Audible Alarms And Informational Tones; About Pulse Oximetry - Nonin 9847 Operator's Manual

Handheld pulse oximeter and carbon dioxide (co2) detector
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Audible Alarms and Informational Tones

9847 uses audible alarms and informational tones (along with visible indicators) to alert healthcare
providers to several patient and equipment conditions. A high priority (patient) alarm alerts the healthcare
provider of a patient's absence of breath, high or low oxygen saturation, pulse rate, or inadequate pulse
quality signal. A medium priority (equipment) alarm indicates the batteries have reached critically low
capacity, or that a sensor alarm condition is occurring. An informational tone (a beep) indicates a non-
alarm event (a breath).
The audible alarms can be silenced or temporarily disabled using the audible alarm disable button.

About Pulse Oximetry

9847 determines functional oxygen saturation of arterial hemoglobin (SpO
of red and infrared light passed through perfused tissue. Changes in absorption caused by pulsation of
blood in the vascular bed are used to determine arterial saturation and pulse rate.
Oxygen saturation and pulse rate values are indicated on light-emitting diode (LED) digital displays. On
each detected pulse, the pulse quality indicator blinks. Patient pulse quality signals are graded as good,
marginal, or inadequate and are indicated as such by the pulse quality indicator blinking green, yellow,
or red respectively. This simple method gives the user a pulse-by-pulse visual indication of waveform
signal quality without requiring the user to perform complex waveform analysis during critical patient care
situations.
If an inadequate pulse is detected, the pulse quality indicator will blink red and a high priority patient
audible alarm will sound.
If the SpO
or the pulse rate meets or exceeds user-defined alarm limits, the corresponding numerical
2
value will blink on the SpO
If the pulse oximeter sensor is disconnected, malfunctions, or an adequate signal is not detected:
• a dash appears in the leftmost position of the SpO
• the displayed SpO
2
• a medium priority equipment alarm will sound (unless the audible alarms are disabled or unless
overridden by a high priority patient alarm).
• 10 seconds after the first dash appears, the SpO
if the condition is not corrected, and
• dashes will blink if there was a patient alarm in process.
8
or pulse rate displays and a high priority patient audible alarm will sound.
2
and pulse rate values will freeze for 10 seconds, and
display,
2
and pulse rate values will be replaced by dashes,
2
General Description
) by measuring the absorption
2

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