Assessment of a cold air breathing aid
✍ Scribed by O.N. Östberg; W.G. Reddan; N.G. Swanson; J.E. Kleman; K.R. Miezio
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 387 KB
- Volume
- 19
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-6870
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
During nasal breathing, heat and humidity are exchanged over a 160 cm 2 area of mucous membrane. This capacity is not sufficient for airway comfort during cold air breathing. Similarly, airway discomfort and constriction may be experienced during exercise-induced mouth breathing in marginally cold temperatures. In asthmatics and sensitive persons such airway discomfort rapidly transforms to broncho-constriction and related breathing problems. The Lungplus mouth-held breathing aid contains a coil of corrugated aluminium foil that provides a heat and moisture exchange area of 1200 cm 2 (ModeJ 1) with a minimal breathing resistance. The present experiment was designed to quantify improved airway comfort using the device.
Ninety-one subjects were exposed to each of three rooms with average air temperatures of +20, +3 and -15°C, with a corresponding relative humidity of 50, 70 and 90%. For each condition, subjects gave subjective numerical assessments of the airway sensation during nose, mouth and Lungplus breathing, respectively. At each room temperature, mouth breathing resulted in a less comfortable airway rating than did breathing through the nose, which in turn resulted in a less comfortable rating than the Lungplus breathing condition.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The design optimization of air-breathing propulsion engine concepts has been accomplished by softcoupling the NASA Engine Performance Program (NEPP) analyser with the NASA Lewis multidisciplinary optimization tool COMETBOARDS. Engine problems, with their associated design variables and constraints,
## Abstract The metabolic organization of the air‐breathing Florida gar, __Lepisosteus platyrhincus__, was assessed by measuring the maximal activities of key enzymes in several metabolic pathways in selected tissues, concentrations of plasma metabolites including nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA),
## Abstract Tests of knowledge, aptitude and psychomotor skills have been used to assess and select surgical trainees but none of these is reliable in the long term. The industrial quality-control method of the cusum was used to assess performance progress in 17 surgical trainees. Trainees were ass