A Low Cost Device for Monitoring the Urine Output of Critical Care Patients

In critical care units most of the patients’ physiological parameters are sensed by commercial monitoring devices. These devices can also supervise whether the values of the parameters lie within a pre-established range set by the clinician. The automation of the sensing and supervision tasks has di...

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Main Authors: Andrey Apalkov, Abraham Otero, Teodor Akinfiev, Francisco Palacios
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2010-12-01
Series:Sensors
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/10/12/10714/
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spelling doaj-a0a151c09ba54f49a0d0575c74257d032020-11-25T01:30:36ZengMDPI AGSensors1424-82202010-12-011012107141073210.3390/s101210714A Low Cost Device for Monitoring the Urine Output of Critical Care PatientsAndrey ApalkovAbraham OteroTeodor AkinfievFrancisco PalaciosIn critical care units most of the patients’ physiological parameters are sensed by commercial monitoring devices. These devices can also supervise whether the values of the parameters lie within a pre-established range set by the clinician. The automation of the sensing and supervision tasks has discharged the healthcare staff of a considerable workload and avoids human errors, which are common in repetitive and monotonous tasks. Urine output is very likely the most relevant physiological parameter that has yet to be sensed or supervised automatically. This paper presents a low cost patent-pending device capable of sensing and supervising urine output. The device uses reed switches activated by a magnetic float in order to measure the amount of urine collected in two containers which are arranged in cascade. When either of the containers fills, it is emptied automatically using a siphon mechanism and urine begins to collect again. An electronic unit sends the state of the reed switches via Bluetooth to a PC that calculates the urine output from this information and supervises the achievement of therapeutic goals. http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/10/12/10714/biosensorsurine outputcritical careintelligent alarmspatient monitoring
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrey Apalkov
Abraham Otero
Teodor Akinfiev
Francisco Palacios
spellingShingle Andrey Apalkov
Abraham Otero
Teodor Akinfiev
Francisco Palacios
A Low Cost Device for Monitoring the Urine Output of Critical Care Patients
Sensors
biosensors
urine output
critical care
intelligent alarms
patient monitoring
author_facet Andrey Apalkov
Abraham Otero
Teodor Akinfiev
Francisco Palacios
author_sort Andrey Apalkov
title A Low Cost Device for Monitoring the Urine Output of Critical Care Patients
title_short A Low Cost Device for Monitoring the Urine Output of Critical Care Patients
title_full A Low Cost Device for Monitoring the Urine Output of Critical Care Patients
title_fullStr A Low Cost Device for Monitoring the Urine Output of Critical Care Patients
title_full_unstemmed A Low Cost Device for Monitoring the Urine Output of Critical Care Patients
title_sort low cost device for monitoring the urine output of critical care patients
publisher MDPI AG
series Sensors
issn 1424-8220
publishDate 2010-12-01
description In critical care units most of the patients’ physiological parameters are sensed by commercial monitoring devices. These devices can also supervise whether the values of the parameters lie within a pre-established range set by the clinician. The automation of the sensing and supervision tasks has discharged the healthcare staff of a considerable workload and avoids human errors, which are common in repetitive and monotonous tasks. Urine output is very likely the most relevant physiological parameter that has yet to be sensed or supervised automatically. This paper presents a low cost patent-pending device capable of sensing and supervising urine output. The device uses reed switches activated by a magnetic float in order to measure the amount of urine collected in two containers which are arranged in cascade. When either of the containers fills, it is emptied automatically using a siphon mechanism and urine begins to collect again. An electronic unit sends the state of the reed switches via Bluetooth to a PC that calculates the urine output from this information and supervises the achievement of therapeutic goals.
topic biosensors
urine output
critical care
intelligent alarms
patient monitoring
url http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/10/12/10714/
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