A Low Cost Medical Data Handling System Part II

1979 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 243-254
Author(s):  
MORTON D. SCHWARTZ
Author(s):  
Csaba Horváth ◽  
Gábor Fodor ◽  
Ferenc Kovács ◽  
Gábor Hosszú

Cardiotocography (CTG) is widely used for antenatal monitoring and assessment of fetal well-being. CTG measurement methods based on the phonocardiographic principle and a home-monitoring system utilizing low-cost devices for data acquisition have been proposed and implemented by our research group. Assessment and storage of the recordings are carried out in medical centers, and their calculation capacity is no longer enough to evaluate the ever-increasing amount of incoming data on the constantly growing number of different assessment methods. The present work proposes a new method to create an easily scalable environment based on a P2P principle to share the workload and data between medical centers, while also representing a framework for discovering new correlations between evaluation method results and symptoms of fetal diseases.


1982 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 1370-1374 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Woo ◽  
M A Longley ◽  
D C Cannon

Abstract We evaluated a commercially available homogeneous enzyme immunoassay (EMIT, Syva Co.) for tobramycin against a reference radioimmunoassay (RIA) method. Between-assay precision (CV) was 2.9% at 6.2 mg/L and 3.0% for values in the range of 1.0-7.6 mg/L. Accuracy based on a recovery experiment (1.0-13.0 mg/L) yielded an analytical recovery of 88-112%. A correlation study with 75 sera from patients on tobramycin therapy showed that EMIT = 0.984 RIA - 0.0808, r = 0.993. Neither the EMIT nor the RIA procedure was affected by the presence of gentamicin, amikacin, and vancomycin. Absorbance data from the EMIT system calculated with the conventional RIA logit-log algorithm correlate well with results generated by the Syva data-handling system (logit-log = 1.077 Syva - 0.318, r = 0.998). A reagent stability study indicated that the EMIT reagents, once reconstituted, remain stable for at least 17 days when stored at refrigerated temperatures, or 11 days if stored at room temperature, thus enabling frequent "stat" assays without the need to prepare a calibration curve each time.


Author(s):  
Akshit Akhoury ◽  
Krishna Birla ◽  
Rohit Sarkar ◽  
Arun Ravi ◽  
Shaleen Kalsi ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document