NIHON KOHDEN Vismo PVM-2703 patient monitor (Feb 2011)

Category: NIHON KOHDEN Vismo bedside monitors and networking. In this article we review both the PVM-2701, PVM-2703 and PVM-4763 Vismo patient monitors, the thinking and illogical approach of the product series.




 

The first Vismo monitor was the PVM-2701 model announced by Signal 718 dated November 2009. Notice this was the first model to do away with the suffix. Vismo came from Vital Signs Monitor.
 

 
In a pilot move, the new Vismo series was designed in Japan with as many parts sourced in China. Although initial shipment were assembled and shipped from Japan, this arrangement was changed from release of PVM-2703.
 
 

      This is a monitor that is short of one connector socket
 
The 7-parameter Vismo PVM-2703 was released in February 2011 equipped with a yellow MULTI-parameter socket for either Invasive Blood Pressure or mainstream etCO2 monitoring use. There is shortage of one connector socket, if the user could have one dedicated socket for Invasive Blood pressure and another dedicated socket for mainstream etCO2, that would be a far superior design since the monitor can now do all 7 parameters at once.


From the release of PVM-2703, shipment for both PVM-2701 and PVM-2703 models started to be directly from Shanghai, China.

The prominent feature of the VISMO PVM-2703 bedside monitor is the utilization of one yellow MULTI-parameter socket. The yellow socket does 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 socketsThese 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 it is not possible to perform more IBP monitoring channels than the number of MULTI-parameter sockets, it means IBP hardware should always correspond to the number of MULTI-parameter sockets and 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.

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 expansion box is not available for the PVM-2703 Multi-parameter Unit.

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 VISMO PVM-2703 bedside monitor, only one channel of IBP hardware are configured out of the five types of hardware configured for use by Smart Cables.

NIBP, SpO2, ECG and one channel 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.


A parameter code is stored in the plug of the measurement cable

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, this being an easy task since there is no need for any internal analog hardware and the digital serial signals just go straight to the monitor main unit. The mainstream CO2, 2nd SpO2, BIS and NMT hardware are supplied as self-contained digital serial kits using the MULTI-parameter sockets only as a link to the monitor.

In VISMO PVM-2703 bedside monitor, the mainstream CO2 serial kit sets are supported using a Smart Cable.

The original label for the yellow MULTI socket indicated the five specific hardware plus mainstream CO2 serial kits using it as a serial port.
 

The original label for the yellow MULTI-parameter sockets when they were first used
 

Unfortunately, the use of Smart Cables does not make VISMO PVM-2703 bedside monitor modular
 
A yellow MULTI-parameter socket by itself does not automatically mean all the five types of mentioned parameters are available for measurements; it still depends on whether what hardware are actually being placed inside for selection.
 
When a model is not equipped with FiO2 hardware internally, no amount of yellow MULTI-parameter sockets is going to provide this measurement capabilityThe amount of configured hardware linked to each multi-parameter socket varies, so is the system support for serial kits.

Examples of configured hardware and serial kits using Smart Cables
 

It is the built-in hardware that determine the parameter capability; and in the case of serial kit sets, the system software. This of course, is the same description as a configured patient monitor
 
Actual internal hardware and system support for serial kits varies for each multi-parameter unit

This means VISMO PVM-2703 bedside monitor making use of Smart Cables is still a configured monitor. The only advantage of using Smart Cables is to allow sharing of a connector socket that is of negligible hardware cost; the cost needed to make use of Smart Cables is however, far higher. It does not make logical sense.


  The value captured by users using the Smart Cables is negative
 
Without sharing, both one channel of IBP and one channel of mainstream CO2 are freely available for use by plugging a non-coded measurement cable into their respective dedicated socket; it is poor logic to save the cost of a cheap connector socket at the expense of compromised sharing!

The output of the CO2 kit sets are processed digital serial data that should go straight to the DPU

The mainstream CO2 parameter is supplied as a self-contained serial kit set with digital serial processed data ready for use by the DPU of the monitor, using the MULTI-parameter socket only as a link. There is no need to compete for a MULTI-parameter socket to connect.

