The alarms are classified into three priorities:
• low-priority alarms, indicated by the symbol
continuously illuminated yellow LED and an acoustic alarm issued (buzzer)
• medium-priority alarms, indicated by the symbol
a flashing yellow LED and an acoustic alarm issued (buzzer)
• high-priority alarms, indicated by the symbol
a flashing red LED and an acoustic alarm issued (buzzer)
8.2.1 Deactivate alarms
The doctor supervising treatment can decide which physiological alarms to activate or
deactivate. If the symbol
been deactivated by the supervising doctor (see "Physiological alarms" on page 82).
8.2.2 Acknowledging alarms
You can find troubleshooting assistance in the following tables.
appears in the status line, all the physiological alarms have
If a fault triggers an alarm (in this case: disconnection
alarm), you can have the acoustic alarm paused for about
120 seconds by pressing the alarm acknowledgement
key
.
The default display appears again after the acoustic
alarm has been acknowledged. The fault which has not
yet been rectified continues to be displayed in the status
line and the alarm LED flashes (or stays on) until the fault
is rectified.
If the fault is not rectified within 120 seconds of the
acknowledgement, the acoustic alarm (buzzer) sounds
again.
in the alarm window, a
in the alarm window,
in the alarm window,
EN
Troubleshooting
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