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A New Anatomy for Health

An International Problem

The affordability of healthcare in an era of explosive technological innovation compounded by exhaustion of financial resources is arguably the No. 1 problem of the industrialized world. Presently, greatly beneficial care is under-delivered, while unneccessary or harmful care is over-delivered, leading to the inevitable unaffordability of all care. Verily, it is likely that modern societies are facing a healthcare financing bubble on a global basis, due to the inability to clearly distinguish between such decisions.
A New Approach

The optimal allocation of resources for the greatest benefit to a population requires a completely new approach. Innovative polices like the CMS (U.S. Medicare + Medicaid) Coverage with Evidence Development are practically unscalable because requisite information technology tools are deployed on a case-by-case basis, and re-invented each time. Indeed, healthcare IT today is a set of highly fragmented applications which do not contribute to the topology of a complex healthcare system, where micro decisions at the patient-physician level are directly connected to a macro view of the entire system as a whole.

The present approach to healthcare financing, from a business intelligence perspective, is computationally intractable and leads to arbitrary coverage and health policies in the absence of data that cannot possibly be obtained in the time frame it is needed. Meanwhile, technological developments march inexorably forward, creating a culture of endless demand for lifesaving as well as utterly futile treatments, without clear distinction, at esoteric costs. In contrast to the disorganization of healthcare, modern Internet search engines have a macro view of billions of pages of data contained in the World Wide Web, and update this world-view interpretation on a continuous (hourly) basis. Importantly, none of the millions of individual website creators designed their own content to be interpreted by a global system. Regardless, an individual web user can rapidly search and find crucial information extremely rapidly (essentially in real-time) across a disparate universe of massively heterogeneous datasets, ranging from an airline boarding pass to streaming video. Additionally, virtually all users, from public officials to grade school students to astronauts, tap into the same engine.

A macro view of healthcare, continually updated by Point-of-Care decisions now technologically exists and can be inexpensively deployed. Its availability would have immediate and profound implications on allocation of resources, patient safety, and knowledge discovery. We call this solution a Medical Operating System, to distinguish it from applications which are stakeholder-specific, microview tools.

Knowledge and Learning Architecture

In this Operating System there is realtime coupling of each of the following attributes, creating a singularly powerful framework:

(1) An open, nonproprietary thesaurus of terms which utilizes and leverages all existing standards, but serves to bridge heterogeneous ones that might never harmonize due to political or financial reasons,

(2) an open rules-authoring environment where a medical societies can publish computable guidelines related to clinical care,

(3) the same rules-authoring environment where a payer organization can publish computable guidelines for financial coverage (e.g., step therapy or prior-authorization),

(3) the same rules-authoring environment where regulatory agencies can create computable quality performance measures, that have a zero net-cost to implement, and require no new engineering effort when requirements change,

(4) a real-time rules execution engine that is publicly available, so that any patient, caregiver, or physician can obtain personalized health guidance at the Point of Care based upon the collective knowledge of the entire system at that moment in time, intersected with patient-specific data,

(5) a macroscopic outcomes transparency engine that runs continuously to measure comparative efficacy of treatments, and is made available to the public in a transparent way when difficult choices are required,

(6) symmetrical consumer-level advice to patients based on the same algorithms utilized at the POC, to allow for shared decision making on risk, benefit, and costs, and

(7) a service-oriented architecture (SOA) that can be delivered to virtually any device, application, or end-user using a simple XML protocol.

Multiple synergistic applications can be built on top of this Operating System, in distinction to an ever-increasing number of single-purpose applications that are non-additive today. Most crucially, a Medical Operating System can be incrementally adopted without wholesale replacement of legacy systems, using commodity technology and a webservices API.