Manufacturers make their profits by providing product benefits to users but the yellow MULTI-parameter sockets have no benefit. The first vehement complaint from users is always the yellow MULTI-parameter sockets on the monitor are not enough for use.

What benefit can it offer users when necessary connector sockets go missing?

To save the cost of a cheap connector socket, the monitor has been compromised to do only one of the parameter at any one time, it is in reality making for inflexible and constrained monitoring.

Elaborate time-sharing are applied to things that are expensive (high in demand, an asset), and not worth the efforts for things that are cheap (high in supply, a commodity) like a connector socket or a switch! It only makes sense to see productive efforts being made to time-share a CPU, a car, a hotel room, a yacht, an airplane but not a calculator, a pencil or a pair of scissors.
 
Time-sharing of a car (an asset) creates value

The next picture shows Philips time-sharing one channel bio-amplifier hardware between IBP and Temperature measurements, and there was no sharing of connector socket; this is exactly the opposite of what Nihon Kohden is doing. The said manufacturer merely ensures physically it is not possible to make use of both the PRESS and the TEMP socket at the same time.
 
Only share the expensive hardware, not the cheap sockets

If you have the misconception there are monitoring hardware embedded in the NIHON KOHDEN Smart Cables, we are going to show you beyond any doubt there is absolutely no active electronics in the Smart Cables.

The marketing messages "New Modular Technology" and "The Module is in the cable!" are mere imaginations of people without the necessary electronics knowledge.

What do the manufacturer mean by this statement? 

It started with the Life Scope TR (BSM-6000) series monitors in the USA market and gradually adopted officially for International markets. These are precise statements.

Keep in mind, the continued repetitions of an assertion without the ability to show any proof does not make it the truth!

This is just assertion without showing any proof
 
Chip makers need huge demand to justify each of their products, so which chip manufacturer is supplying NIHON KOHDEN the variety of analog chips given the extremely low volume in demand? If we were to open up the plug of a Smart Cable, what do we see? A small PC board is seen attached to some pins of the yellow plug.

 
A small PC Board is soldered to some pins of the yellow connection plug
 
The PC board confirms a cheap digital EEPROM chip is being used to code the Smart Cable.
 
A cheap digital EEPROM chip was what we found inside the yellow Smart Cable plug

If we were to open up the plug of a compatible IBP cable from China suppliers, what do we see? It is the same thing, a plug with a digital code defined by NIHON KOHDEN.


Under US FDA rule, a cable is only a cable if it does not change the signal that passes through it. A Smart Cable with a hexadecimal code is just a cable and does not change a signal passing through it, but if it has an amplifier it becomes a medical device and requires FDA registration. Can you find any stand-alone Smart Cables registered with US FDA as a medical device?

Keep in mind when the Smart Cables are used with serial kit sets, such as mainstream CO2 kit sets or the NMT AF-101P kit set, the registration is for the active serial kit set and not the passive Smart Cable.

Irrefutable Proof the IBP amplifier hardware is configured internally, an important fact withdrawn from later monitor manuals
 
The Life Scope BSM-2301 bedside monitor was launched before the Life Scope TR bedside monitors, and the Service Manual is clear on the design; manuals for later models stop providing such information. The major move to curb details in manuals started from Life Scope J (BSM-9101) Bedside Monitor, launched before the Life Scope TR bedside monitors.

In below BSM-2301 service manual, you can see the IBP and thermistor respiration are hardware inside the Life Scope BSM-2301 monitor. These internal hardware are linked to the MULTI-parameter socket, and to make use of either hardware, a Smart Cable with the correct code must be plugged into the MULTI socket.
 
Can you see the IBP amplifier and thermistor respiration hardware are internal components of the Life Scope BSM-2301 monitor?

The MULTI-parameter socket doubles as a serial port without any need for internal monitoring hardware, only as a link to the monitor. In the block diagram below, the processed digital serial data from a CO2 kit set goes straight to the digital microcontroller APU (Analog-block Processing Unit) and is forwarded to the DPU.  For a parameter using the internal analog hardware, the analog signal needs to pass through an Analog-Digital converter before coming to the APU for digital processing. 

