Category: Product Review, NIHON KOHDEN (日本光電) Life Scope J (Jupiter) to Genesis series Life Scope monitors (CSM-1000 series); the missing digital modular platform in Life Scope G9 (CSM-1901), Life Scope G7 (CSM-1700 series) and Life Scope G5 (CSM-1500 series) bedside monitors.
In
this knowledge-sharing record we reviewed the new NIHON KOHDEN Life Scope G9, G7, G5 Bedside Monitor (监护仪)
and explained why there is no digital modular support platform for them. The continued use of the puzzling Smart
Cables and MULTI sockets are also not what the market needs from Japan.
Life Scope G9 (CSM-1901) bedside monitor looks just like Life Scope J bedside monitor
The first of NIHON KOHDEN Genesis series bedside monitors started with a high-end model, Life Scope G9 (CSM-1901) Bedside Monitor. The basic configuration offered comprises of the Core unit, a 19-inch display monitor (three display monitors can be supported), and a BSM-1700 (Life Scope PT) transport monitor
placed on a JA-694PA Data Acquisition Unit (DAU) connected to the main unit using point-to-point serial communication.
There are two types of Data Acquisition Units that the BSM-1700 transport monitor can make use of; the JA-694PA DAU has four yellow expansion MULTI-parameter sockets while the JA-960PA has none. Note the JA-690PA or JA-694PA DAU both do not have an IP address for networking need, the connection to the main unit is only by direct serial digital communication.
The Life Scope PT acts as an input unit when placed on the Data Acquisition Unit (DAU) linked to the Core Unit of Life Scope G9, and when mechanically released from the DAU will operate as an independent transport monitor.
When a transport monitor is not required, the AY-663P Input Unit is used instead and expanded with a AA-674P four-socket expansion box. In such a case, the JA-690PA DAU which does not have expansion sockets on it is being used.
There are four models of Life Scope PT (BSM-1700) transport monitor to select from. The alternative AY-663P Input Unit can also be substituted with AY-653P Input Unit using Nellcor OxiMax algorithm or AY-633P Input Unit using Masimo SET algorithm.
The Core Unit is the new name for the usual main unit, the name update is because this time a PC sub-unit is included. The PC sub-unit makes it possible for Life Scope G9 bedside monitor to have web browsing capability, and this is the first ever a Nihon Kohden Life Scope bedside monitor has such a capability!
Other than the Core Unit being new, the rest of the items mentioned above are all existing hardware initially designed for Life Scope TR (BSM-6000 series) bedside monitors. A sense of history is necessary to understand the shallowness of Life Scope G9 bedside monitor design.
Life Scope G9 Bedside Monitor is the first NIHON KOHDEN patient monitor ever to be equipped with a web browser |
---|
Before Life Scope G9 (CSM-1901), None of the Life Scope patient monitors (including Central Monitors) had ever been able to access external servers for images of Ultrasound, CT, MRI, Laboratory test results, clinical decision support etc. These servers usually utilize portal technology for access and a patient monitor needs a web browser as well as an additional non-realtime network path to access them for services.
NIHON KOHDEN was finally able to introduce the first monitor with built-in web browsing capability after learning from the Singapore subsidiary how Philips made use of UPS in a Central Monitor. NIHON KOHDEN is using a PC for the first time in a bedside monitor, so system stability is a top concern. To have peace of mind, the PC unit is not integrated into the monitoring block in G9; the trick is to use the monitoring block to keep an eye on the PC Unit and reset it when it hangs or freezes. The independent PC sub-unit is the reason for the Core Unit's large physical size.
It is such an embarrassment to release a patient monitor this late with a web browser |
An old slide of Philips introducing the (long-discontinued) IntelliVue MP20/ MP30 patient monitors should make clear our point.
