Anaesthetic vapour concentrations in the EMO system

Abstract
Measurements of the vapour concentrations delivered by the EMO and Oxford Miniature Vaporizers (OMV) were made with both continuous (plenum mode) and intermittent (drawover mode) air flows. Leakage of ether, halothane and trichloroethylene vapours through the corrugated elephant tubing was also measured. Both vaporizers performed most consistently with the intermittent flows for which they were designed. Outputs were minimal at very low carrier gas flows, reached their greatest at the higher settings in the middle flow range and tended to be low at the highest flows. These effects were far more notable with continuous than with intermittent flows. Minimal amounts of ether were lost through the tubing but halothane losses were appreciable, while losses of trichloroethylene were enough to reduce the concentrations available to the patient. The EMO is not suitable for plenum use with carrier gas flows below about 10 litres/min. The OMV is a useful plenum vaporizer although the outputs are generally lower than indicated at higher flows.