You should know by now the IBP amplifier hardware inside the monitor is the reason the VISMO PVM-2703 bedside monitor can do one channel of IBP monitoring.


Users rebuffed the use of Smart Cables when it does not make sense
Preceding VISMO PVM-2703 bedside monitor was the Life Scope BSM-2300K series monitors, let's see how the sole yellow MULTI socket was actually being used in this series.
 
The portable 8.4-inch Life Scope i (BSM-2301K)

 
To insist the use of Smart Cables, the Life Scope BSM-2301K monitor has a yellow MULTI-parameter socket for three types of measurements, namely:
 
a. Invasive Blood Pressure
b. Thermistor Respiration
c. Digital self-contained mainstream CO2 serial kit sets.
 
The MULTI-parameter socket does not mean flexibility because you can only do one of the above parameter at any one time. Using three dedicated sockets is a far superior proposal; why suffer pain of two missing sockets to gain use of one flexible socket? It is illogical because the manufacturer just wants to use the Smart Cables.
 
Life Scope-i does not have enough connector sockets
 

The use of a MULTI-parameter socket is self-contradictory from the start. We have to ask why is the monitor avoiding the use of MULTI-parameter socket to access the Temperature hardware if sharing a socket is preferred capability? This is a slap on the face for anyone proposing use of Smart Cables on a bedside monitor!


The two blocks of patient monitoring hardware in the Life Scope BSM-2301 bedside monitor are:

(ORDINARY BLOCK) The hardware using dedicated sockets and ordinary cables:
- 1-ch TEMP
- ECG
- SpO2
- NIBP

(MULTI-PARAMETER UNIT BLOCK with one MULTI-parameter sockets) The hardware only use Smart Cables for connections:
- 1-ch IBP
Thermistor Respiration

The mainstream CO2 comes in the form of a self-contained kit set with processed digital serial output, utilizing the MULTI socket only as a serial port


The reality is the shortage of two connector sockets, and the flood of complaints from users insisting the single MULTI-parameter connector socket on the BSM-2301K was not enough. The manufacturer was pressured to respond with an updated model (BSM-2303K) with an isolated MULTI-parameter socket added. The isolation was done so as not to disturb existing circuitry with an additional MULTI-parameter socket. It means the additional MULTI-parameter socket is not a functional one and only could make use of the IBP amplifier hardware that come with it.

The isolated MULTI-parameter socket was intended solely for IBP monitoring, effectively relieving the existing functional MULTI-parameter socket to only measure either Thermistor Respiration or act as serial port for the mainstream CO2 kit set. The solution was only partial, and it reduced two missing sockets to one missing socket; a total solution would have been just using dedicated sockets as there is no need for socket sharing. There was no need for the Smart Cables.

There was no actual demand for additional IBP channel, but the BSM-2303 bedside monitor was camouflaged as an upgraded monitor with 2 channels of IBP.

Under pressure, an additional isolated MULTI-parameter socket acting solely as an IBP amplifier had to be introduced



   Similar to BSM-2301 bedside monitor, the Vismo PVM-2703 could not justify use of the MULTI-parameter socket

Just like BSM-2301 bedside monitor, users want their socket back on the PVM-2703 bedside monitor so that they can do both IBP monitoring and mainstream CO2 measurement without hesitation. In new PVM-4000 series bedside monitors, the VISMO PVM-4763, PVM-4753 and PVM-4733 are doing just that. The users can have two MULTI-parameter sockets as they wished, but each MULTI-parameter sockets comes with its own one-channel IBP amplifier hardware. Thus, the VISMO PVM-4763 bedside monitor is adding one more channel of IBP hardware just to do what the PVM-2703 monitor could already do using dedicated sockets because the users are not asking for an additional channel of IBP hardware!

It is a such a big mistake to continue the use of Smart Cables.

 

Beware the need for network isolation units to ensure electrical safety of monitored patients
For networking, the Vismo PVM-2701 and PVM-2703 need the QI-202P Interface option but the interface is not equipped with a isolated Ethernet LAN interface. When connecting to a real-time LAN network, it is important and mandatory for hospitals to observe patient electrical safety by using a network isolation unit.
 


