Blaxter Laurence, Yeo Mildrid, McNally Donal, Crowe John, Henry Caroline, Hill Sarah, Mansfield Neil, Leslie Andrew, Sharkey Don
1 Bioengineering Research Group, Faculty of Engineering, The University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
2 Academic Child Health, School of Medicine, University Hospital, The University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Proc Inst Mech Eng H. 2017 Feb;231(2):99-113. doi: 10.1177/0954411916680235. Epub 2017 Jan 5.
Inter-hospital transport of premature infants is increasingly common, given the centralisation of neonatal intensive care. However, it is known to be associated with anomalously increased morbidity, most notably brain injury, and with increased mortality from multifactorial causes. Surprisingly, there have been relatively few previous studies investigating the levels of mechanical shock and vibration hazard present during this vehicular transport pathway. Using a custom inertial datalogger, and analysis software, we quantify vibration and linear head acceleration. Mounting multiple inertial sensing units on the forehead and torso of neonatal patients and a preterm manikin, and on the chassis of transport incubators over the duration of inter-site transfers, we find that the resonant frequency of the mattress and harness system currently used to secure neonates inside incubators is [Formula: see text]. This couples to vehicle chassis vibration, increasing vibration exposure to the neonate. The vibration exposure per journey (A(8) using the ISO 2631 standard) was at least 20% of the action point value of current European Union regulations over all 12 neonatal transports studied, reaching 70% in two cases. Direct injury risk from linear head acceleration (HIC) was negligible. Although the overall hazard was similar, vibration isolation differed substantially between sponge and air mattresses, with a manikin. Using a Global Positioning System datalogger alongside inertial sensors, vibration increased with vehicle speed only above 60 km/h. These preliminary findings suggest there is scope to engineer better systems for transferring sick infants, thus potentially improving their outcomes.
鉴于新生儿重症监护的集中化,早产儿的院际转运越来越普遍。然而,已知这种转运与发病率异常增加有关,最显著的是脑损伤,以及多因素导致的死亡率增加。令人惊讶的是,此前相对较少有研究调查这种车辆转运过程中存在的机械冲击和振动危害水平。我们使用定制的惯性数据记录器和分析软件来量化振动和线性头部加速度。在新生儿患者和早产仿真模型的前额和躯干上,以及在跨站点转运期间的运输培养箱底盘上安装多个惯性传感单元,我们发现目前用于将新生儿固定在培养箱内的床垫和安全带系统的共振频率为[公式:见原文]。这与车辆底盘振动耦合,增加了新生儿的振动暴露。在所研究的所有12次新生儿转运中,每次行程的振动暴露(使用ISO 2631标准的A(8))至少是当前欧盟法规作用点值的20%,在两个案例中达到70%。线性头部加速度(HIC)导致的直接伤害风险可忽略不计。尽管总体危害相似,但带有仿真模型时,海绵床垫和空气床垫之间的隔振效果有很大差异。在惯性传感器旁边使用全球定位系统数据记录器,振动仅在车速高于60公里/小时时随车速增加。这些初步研究结果表明,有空间设计出更好的系统来转运患病婴儿,从而有可能改善他们的预后。