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Supply Of Medical Gases

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Supply Of Medical Gases Tutor: Dr. Syed Sajjad Naqvi Prepared By: Dr. Umar J. Alvi Dr. Syed Ghufran Arshad. Introduction Supply of Medical Gases: From: Cylinders ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Supply Of Medical Gases


1
Supply Of Medical Gases
  • Tutor
  • Dr. Syed Sajjad Naqvi
  • Prepared By
  • Dr. Umar J. Alvi
  • Dr. Syed Ghufran Arshad.

2
Introduction
  • Supply of Medical Gases
  • From
  • Cylinders (Manifold)
  • PIPED gas system
  • Medical gases commonly used
  • Oxygen
  • Nitrous oxide
  • Air
  • Nitrogen
  • Carbon Dioxide

3
Cylinders
  • A gas cylinder or tank is a pressure vessel used
    to store gases at high pressure. Gases stored
    this way are called bottled gases.
  • Components
  • Made of Molybdenum steel in which gases and
    vapours are stored under pressure, e.g.13700 kPa
    for oxygen and 4400 kPa for Nitrous oxide.
  • Shape colour of plastic disc around the neck of
    cylinder indicates the year of last examination.

4
Medical Gas Cylinder
Cylinder Size D AF E F G J
Approx dimension(mm) 490 x 102 760 x 173 830 x 102 890 x 140 1290 x 178 1600 x 230
Approx Weight Empty (kg) 3.8 11.4 6.6 13 30.6 68.7
Valve Type Pin-Index Bullnose Pin-Index Bullnose Bullnose Pin-Index
Gaseous Litres 0.34 (340) 1.36 (1360) 0.68 (680) 1.36 (1360) 3.4 (3400) 10.6 (10600)
5
Components
  • They are manufactured in different sizes (A to
    J).
  • Size E cylinders are used on the anaesthetic
    machine.
  • Oxygen cylinders contain gas.
  • Nitrous oxide cylinders contain a mixture of
    liquid and vapour. 75 liquid N2O
  • Light weight for homes Transportation made of
    aluminium alloy.

6
Different Sizes
7
Marks Engraved on Cylinders
  1. Test pressure
  2. Dates of tests performed
  3. Chemical Formulas of the cylinders content
  4. Tare weight ( weight of Nitrous oxide cylinder
    when empty)

8
Labelling
  • Name, chemical symbol, pharmaceutical form,
    specification of the product and its Licence
    number.
  • Hazard warnings and safety instructions.
  • Cylinder size code

9
  • Labelling

10
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11
Labelling
  • Normal cylinder contents (Liters)
  • Maximum cylinder pressure (Bars)
  • Shelf life and expiry date
  • Directions for Use
  • Storage and handling precautions

12
Storage
  • Purpose built, dry, well-ventilated and fire
    proof room, preferably inside and not subjected
    to extremes of heat.
  • Not be stored near flammables
  • Not be exposed to dampness, corrosive chemicals
    or fumes. Leads to corrosion of cylinders and
    valves

13
Storage
  • To avoid accidents, full cylinders should be
    stored separately from empty ones
  • F, G and J size cylinders are stored upright to
    avoid damage to the valves.
  • C, D and E size cylinders can be stored
    horizontally on shelves.
  • Overpressurized cylinders are hazardous and
    should be reported to manufacturer.

14
Safety Features
  • The Gases and vapours should be free of water
    vapours when stored in cylinders.
  • Water vapour freezes and blocks the exit port
    when the temperature of the cylinder decreases on
    the opening.

15
Pin-Index
  • The outlet valve uses the pin-index system to
    make it almost impossible to connect a cylinder
    to the wrong yoke.

16
  • The identifying code consists of a specific
    combination of two holes in the face of the valve
    into which connecting pins for a particular type
    of gas must fit in perfect alignment. For
    example, the index hole position for a cylinder
    of oxygen is 2-5, for nitrous oxide it is 3-5,
    and so on.

17
Colour Coding
  • Cylinders are colour coded to reduce accidental
    use of the wrong gas or vapour.

18
Body Colour Shoulder Colour Pressure, kPa (room T)
Oxygen Black White 13700
Nitrous oxide Blue Blue 4400
Carbon dioxide Grey Grey 5000
Air Grey White/ Black quarters 13700
Entonox Blue White/ Blue quarters 13700
Oxygen/ helium Black White/ Brown quarters 13700
19
Cylinders should be checked regularly while in
use to ensure that they have sufficient contents
and that leaks do not occur
20
Cylinder Valves
  • Introdcuction
  • Cylinder Valves seal the cylinder contents.
  • The chemical formula of the particular gas is
    engraved on the valve.

