Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. Part H, Journal of engineering in medicine
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Proc Inst Mech Eng H · Jun 2012
Gas flow between coaxial tubes: impedance to gas flow in an endotracheal tube increases with a catheter within.
The insertion of a suction catheter or a bronchoscope down an endotracheal tube increases the resistance to gas flow down the tube. The extent to which this occurs depends on the relative diameters of the endotracheal tube and the coaxially introduced catheter. This study utilises a laboratory model to quantify this effect, using a steady flow down an annulus between two tubes whose long axes lie co-axially. ⋯ The results show that for equal d(o)/d(i), and equal values of x, deltaP/deltaPo are lower for higher values of Re than for lower; and that for lower values of Re there is a more rapid increase in deltaP/deltaPo as x increases, than for higher Re, especially at low values of d(o)/d(i). This result quantifiably confirms clinical experience; that care must be taken in introducing a catheter down a neonatal endotracheal tube. Deviation of these results from the theoretical calculation is less for the smaller Reynolds numbers and smaller values of d(o)/d(i), because under these conditions the flow is more likely to be laminar, with a greater degree of concentricity.