Additionallly, the power of the system grows exponentially with the number of users, in accordance with Metcalfe's law. A Medical Operating System would also foster competition for healthcare outcomes (rather than care volume) among virtually every manufacturer and service provider, but be transparent and allow for unambiguous comparisons that are largely missing today. The lack of a transparent knowledge infrastructure has created a culture of distrust among stakeholders - and frank paralysis of desperately needed innovation to avert financial crises - because society has few consistently meaningful yardsticks to prioritize decisions beyond the political pressures of the moment.
Healthcare's GPS - An Analogy

The following table illustrates how just-in-time decision making is transformed using a Medical Operating System, similar to a Global Positioning System:

GPS Characteristic/Medical Operating System Analogue
Present Location
(Latitude, Longitude)
Patient Longitudinal Health Record
(Age, Gender, Weight, Procedures, Medications, Diagnoses, Lab Results)
Destination
(Address)
Effective Treatment Options for Problem X
Patient Quality of Life Preferences
Routes
(Maps and Traffic)
Marginal Costs and Efficacy of Competing Therapies
Realtime Financial Approval
Satellities
(Topology)
Quantitative World View of Like-Patients in Realtime
Continuously Updated and Refined
Implications

With a dedicated staff of 270 members and 2000 outside experts, U.K. NICE has been able to publish an average of 17.5 technology assessments per year during the past decade, while the number of new therapeutic protocols introduced during this time period was in the thousands. While insightful and commendable first-generation approaches such as NICE technology appraisals (and similar models in the U.S. such as Coverage with Evidence Development, and Congressional Bill S.3408) are very important, these strategies are not scalable or generalizable without tools that provide continuous, automated world-views of treatment value.

A world view also serves to make quantifiable, instead of arbitrary, choices on thresholds for coverage using a Quality-Adjusted Life Year (QALY) cost model. Instead of choosing arbitrary values (e.g., a $50,000 QALY threshold for coverage of a handful of formally-reviewed treatments), it is possible to determine, given a specific amount of total healthcare capital, what the consequences are, for the macro system in terms of outcomes, as the QALY threshold is changed for any treatment.

This "What-If" analysis, fundamental to virtually every traditional business, is not done today in healthcare because there is no world view system in place that can interpret the semantics of extraordinarily complex data. However, the same could have been said of the billions of terminologically inconsistent and unstructured webpages in the late 1990s.


Importantly, the tools to create this world view now exist, and can be inexpensively deployed, making public and private choices fundamentally understandable, transparent, and defensible. Only leadership and will are required to move forward.

source : Dr. Ahmed Ghouri's Personal Blog

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Dental unit ( Description )

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to a dental unit.

At present, a dental unit in its most basic form typically consists of a chair and a base or column which mounts the main and auxiliary items of dental equipment, including a tray for a main set of handpieces and another tray for an accessory set of handpieces.

The dental unit is normally equipped with a plurality of dental handpieces, divided substantially into instruments, for example, the turbine and the micromotor, used for removal of dental material, and instruments, for example, the syringe and the polymerizing lamp, used for complementary stages of dental treatment.

These handpieces may be located, according to function, either on the main tray or on the accessory tray.

With the passage of time, this basic structure has been constantly improved in both the internal and external features of the dental unit. Thus, the latest dental units include sophisticated water and compressed air systems, one or more microprocessor units designed to control the functions of the dental unit, and other technological developments.

These developments have also greatly improved the operative parts of dental units, for example, the handpieces, and especially micromotors, which the present invention is concerned with in particular. A handpiece typically comprises a first body, constituting the part by which the handpiece is held and which is equipped on the end of it with a head to which a tool (for example, a burr) can be fitted.

In micromotor handpieces, the first body is connected to a second body, which houses a motor. The connection is coaxial by means of a quick-release fitting on the respective ends of the two bodies. The second body is in turn connected, at its other end, to an endpiece that supplies water or physiological saline, air for nebulizing the liquid, air for cooling the micromotor and electricity for driving the micromotor. The endpiece constitutes the end of a cable that starts at one of the aforementioned handpiece trays on a dental unit and that combines the conduits and wires used to supply the fluids and electricity required for the operation of the handpiece.

