Novel Video-Laryngoscope with Wireless Image Transmission via Wi-Fi towards a Smartphone

A low-cost video laryngoscope (VDL) called Hybrid 1.0 was developed using smart devices for visualization. To test its performance, we compared it with a high-end VDL device, using both in vitro and in vivo studies. During the in vitro study, medical students without experience in airway intubation...

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Veröffentlicht in:Electronics (Basel) 2020-10, Vol.9 (10), p.1629
Hauptverfasser: Guerra-Hernández, Mauricio, Vidaña-Martínez, Gabriela Josefina, Camacho-Juárez, José S., Barragán-Villegas, Hugo, Calacuayo-Rojas, José Enrique, Reyes, Bersaín Alexander, Castañón-González, Jorge Alberto, Núñez-Olvera, Oscar Fernando, Fonseca-Leal, Ma. del Pilar
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container_end_page
container_issue 10
container_start_page 1629
container_title Electronics (Basel)
container_volume 9
creator Guerra-Hernández, Mauricio
Vidaña-Martínez, Gabriela Josefina
Camacho-Juárez, José S.
Barragán-Villegas, Hugo
Calacuayo-Rojas, José Enrique
Reyes, Bersaín Alexander
Castañón-González, Jorge Alberto
Núñez-Olvera, Oscar Fernando
Fonseca-Leal, Ma. del Pilar
description A low-cost video laryngoscope (VDL) called Hybrid 1.0 was developed using smart devices for visualization. To test its performance, we compared it with a high-end VDL device, using both in vitro and in vivo studies. During the in vitro study, medical students without experience in airway intubation were randomly asked to intubate a mannequin with different degrees of difficulty (Cormack–Lehane scales) by using either the Hybrid 1.0 VDL (GI) or a conventional laryngoscope (GII). During the in vivo study, N = 60 endotracheal intubations were performed by resident and base physicians, divided into two groups; the first group intubated with the Hybrid 1.0 VDL (GI) while the second group used a VDL C-Mac shovel (GII). As performance indexes, both studies reported the number of successful intubations (correct capnography signal) and intubation time. For the in vitro testing, no statistically significant differences were found regarding the number of successful intubations, while statistically significant differences were found regarding the intubation times. During the in vivo tests, procedures were performed by residents and by base physicians, and no statistically significant differences were found. The provided results point out that the VDL proposed can be clinically useful and offers technical characteristics similar to other VDLs that currently exist on the market.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/electronics9101629
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source MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Biomedical materials
Capnography
Coronaviruses
COVID-19
Electronic devices
Image transmission
In vitro methods and tests
In vivo methods and tests
Laryngoscopy
Light emitting diodes
Mannequins
Medical instruments
Performance indices
Physicians
Smart phones
Smartphones
Technology application
Wi-Fi
title Novel Video-Laryngoscope with Wireless Image Transmission via Wi-Fi towards a Smartphone
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