Jurnal Internasional Aprika vol.12 issue 3 2022
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Oxygen efficient respiratory Aid (OxEra TM ) device: A safety study

Dublin Core

Title

Jurnal Internasional Aprika vol.12 issue 3 2022
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Oxygen efficient respiratory Aid (OxEra TM ) device: A safety study

Subject

Safety study OxEra Oxygen delivery device

Description

Background: Severe Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) can develop pneumonia with severe complications. The Oxygen Efficient Respiratory Aid (OxEra TM ) device has been granted SAPHRA approval for emergency COVID-19 pandemic use. The device has the potential to be used widely in the healthcare sector due to its efficient oxygen supply and adjustable wall positive expiratory pressure (PEP). Objectives: We assessed whether the OxEra TM device was safe to use in a healthy adult volunteer population. Our primary objective was to ensure there was no asphyxiation, as assessed by changes observed from baseline End Tidal Carbon Dioxide (ETCO 2 ) exceeding 6.3 mmHg and above the 45 mmHg threshold. We also monitored changes in vital organ signs and assessed the pain and comfort of the participant at various intervals with changes in PEPs. Methods: This was an experimental safety study of the OxEra TM Device on 30 healthy participants at the ICU training centre of Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital, Johannesburg, South Africa. Each participant had basic vital-signs, ETCO 2 , and Oxygen saturation percentages (SpO 2 %) taken at baseline until the end of 2 h. In the first 20 min, the PEP was increased by 5 cmH 2 0 until 20 min, then continued for the rest of the time on a PEP of 5 cmH 2 0. At each interval, vital signs, subjective comfort, pain, and visual scores were measured. Results: Thirty healthy participants were enrolled. There was no significant difference in ETCO 2 from baseline until 2 h. No participant experienced an increase in measured ETCO 2 greater than 45 mmHg and no increase in ETCO 2 from baseline was greater than 6.3 mmHg. The median increase in ETCO 2 over the study period was 2 mmHg. There were no significant changes in respiratory rate and blood pressure. The heart rate decreased significantly (73–68 bpm). The VAS and comfort score had a significant increase over the 2 h from baseline of 0–2 at maximum; however, the PAS scores showed no significant increase. Conclusion: Overall the OxEra TM device achieved the safety endpoints set out. There was no sign of asphyxiation and there were appropriate physiological responses to changes in PEP once applied. The comfort of the mask did worsen over the 2 h; however, the scores were minimally worse on PEP application but improved once-offPEP. No adverse event was recorded at all.

Creator

Midhun Thomas John , Sarah Alexandra van Blydenstein , Shahed Omar , Joanne Bruins , Stephilia Tshukutsoane

Source

www.elsevier.com/locate/afjem

Publisher

ELSAVIER

Date

16 March 2022

Contributor

PERI IRAWAN

Format

PDF

Language

ENGLISH

Type

TEXT

Files

Tags

,Repository, Repository Horizon University Indonesia, Repository Universitas Horizon Indonesia, Horizon.ac.id, Horizon University Indonesia, Universitas Horizon Indonesia, HorizonU, Repo Horizon ,

Citation

Midhun Thomas John , Sarah Alexandra van Blydenstein , Shahed Omar , Joanne Bruins , Stephilia Tshukutsoane , “Jurnal Internasional Aprika vol.12 issue 3 2022
African Journal of Emergency Medicine
Oxygen efficient respiratory Aid (OxEra TM ) device: A safety study,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed September 20, 2024, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2056.