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How Ventilator invented
Iron Long, a ventilator at St. Bartholomew's Hospital in the United Kingdom, 1935
As the coronavirus outbreak continued to grow, some words began to be heard in daily life. One of them is a ventilator. A ventilator is an artificial respiration system. When normally humans cannot breathe, this device provides oxygen.
Although the exact date of the introduction of the emergency device is not known in medical science, some incidents have been reported. Once upon a time, there was a machine-like device used for artificial respiration. It was recognized by the Royal Human Society of England in the late eighteenth century. Although it was not possible to control breathing in a controlled way with this device, the main function of the ventilator was to get air into the respiratory tract.
In 1832, the Scottish physician John Dalziel developed a type of negative-pressure ventilator to treat respiratory problems. The main function of this ventilator was to reduce the air pressure in the box by inserting the whole body without the patient's head into a box.
One of the earliest forms of modern ventilators was the palmotor. The device, designed by the German inventor Johann Heinrich Drager and his son Bernhard in 1906, could deliver oxygen to the respiratory system at a certain pressure with the help of a face mask. Another such device called Rhythmic Inflation Apparatus was invented in recent times.
After the death of his son due to respiratory problems, the inventor of the telephone, Alexander Graham Bell, is said to have designed a kind of artificial respiration device called 'vacuum jacket'.
Iron Long, a type of negative pressure ventilator, was very popular in the 1920s. This device was an integral part of the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) in particular. The device could carry air into the lungs.
Forrest Bird, a U.S. Army aviator, invented a ventilator called the Bird Mark 6 Respirator in 1956. Many claim it to be the first modern ventilator. With the modernization of the medical field since the 1960s, the ventilator has also been modernized.
Iron Long, a ventilator at St. Bartholomew's Hospital in the United Kingdom, 1935
As the coronavirus outbreak continued to grow, some words began to be heard in daily life. One of them is a ventilator. A ventilator is an artificial respiration system. When normally humans cannot breathe, this device provides oxygen.
Although the exact date of the introduction of the emergency device is not known in medical science, some incidents have been reported. Once upon a time, there was a machine-like device used for artificial respiration. It was recognized by the Royal Human Society of England in the late eighteenth century. Although it was not possible to control breathing in a controlled way with this device, the main function of the ventilator was to get air into the respiratory tract.
In 1832, the Scottish physician John Dalziel developed a type of negative-pressure ventilator to treat respiratory problems. The main function of this ventilator was to reduce the air pressure in the box by inserting the whole body without the patient's head into a box.
One of the earliest forms of modern ventilators was the palmotor. The device, designed by the German inventor Johann Heinrich Drager and his son Bernhard in 1906, could deliver oxygen to the respiratory system at a certain pressure with the help of a face mask. Another such device called Rhythmic Inflation Apparatus was invented in recent times.
After the death of his son due to respiratory problems, the inventor of the telephone, Alexander Graham Bell, is said to have designed a kind of artificial respiration device called 'vacuum jacket'.
Iron Long, a type of negative pressure ventilator, was very popular in the 1920s. This device was an integral part of the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) in particular. The device could carry air into the lungs.
Forrest Bird, a U.S. Army aviator, invented a ventilator called the Bird Mark 6 Respirator in 1956. Many claim it to be the first modern ventilator. With the modernization of the medical field since the 1960s, the ventilator has also been modernized.
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