"Portal technology compatible" bedside monitors from a leading competitor |
The Philips slide showed the middle to high end products (namely IntelliVue MP40, MP50, MP60, MP70, MP90) all have web browsers already incorporated at that point of time. In the year 2013, the IntelliVue MP20, MP30 patient monitors were already replaced by newer IntelliVue MX400/ MX450 patient monitors. The events just described had taken place long before the launch of Life Scope G9 bedside monitor, making clear this can only be tolerated in the domestic market in Japan, which is protectively insulated from international high-tech competitions.
Portal Technology application illustration |
What we are seeing is a demonstration to the world how extreme is NIHON KOHDEN in falling behind the international competitors in digital technology.
What are important but missing in Life Scope Genesis G9 bedside monitor? |
---|
First, it is being promoted as a modular monitor; a modular monitor needs a network infrastructure for exchange of measurement-data but this is blatantly missing.
Next, there are plenty of missing connector sockets on the AY-663P input unit or in its place, the Life Scope PT transport monitor. Why should the users tolerate such illogical design?
Similarly configured input units with different SpO2 algorithms |
The prominent feature of the AY-663P Input Unit (or Life Scope PT transport monitor) is the utilization of yellow MULTI-parameter sockets. These MULTI sockets do not accept ordinary measurement cables but only cables embedded with codes defined by NIHON KOHDEN.
NIHON KOHDEN had identified five types of internally configured hardware that can be linked to the MULTI-parameter sockets and to make use of these hardware, a cable with the correct code must be plugged into one of the MULTI-parameter sockets. These coded cables are collectively cited as Smart Cables by the manufacturer and the codes are also known as parameter codes. Each socket selects only one channel of the hardware, except for Temperature allowing two channels of hardware to be selected.
A coded measurement cable can make use of any of the internally configured hardware shown here |
The configured hardware are grouped into a block known as MULTI-parameter Unit. Since the number of IBP monitoring channels correspond to the number of MULTI-parameter sockets, each MULTI-parameter socket comes with its own IBP hardware. A MULTI-parameter socket makes use of its own IBP hardware when a measurement cable with a IBP code is plugged into it; it is the design that if a MULTI-parameter socket does not come with its own one-channel IBP hardware, it does not have the ability to perform IBP monitoring.
Remember,
A functional MULTI-parameter socket always come with its own one-channel IBP hardware, and the number of IBP channels specified always correspond to the number of yellow MULTI sockets.
This being a hardware rule, and the key word is "functional" because a non-functional MULTI-parameter socket may not need to care about the capability to do IBP monitoring, such as a socket found on the CardioLife TEC-5600 series defibrillators solely for mainstream CO2 kit sets.
Principle of operation |
Given the large amount of hardware in the MULTI-parameter Unit block, it may be necessary to add more MULTI-parameter sockets; this is done by using an external expansion box filled with MULTI-parameter sockets with associated IBP amplifier hardware.
The additional sockets are added using analog interface with a limit set at a maximum of four MULTI-parameter sockets. The limitation is to avoid signal deterioration caused by voltage drop and noise.
There are variations from the basic theme, such as doing without use of external expansion box, or increasing the number of MULTI-parameter sockets in the MULTI-parameter Unit, or reducing the hardware configured in the Multi-parameter Unit.
In the AY-663P, AY-653P, AY-633P Input Units (or Life Scope PT transport monitors), 3 channels of IBP amplifiers, 2 channels of Temperature, one channel each of Thermistor Respiration, FiO2 and Cardiac Output are configured for use by Smart Cables.
NIBP, SpO2, ECG and two channels of Temperature are configured using dedicated measurement cables
The digital hexadecimal code is stored in an EEPROM chip mounted on a small flexible PC board electrically wired to the pins of the cable plug. It is not difficult to make the Smart Cables but they are being priced highly by the manufacturer; only the common IBP cable can be sourced from China suppliers at a reasonable price.
One MULTI-parameter socket can select two Temperature hardware channels.
Each MULTI-parameter socket can take two channels of Temperature measurements |
The MULTI-parameter sockets are additionally allowed to be diverted as costly digital serial ports,