The Anesthesia Machine - Gas Analysis
Anesthesia machines must contain an oxygen sensor in the inspiratory limb of the circuit. The oxygen sensor prevents the delivery of hypoxic gas mixtures. These sensors are typically paramagnetic or galvanic.
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Citation
Pino, Richard M., editor. "The Anesthesia Machine - Gas Analysis." Clinical Anesthesia Procedures, 10th ed., Wolters Kluwer, 2022. Anesthesia Central, anesth.unboundmedicine.com/anesthesia/view/ClinicalAnesthesiaProcedures/728568/all/The_Anesthesia_Machine___Gas_Analysis.
The Anesthesia Machine - Gas Analysis. In: Pino RMR, ed. Clinical Anesthesia Procedures. Wolters Kluwer; 2022. https://anesth.unboundmedicine.com/anesthesia/view/ClinicalAnesthesiaProcedures/728568/all/The_Anesthesia_Machine___Gas_Analysis. Accessed July 22, 2025.
The Anesthesia Machine - Gas Analysis. (2022). In Pino, R. M. (Ed.), Clinical Anesthesia Procedures (10th ed.). Wolters Kluwer. https://anesth.unboundmedicine.com/anesthesia/view/ClinicalAnesthesiaProcedures/728568/all/The_Anesthesia_Machine___Gas_Analysis
The Anesthesia Machine - Gas Analysis [Internet]. In: Pino RMR, editors. Clinical Anesthesia Procedures. Wolters Kluwer; 2022. [cited 2025 July 22]. Available from: https://anesth.unboundmedicine.com/anesthesia/view/ClinicalAnesthesiaProcedures/728568/all/The_Anesthesia_Machine___Gas_Analysis.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
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