The performance of these handpieces, driven by conventional electric motors, has reached the highest possible levels, giving little room for further improvement. The Applicant has therefore designed a handpiece which, instead of a conventional electric motor with brushes, is driven by a brushless motor. This optimizes speed control, offers better torque response and silent operation, and reduces friction and heating, thereby increasing the useful life of the motor. In addition to this, the new handpiece can be used for both traditional, conservative treatments and for implants thanks to a constructional architecture that enables it to be fitted with all the tools and accessories currently used on traditional handpieces.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention accordingly provides a dental unit comprising at least one chair, a base positioned next to the chair and mounting a handpiece tray. The tray is equipped with a plurality of operative or auxiliary handpieces for dental operations of traditional conservative type and/or for implants. At least one of the handpieces is fitted with a drive unit consisting of a brushless micromotor presenting a unit for continuously controlling the speed of the brushless micromotor according to parameters that depend on the type of application, that is, traditional conservative type operations or implants.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The technical characteristics of the invention, with reference to the above aims, are clearly described in the claims below and its advantages are apparent from the detailed description which follows, with reference to the accompanying drawings which illustrate a preferred embodiment of the invention provided merely by way of example without restricting the scope of the inventive concept, and in which:

FIG. 1 shows a dental unit according to the present invention in a schematic perspective view with some parts cut away to better illustrate others;

FIG. 2 is a schematic side view of a detail A from FIG. 1 showing a handpiece fitted to the dental unit; and

FIG. 3 is a cross section through line III—III of FIG. 2.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

With reference to the accompanying drawings, in particular FIG. 1, the dental unit according to the present invention, labeled 100 in its entirety, essentially comprises a chair 1, a base or column 2, located next to the chair 1 and mounting a set of operative and auxiliary elements such as a main handpiece tray 3 on an arm 3a.

FIG. 1 also shows a second tray 15 for the dentist's assistant, mounted on a second arm 15a, a lamp 16, a spit bowl 17, an endpiece 18 for supplying water to a tumbler 19, and a pedal unit 20 for activating the handpieces.

The handpieces 4 are mounted on the two trays 3 and 15 and are divided into operative and auxiliary handpieces for traditional, conservative operations and/or for implants.

The dental unit 100 further comprises a microprocessor unit 7 for controlling the main and auxiliary functions of the dental unit 100, that is, the main operative functions of the handpieces, such as, for example, speed, rpm, air and water supply, including the main water supply for the dental unit, activation of disinfection/sterilization cycles, etc.

The unit 7 may be equipped with a display unit 21 and a keyboard 22, both located, for example, on the tray 3.

In a dental unit 100 structured in this way, at least one of the handpieces, for example the one labeled 4a in FIG. 1, is fitted with a drive unit 5 consisting of a brushless micromotor (see also FIG. 2) presenting a unit 6 for continuously controlling the speed of the brushless micromotor 5 according to parameters that depend on the type of application, that is, traditional, conservative type operations or implants.

Preferably, the unit 6 for continuously controlling the speed of the handpiece 4a is controlled by the microprocessor unit 7 with which it is possible to set the user parameters according to the type of application.

As shown in FIG. 2, the handpiece 4a comprises an operative body 8, a spindle 9 located at a first end of the operative body 8 for quick fitting to the tool holder endpiece (not illustrated).

The tool drive unit 5 is housed in the operative body 8, while the other end of the operative body 8 mounts an endpiece 10 presenting at least one power cable 11 for the drive unit 5, the cable 11 being connected to the customary circuitry of the dental unit 100.

The unit 6 for continuously controlling the speed of the handpiece 4a is housed in the operative body 8 and comprises a plurality of Hall-effect sensors 12.

Looking in more detail (see FIG. 3), the unit 6 for continuously controlling the speed of the handpiece 4a comprises three Hall-effect sensors 12.

These three Hall-effect sensors 12 are arranged at a defined angular interval α of approximately 120° around a reference magnet 13 associated to a rotor 14 of the brushless micromotor 5 in such a way as to detect the latter's position and provide feedback control of the speed of the rotor 14.

