 4 mL/hr.
J L, Carl   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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