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Anesthesia Apparatus Checkout Recommendations

These recommendations are valid for an anesthesia system conforming to current standards and include an ascending bellows ventilator and specific monitors. Learn how to perform a daily anesthesia apparatus checkout and calibrate the oxygen analyzer.

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Anesthesia Apparatus Checkout Recommendations

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  1. Anesthesia Apparatus Checkout Recommendations These recommendations are valid only for an anesthesia system that conforms to current and relevant standards and includes : 1)An ascending bellows ventilator 2) At least the following monitors: capnograph, pulse oximeter, oxygen analyzer, respiratory volume monitor (spirometer) 3)Breathing system pressure monitor with high- and low-pressure alarms.

  2. Checking Your Anesthesia Workstation A complete anesthesia apparatus checkout procedure must be performed each day before the anesthesia workstation is first used. Several checkout procedures exist, but the 1993 FDA Anesthesia Apparatus Checkout Recommendations. As a result, in 2005 the ASA's Committee on Equipment and Facilities began to develop a revised pre-use checklist that was designed to be more workstation specific and, indeed, was intended to eventually replace the 1993 FDA Anesthesia Apparatus Checkout Recommendations.

  3. 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

  4. Abbreviated Machine Check Out Calibrate Oxygen Monitor Check Machine for gas delivery Check Circuit for integrity Check Ventilator for function Check Exhaust for function

  5. Testing Specific Components of the Anesthesia Delivery System The three most important preoperative checks are : 1) calibration of the oxygen analyzer, 2) the low-pressure circuit leak test, 3) the circle system tests.

  6. Gas Line Filters sometimes crack

  7. Suction can fail in many ways DISS (Diameter Index Safety System) Connector Unscrewed at Wall Vacuum Switched Off at DISS Connector

  8. Canister vacuum problem Hose disconnect from canister Canister switched off Insert seated incorrectly Any port or hole open Hose disconnect from holder Tubing disconnect from canister Flap valve closed Canister Tilted Canister Full Hose kinked

  9. Tighten Expiratory Valve Cover

  10. Expiratory Valve - Missing O Ring

  11. Valve and cage

  12. Replace valve, cage, o-ring

  13. Replace Cover

  14. Tighten Expiratory Valve Cover

  15. H tanks • Bulk Tanks

  16. High-Pressure System Check Oxygen Cylinder Supply: a.    Open the O2 cylinder and verify that it is at least half full (≈1000 psi).  b.    Close the cylinder.   .Check Central Pipeline Supplies: Check that hoses are connected and pipeline gauges read about 50 psi.

  17. Calibration of the Oxygen Analyzer The oxygen analyzer is one of the most important monitors on the anesthesia workstation. It is the only machine safety device that evaluates the integrity of the low-pressure circuit in an ongoing fashion. Other machine safety devices, such as the fail-safe valve, the oxygen supply failure alarm, and the proportioning system, are all upstream from the flow control valves. The only machine monitor that detects problems downstream from the flow control valves is the oxygen analyzer. The actual procedure for calibrating the oxygen analyzer has remained reasonably similar over the recent generations of anesthesia workstations.

  18. Cont Generally, the oxygen concentration–sensing element must be exposed to room air for calibration to 21%. This may require manually setting a dial on older machines, but on newer ones, it usually involves only temporary removal of the sensor, selecting and then confirming that the oxygen calibration is to be performed from a set of menus on the workstation's display screen, and finally reinstalling the sensor.

  19. Machine outlet check valve

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