Obviously, the handpiece 4a is structured in such a way as to include all the conduits necessary to supply air and spray water for the tool and to illuminate the tool working area (these structures being of customary type and therefore not illustrated in detail).

A further improvement to the dental unit structured in this way adds to the unit's already wide range of operative capabilities.

Thus, the possibility of combining traditional handpieces with one or more brushless micromotor handpieces built directly into the dental unit makes it possible to extend the range of operations that can be performed on the patient using normal equipment and the units forming part of the dental unit itself.

Indeed, the brushless handpiece, or handpieces, receives fluids and motive power from the dental unit and the operative part of the handpiece is controlled directly by the microprocessor unit that controls the dental unit.

That means that auxiliary equipment independent of the dental unit, for example, for implant operations, are no longer necessary.

The wide range of speeds offered by the brushless motor enables the handpiece to be used for many different traditional treatments without having to change the handpiece, while at the same time allowing the speed to be controlled with a high degree of precision.

The invention described can be subject to modifications and variations without thereby departing from the scope of the inventive concept. Moreover, all the details of the invention may be substituted by technically equivalent elements.

* * * * *
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Syringe Driver or Syringe Pump

A syringe driver or syringe pump is a small infusion pump (some include infuse and withdraw capability), used to gradually administer small amounts of fluid (with or without medication) to a patient or for use in chemical and biomedical research.
The most popular use of syringe drivers is in palliative care, to continuously administer analgesics (painkillers), antiemetics (medication to suppress nausea and vomiting) and other drugs. This prevents periods during which medication levels in the blood are too high or too low, and avoids the use of multiple tablets (especially in people who have difficulty swallowing). As the medication is administered subcutaneously, the area for administration is practically limitless, although edema may interfere with the action of some drugs.
Syringe drivers are also useful for delivering IV medications over several minutes. In the case of a medication which should be slowly pushed in over the course of several minutes, this device saves staff time and reduces errors.
Syringe pumps are also useful in microfluidic applications, such as microreactor design and testing, and also in chemistry for slow incorporation of a fixed volume of fluid into a solution. In enzyme kinetics syringe drivers can be used to observe rapid kinetics as part of a stopped-flow apparatus
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Patient monitor Description

Patient monitors are in wide use in hospital and clinic setting and considered vital medical equipment for the delivery of an excellent standard of care. Like all medical devices, a patient monitor can be prohibitively expensive but still urgently needed. One of the ways of obtaining this equipment with tight budgets is the purchase of used equipment instead of new.
There are many types of monitors from the basic vital signs monitor to the advanced ansesthetic monitor or 5 agent gas monitor, required for patients undergoing anesthesia and many patient monitors that are multiparameter . One simple monitor widely used is the pulse oximeter monitor to detect the oxygen saturation, or SpO2, in the blood through the skin. A sensor with a special light is attached to the finger or earlobe for an almost instant reading. Buying used oxygen meters can speed up testing by having more available.
Another type of monitor, one that provides information by telemetry is especially critical in cardiac units and there is usually a need for a large number of these monitors. There must be extras to replace broken or damaged monitors or modules so having a very large inventory is both essential and costly. Reducing the per unit cost through used medical equipment purchasing makes having a safety cushion of extra units more affordable.
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MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scanner

MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) is a non-invasive method of using magnets and radio waves to look deep into the human body. MRI provides much greater detail than traditional X-ray can help doctors diagnose a wide range of diseases. This article is a non-technical summary in terms of patients, to help those who at one point scan, or what is involved undergone.
We all tend to expect the worst, and it’s very normal to worry about any medical procedure, but the MRI scan is really no need to worry, and although the technology of MRI is very complicated, requiring only a small number of patients other than lie down, breathe normally and put up with some noise – more on that later …
If you visit the hospital as an outpatient, it is useful to consider what you wear on the day of the scan. MRI uses a strong magnetic field, so you should not avoid wearing clothing that metal fasteners, zippers, buckles, etc., in this case does not get changed. Before you scan (or guardian / career for children / elderly or sick) will be asked to remove metal such as watches, eyeglasses, hairpins, etc., or items that are damaged by a magnet (eg credit cards) and hand the majority hospitals will be a box where your valuables have been made.
Scanning typically last 20 to 30 minutes (longer in some cases) and is a good idea to visit the toilet before the scan, so you can feel as relaxed as possible.
After searching the room, you see that the machine itself is quite a large cube-shaped with a horizontal hole or tunnel in the center where the patient is transferred to the motorized table, until the body part directly be scanned in the middle of the magnetic field of the machine.
The most striking part of the MRI scan and a part that often the biggest surprise is the sound. I can not explain the exact technical reasons for the sound, but who has an MRI scan will knowingly nod as you mentioned – the machine is very noisy and will be available earplugs or some kind of headphones to help reduce the effect. Once inside the tunnel radiologist usually ask if you are OK, and then leave. Now it’s time to try to settle into a comfortable position, so if you can. If you are on the radio or CD, try to match the music and focus your attention on it as a way to get your body to relax.
Sometimes you need to add scanning with a small dye injection MRI – this is known as contrast injection and can help radiologists to the veins easier to see a clearer picture if you have previously had surgery, including orthopedic implants, metal plates or pins (all of which must be addressed to the radiographer before the scan).
source http://elektromedik.com/mri-magnetic-resonance-imaging-scanner/
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All About Heart Attacks

Because heart attacks are the number one killer in the United States, it is important that everyone know about them. Heart attacks kill approximately 3/4 of a million people each and every year. While heart attacks
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 can happen to any person at any given time, they do generally occur more in older people. During a heart attack, it is critical that the victim receive prompt treatment or death can occur. Familiarize yourself with CPR and the use of a defibrilator. You never know when you will need to use one to help someone out. Knowing what to do in the event of a heart attack can save someone's life!

Generally a heart attack occurs because the arteries that supply the heart with blood become blocked. Over time, the lining of the arteries thicken and a heart attack occurs when it suddenly becomes blocked. However, a heart attack can also occur when there is a hemorrhage, drug overdose, loss of oxygen or simply, an aged heart that can no longer handle the work load.

There are usually early warning signs that a heart attack is going to occur. A heart attack vivtim will generally experience pressure, tightness or a squeezing sensation in the center of their chest. Sometimes, the pain will spread to the shoulders, arm, jaw or neck. Often times, a victim will also experience sweating, nausea, shortness of breath and faintness. A person will usually go unconscious during a severe heart attack and the heart will likely stop beating. If the victim's heart stops beating, he will also stop breathing. This will cause their skin to look pale and may give them the appearance of being dead.

If you notice any warning signs of a heart attack, it is important to get help right away. If the person having the attack is breathing okay and his heart is still beating, you can either go directly to the hospital or call 911 to get an ambulance to the victim. Timing is crucial during a heart attack. Paramedics are specially trained and can provide life-support measures until they arrive at the hospital. Keep the person warm and calm until help arrives.

If the person suffering a heart attack has already fallen unconscious, you must immediately. If someone else is around, have them call for help while you help the person suffering from the heart attack. You should
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 then lie the person down on a flat surface on their back. Do not use pillows or blankets to prop their head up. Instead, tilt their head back so that breathing can become accomplished. You should look, listen and feel. Look at the victim's chest to see if it is rising and falling. Listen and feel for any signs of breathing or pulse. Check the victim's neck or wrist for a pulse. If the person is not breathing, you should begin artificial respiration immediately. You should continue doing CPR until help arrives or until breathing resumes.
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Defibrillators

