Infrared Imaging for Diagnosing OSA
- jskinner
- Posts: 1475
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Infrared Imaging for Diagnosing OSA
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Wow!! "...without ever coming in contact with the patient."
That would be the end of the 1/2 hour standing in the shower to get the glue off. Not to speak of being able to sleep more naturally without all those wires!
Now, the trick would be to get all the sleep centers to give up their expensive traditional equipment and buy infrared.
That would be the end of the 1/2 hour standing in the shower to get the glue off. Not to speak of being able to sleep more naturally without all those wires!
Now, the trick would be to get all the sleep centers to give up their expensive traditional equipment and buy infrared.
Re: Infrared Imaging for Diagnosing OSA
Interesting, I wish the link was more than 3 paragraphs and suggested exactly what was being done. They note:jskinner wrote:http://www.sleepreviewmag.com/news/2007-10-23_01.asp
The headline says "Infrared Imaging Shows Promise for Diagnosing OSA" but they don't specially mention that it detects obstructive sleep apneas only all apneas. So the headline would seem to be imprecise."Results of the study by Jayasimha Murthy and his colleagues from the
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, the University of
Houston, and Memorial Hermann Sleep Disorders Center in Houston, Tex, showed
that IR-I detected 20 sleep-disordered breathing events, compared with 22
events detected by the nasal-oral thermistor, and 19 events detected by
nasal pressure."
(Of course some HMO's don't seem to bother testing specifically for OSA. A friend with OSA was given a one channel take home test and then given an un-humidified CPAP--I presume it is compliance data only since the HMO was so cheap about other things but I don't know for sure...)
- jskinner
- Posts: 1475
- Joined: Sat Aug 26, 2006 9:21 pm
- Location: Greenwich, Nova Scotia, Canada
- Contact:
Re: Infrared Imaging for Diagnosing OSA
I would assume that it is just monitoring breath so it couldn't tell the difference. Still possibly useful as a possible addition to the cannula and thermosister approaches.ApNoob wrote: The headline says "Infrared Imaging Shows Promise for Diagnosing OSA" but they don't specially mention that it detects obstructive sleep apneas only all apneas. So the headline would seem to be imprecise.
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Unfortunately it seems it is only a substitute for the nasal canula not for all the other sensors. You still can't detect brainwaves and EKGs with it so you'd still need to wash the goo out of your hair (or the goo **and** the leftover gauze in the case of the sleep study I had...)gasp wrote:Wow!! "...without ever coming in contact with the patient."
That would be the end of the 1/2 hour standing in the shower to get the glue off. Not to speak of being able to sleep more naturally without all those wires!
Now, the trick would be to get all the sleep centers to give up their expensive traditional equipment and buy infrared.
Right on, ApNoob! My very first thought as well. Pardon me if I don't get too excited after reading the article. There "are" other sleep disorders besides OSA that would be missed if present. Just shows to go you - if the headline sounds like it is too good to be true - it probably is. Too good to be true.
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