21
Cylinder Valves
  • They are mounted on the neck of cylinder.
  • They act as an on/off device for the discharge of
    cylinder contents.
  • A pin-index system prevents cylinder
    identification errors.

22
Cylinder Valves
  • A Bodock sealing washer must be placed between
    the valve and the yoke of the anaesthetic
    machine.
  • A newly designed valve allows keyless manual
    turning on and off.

23
Piped gas system
  • Introduction
  • Piped gas supply ( piped Medical Gas and Vacuum
    PMGV)
  • PMGV system delivers gases from central supply
    points to different sites in a hospital at a
    pressure of about 400 kPa.

24
Piped gas system
  • Special outlet valves supply the various needs
    throughout the hospital.
  • Oxygen, nitrous oxide, Entonox, compressed air
    and medical vacuum are commonly supplied through
    the pipeline system.

25
Components
  • Central supply points
  • Cylinder banks.
  • Liquid oxygen storage tank.
  • Pipework made of special high quality copper with
    bacteriostatic properties.
  • Outlets identified by gas colour coding, gas name
    and shape.
  • Matching quick connect/ disconnect probes

26
Piped gas supply
  • Network of pipelines throughout a hospital from
    central supply
  • Outlets are colour- and shape-coded
  • Flexible and colour-coded pipelines runs from the
    anaesthetic machine to outlets

27
Safety features
  • Reserve bank of cylinders
  • Low pressure alarms
  • Single hose test, cross-connection
  • Tug test, miss-connection
  • Regular PGMV installation, repair and modification

28
Sources of Gas supply
  • Cylinder Manifold
  • Liquid oxygen storage tank
  • Oxygen concentrator

29
Cylinder Manifold
  • Introduction
  • Manifolds are used to supply, Oxygen, Nitrous
    oxide and Entonox.

30
  • Manifold

31
Components
  • Large cylinders (e.g. Size J) are divided into 2
    groups, primary secondary.
  • The 2 groups alternate in supplying the
    pipelines.
  • All cylinders in each group are connected through
    non return valves to a common pipe.
  • In turn connected to pipeline.

32
Mechanism of action
  • In either group all cylinder valves are open to
    allow simultaneously empting.
  • The supply is automatically changed to the
    secondary group when the primary group is nearly
    empty.
  • This changeover is achieved by a pressure
    sensitive device.
  • Alarm is activated to alert staff

33
Safety Features
  • Manifold should be housed in a well ventilated
    room built of fire proof material away from the
    main hospital building.
  • Manifold room should not be used as a general
    cylinder store.
  • Empty cylinders should be immediately removed
    from the manifold room.

34
Liquid Oxygen
  • Vacuum-insulated evaporator.
  • Components
  • Thermally insulated vessel where vacuum is used
    as insulation
  • Pressure regulator allows gas to enter pipelines
    maintain pressure of 400 kPa.
  • Safety valve opens at 1700 kPa
  • Control valve opens for excessive demand.

35
Outer carbon steel shell and an inner stainless
steel shell, with a vacuum insulation in between
and kept cold (between -160C to - 180C as the
critical temperature of oxygen is - 118C).
36
Oxygen Concentrator
37
ENTONOX
  • Compressed gas mixture of 50 oxygen 50
    nitrous oxide by volume.
  • Used in casualty labour wards for analgesia.
  • A two-stage pressure demand regulator is attached
    to the entonox cylinder.

38
ENTONOX
  • Entonox is the registered trademark of BOC
    Healthcare. Entonox, referred to as gas and air,
    is an analgesic used to ease pain during labour,
    trauma and minor surgical procedures.
  • Entonox is administered by inhalation from a
    cylinder at a pressure of 137 bar (in the UK) or
    from a pipeline supply.

39
ENTONOX
  • Its analgesic effect is strong (equivalent to 5
    to 10 mg of morphine) and characterised by rapid
    onset and offset
  • Entonox is self administered.
  • Self-administration of Entonox remains safe
    because if enough is inhaled to start to induce
    anaesthesia, the patient becomes unable to hold
    the valve, and so will drop it and soon exhale
    the residual gas.
  • The 50 oxygen in Entonox ensures the patient
    will have sufficient oxygen in their system for a
    short period of apnoea to be safe.

40
Safety Features
  • Liquefaction separation of contents should be
    prevented.
  • Prolonged use of entonox should be avoided, due
    to the effect on bone marrow in critically ill
    patient.
  • Adequate scavenging should be provided to protect
    hospital staff.

41
Compressed Air
  • Medical air is supplied in hospitals for clinical
    uses or to drive power tools.
  • 400 kPa
  • 700 kPa
  • Can be supplied by cylinder manifolds or by
    compressor

42
Thank You
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