Defibrillators are devices that apply sharp electrical shocks to the heart when its beating becomes dangerously rapidly or chaotic. The shocks can restore normal heart rhythms before the malfunctioning heart suffers sudden cardiac arrest, a seizure than can lead to death within minutes.
Implanted defibrillators have become a multibillion dollar business for medical device makers following clinical trials showing that they could save thousands of lives annually among patients with weak or damaged hearts who are at heightened risk of sudden cardiac arrest. They consist of small battery-powered canisters implanted into muscle under the collarbone (usually on the right side for left-handed patients and the left for those who are right-handed), which are connected to the heart by insulated wires known as leads.
The leads are used both to sense when the heart is experiencing a rhythm that requires a shock and to deliver the shock. Defibrillator canisters need to be replaced when batteries are depleted -- currently every four to seven years -- but leads are left in place unless fractures or infections require them to be removed.
Many defibrillators are designed to be multi-purpose devices that can also deliver low-powered stimulation to pace slow-beating hearts or to help the four chambers of the heart contract in more synchronized rhythms.
External defibrillators, which deliver life-saving jolts through paddles applied to the chest, are standard equipment in ambulances and many other emergency response vehicles. In recent years, simpler models of such devices known as automated external defibrillators, or A.E.D.'s, have been placed on commercial aircraft, in offices and schools for public use by citizens who are trained to use them in courses offered by the Red Cross and other groups. In 2004, Philips Medical Systems introduced the first F.D.A. approved A.E.D. for sale to home users.
--Barnaby J. Feder, Dec. 14, 2007
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All About Ultrasonography

     Ultrasonography is a noninvasive diagnostic technique in which sound waves are passed into internal body structures and are deflected back, producing an image of the abdominal organs and structures on the oscilloscope.This procedure is generally used to indicate size and configuration of these abdominal structures. It is particularly useful on the detection of cholelithiasis, cholecystitis and appendicitis.

     Uses of Abdominal ultrasound: To find out the condition of the abdominal organs after an accident or abdominal injury and look for blood in the abdominal cavity. The computed tomography (CT) scanning is more commonly used for this purpose because it is more precise than abdominal ultrasound. To find out the main cause of abdominal pain.To look for fluid buildup in the abdominal cavity. An ultrasound may also be done to guide the needle during a procedure to remove fluid from the abdominal cavity. To find, measure, or monitor an aneurysm in the aorta. An aneurysm can cause a large, pulsing lump in the abdomen.To check the size, shape, and position of the liver. An ultrasound may be done to evaluate jaundice and other problems of the liver, including liver masses, cirrhosis, fat deposits in the liver, or abnormal liver function tests. To detect gallstones, inflammation of the gallbladder, or blocked bile ducts.To detect presence of kidney stones. To find out the size of an enlarged spleen and look for damage or disease.To detect problems with the pancreas, such as pancreatitis or pancreatic cancer. To find out the cause of urine blocked flow in the kidney. A kidney ultrasound can also be done to find out the size of the kidneys, detect kidney masses, detect fluid surrounding the kidneys, investigate the causes for recurring urinary tract infections, or check the condition of transplanted kidneys. To guide the placement of a needle or other instrument during a biopsy.To find out whether a mass in any of the abdominal organs is a solid tumor or a simple fluid-filled cyst.
Abdominal ultrasound can be used to diagnose abnormalities in various internal organs, such as the abdominal aorta, kidneys, liver, gallbladder, pancreas, and spleen. If Doppler imaging is added, the blood flow inside
 blood vessels can also be evaluated as well.

     Abdominal ultrasound examinations are performed by gastroenterologists or certain other specialists in internal medicine, radiologists or sonographers that are trained for this procedure.

     Advantages of ultrasound imaging of abdominal structures are that the procedure can be performed quickly, done at bed-side, involves no exposure to X-rays (which makes it useful in pregnant patients, for example), it requires no ionizing radiation. There are no noticeable side effects and is inexpensive compared to other often-used techniques such as computed tomography (CT scan) of the abdomen.

     The imaging occurs real-time and there is no required sedation, so that the influence of movements can be assessed quickly.

     One disadvantage is that this technique cannot be used to examine structures that lie behind bony tissue, which prevents passage of sound waves to deeper structures. Gas and fluid in the abdomen or air in the lungs also presents problems because ultrasound is not well transmitted through gas, air, or fluid.
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