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The CapnoTrainer®
The
CapnoTrainer® is a
capnograph, a capnometer, an instrument used for monitoring exhaled
carbon dioxide (CO2),
more specifically
End Tidal partial pressure carbon dioxide (ETCO2).
Capnometers are used worldwide in emergency
medicine, in critical care, and during surgery for monitoring purposes; these are medical applications.
The CapnoTrainer®
provides for educational applications.
The CapnoTrainer® has been specifically
designed and manufactured
for evaluating, observing, and learning
breathing behavior. It is not intended for diagnosis and
treatment. The instrument is for
CapnoLearning™, which is
about you and your body learning new behaviors, as partners, in improving health
and performance. Most anyone can get involved. We all breathe, and we all breathe
differently based on our own personal learning experiences.
The
CapnoTrainer® makes CapnoLearning™ possible.
The CapnoTrainer® is a combination hardware-software system that provides for real-time computer displays of partial pressure carbon dioxide (PCO2) while breathing, both during the inhale and the exhale. During the inhale the instrument reads effectively “zero,” as there is only a very small amount of CO2 in atmospheric air, about 0.3 mmHg (millimeters of mercury) as compared to a total atmospheric pressure of 760 mmHg (at sea level). During the exhale it rises sharply to the average level of PCO2 in the alveoli (basic gas exchange units) of the lungs, rising very slowly during the transition from exhale to inhale (alveolar plateau), and eventually reaching a peak value immediately prior to the next inhale. This peak value of PCO2 can be thought of as the “End of the Tide” of air, or ETCO2. This waveform is a capnogram.
CAPNOGRAM
In a
lung-healthy and cardiovascular-healthy people
End
Tidal CO2 (ETCO2) is generally
equivalent to alveolar
Partial pressure carbon dioxide
(PCO2), which is itself equivalent to arterial
Partial pressure carbon dioxide (PaCO2). Low levels of
PaCO2, a physiological condition known as
hypocapnia, may trigger, cause, or exacerbate a wide variety of
physical and mental symptoms and deficits.
Hypocapnia is the consequence of
overbreathing behavior. When your breathing behavior results in
PaCO2 levels below 35 mmHg, you are considered to be hypocapnic: 30-35 mmHg
is mild to moderate, 25-30 mmHg is serious, and 20-25 mmHg is severe
hypocapnia. CapnoLearning™ is about learning breathing behaviors that improve PaCO2
chemistry (internal respiration).
The CapnoTrainer® computer display
presents the waveform, or capnogram, in various graphical and digital formats,
which allows you to observe air flow where even minor shifts in breathing
pattern can be observed, e.g., gasping.
It also presents live continuous updating of ETCO2 and breathing rate
history graphs.
Click here for a brochure of the CapnoTrainer®. |