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Take home device measures sleep ills

May 18, 2007 12:00 AM (512 days ago) by Karl B. Hille, The Examiner
This story ranks Not ranked
Related Topics: Bel Air, Md.

Bel Air, Md. (Map, News) - How are you sleeping?

Bel Air inventor David Krausman has a device that can measure the quality of your sleep and identify potentially dangerous conditions like sleep apnea.

The DeSat Counter, about the size of a Palm Pilot, straps to a patient’s wrist. Using a disposable sensor attached to the index finger, the device measures vital statistics such as pulse, breathing and how much oxygen gets into the blood. And it goes home with you.

“People can be very symptomatic with sleep apnea when they’re at home,” Krausman said. “Then you get them into a sleep center and hook them up to all these wires and monitors and put them in a strange bed and expect them to sleep normally?”

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The device contains a computer processor that analyzes the telltale interruptions in breathing that form sleep apnea. It records individual apnea events, flags incomplete data if the monitor is pulled off in the night, detects limb movements and can download data onto a physician’s computer for analysis.

People with sleep apnea stop breathing repeatedly during their sleep, according to the American Sleep Apnea Association Web page. Sometimes these interruptions come hundreds of times during the night and often last for a minute or longer.

khille@baltimoreexaminer.com

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9:26 AM MST on Wed., Sep. 17, 2008 re: "Creatine could help in Parkinson’s fight"

Examiner Reader said:
I know how it works. Creatine ups ATP which inturn stops the hyperpolarizing of brain cells by leptin. MTGDGW

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2:20 PM MST on Sun., Feb. 10, 2008 re: "Inmate gets drunk on hand sanitizer"

Examiner Reader said:
Your alcohol facts are not quite straight. You mentioned Avant Hand Sanitizer- it has denatured alcohol. The denaturing process adds a bitter agent- it make sit taste horrible- definitely not a vodka type drink. That is why alcohol is denatured- to avoid abuse like this. It will likely make you vomit.

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6:48 PM MST on Wed., Aug. 8, 2007 re: "Inmate gets drunk on hand sanitizer"

Examiner Reader said:
Former Minneapolis Fire Chief: A First Responder in I-35W Bridge Collapse; Coordinates Helping Hand Contribution of Soapopular Hand Sanitizers For EMS Workers For Immediate Release Minneapolis, MN, Aug 8, 2007-- Former Minneapolis Fire Department Chief Bonnie Bleskachek, an embattled hero to many in the Minneapolis community, hasn't allowed recent personal controversy to stand in the way of helping Minnesota citizens in times of crisis. Since the August 1 catastrophe first occurred, Bleskachek has been working tirelessly by coordinating volunteer and emergency supply logistics, and she was the first to respond to an unsolicited call from a Connecticut company offering to contribute a shipment of Soapopular, a new, alcohol-free hand sanitizer, for emergency workers at the disaster scene.

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8:24 AM MST on Sun., Jun. 10, 2007 re: "Inmate gets drunk on hand sanitizer"

Examiner Reader said:
Hand-Sanitizer=Alcohol Poisoning.. As inane as the subject might seam, the exponential growth in the use of hand sanitizer products over the past few years has lead to an ever-increasing number of alcohol-poisoning instances--and too many within school/educational settings. Most recent report was two weeks ago in Hartford CT, where second grader, overloaded her hands from a Purell bottle on her teachers desk ,then licked it off--and was soon rushed to Yale University Hospital and diagnosed with alchohol poisoning. Thank goodness that some new manufacturers, including Soapopular--which offers a full line of Alcohol-FREE hand sanitizing products, are now getting retailers to put their products on their shelves. Soapopular, which is Canada's leading brand in the alcohol-free segment, made its debut last week here in the US.

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