Refinement of electronic stethoscope
Project Overview
Anesthesia providers need to listen to patients' heart & breath sounds during anesthesia care. Manual stethoscopes are the standard method (no microphones) but only allow one provider to listen at a time (and the standard ear-pieces are uncomfortable for extended wear). The manual method is hard to position and secure on the patient's skin. There already exists a rather expensive Bluetooth system, and some old do-it yourself FM wireless systems, but it would be simpler and far less expensive to have a box that has a speaker for when we need to have more than one person listen, and a headphone jack for private listening. Pediatric anesthesiologists commonly want to be able to compare breath sounds from the right and left chest, so a two microphone capable system is preferred. Resistance to high-frequency electrical signals from the electrosurgery unit is required.
Team Picture
Files
- Midsemester Presentation (February 28, 2013)
- PDS Report (March 5, 2013)
- Midsemester Report (March 6, 2013)
- Executive Summary (May 2, 2013)
- Poster (May 4, 2013)
- Final Report (May 8, 2013)
Contact Information
Team Members
- Charles Rodenkirch - Team Leader
- Alexander Eaton - Communicator
- Lucas Haug - BSAC
- Yue Yin - BWIG
Advisor and Client
- Prof. John Webster - Advisor
- Scott Springman - Client
Related Projects
- Spring 2013: Refinement of electronic stethoscope
- Fall 2011: Refinement of electronic stethoscope