When an isolated monitor with an non-isolated Ethernet port is connected to a hardwired network, it is no longer a medical device unless the above-shown network isolation transformer is introduced between the monitor and network. If the network isolation transformer is not installed, dangerous electric shocks can be delivered to a monitored patient through the wired Ethernet network. Such dangerous electric shocks are potentially lethal and no hospital should ignore this mandatory requirement.


WATCH OUT the dangerous use of uncertain semi-quantitative CO2 measurements and displaying a flawed CO2 waveform
 
Nihon Kohden lacks sidestream CO2 sampling expertise and buys OEM units to offer them as expensive standalone. The AG-400 CO2 unit as shown, for example, is technology from Oridion Medical. For monitoring such as post-surgery recovery, integration of the sidestream CO2 into the monitor is a mandatory requirement because an external unit requires additional power socket besides necessitating the use of a trolley.
 
For some unknown reason, Nihon Kohden monitors have never been able to offer benefits of integrated sidestream CO2 measurements.

 
The inability to integrate the sidestream CO2 unit into the patient monitor main unit


The adoption of semi-quantitative mainstream CO2 measurement was to reduce cost and its simplicity also help in miniaturization of the transducers. The first solution offered by Nihon Kohden was the mainstream cap-ONE TG-920P CO2 sensor kit (order code P907) that can be used on non-intubated patients.
 
The cap-ONE TG-920P CO2 sensor kit (order code P907) has very small sensors because semi-quantitative measurement is adopted, the method is not commonly seen and many are not aware of the risks of obtained CO2 readings from the semi-quantitative CO2 kit sets, and to make matter worse, the semi-quantitative measurements are also being made used of to display a flawed continuous CO2 waveform.
 

Nihon Kohden cap-ONE P907 (TG-920P) mainstream CO2 sensor kit



    How to remove a relatively big disposable adapter from the two tiny transducers after use?
 
When the sensor
s become smaller, it also means the disposable adapter becomes relatively much bigger as seen in this below picture. When trying to remove the disposable adapter from the transducers, it is difficult to separate the two because of the latching mechanism. A small size transducer means anything that latches onto it must be even smaller.

It is not easy to separate the disposable adapter from the Cap-ONE transducers after use
 
When removing disposable adapter from the mini sensors, users tend to just pull from the cables and this action quickly weakens the joint holding the sensors and cables. The action will cause stress to the two joints and quickly degenerate the performance of the transducers. This means the transducers are unlikely to last.
 
Users just doing the inevitable

 
Shown below is another TG-900P etCO2 kit set (order code P903) that makes semi-quantitative CO2 measurements on a traditional mainstream CO2 sensor. The TG-901T3 kit set (order code P906) is the same thing but using a non-coded connection plug. The medical devices from same manufacturer that make use of semi-quantitative CO2 kit sets for patient CO2 measurements and waveform include:

- Life Scope patient monitors
- Vismo patient monitors
- Cap-STAT OLG-2800
- CardioLife defibrillators
- Neurofax EEG machines etc.

 
Nihon Kohden semi-quantitative CO2 kit sets with traditional mainstream transducer
 

Do the users know semi-quantitative CO2 measurements are only estimations?
    
To save costs, the semi-quantitative kit sets do not make measurement during the inspiration phase. The important point is there is a measurement duty cycle and it is as shown; there is no way to know the actual CO2 measurements during the inspiration phase because CO2 measurements are not made.

Semi-quantitative means there is a duty cycle, and measurements are not continuous
 
Semi-quantitative measurement is also of low-accuracy type, performed using one IR detector instead of the usual two to save cost. This is reflected in the measurement tolerance.
 
Contrasting, quantitative measurement delivers high accuracy for critical care. To ensure the necessary high accuracy, quantitative measurement employed two IR detectors for simultaneous CO2 measurements at different wavelength for results comparison. CO2 measurements are also being made continuously.
 
Quantitative measurement employs two detectors to make continuous measurement at different wave-lengths to compare readings for high accuracy

NIHON KOHDEN specification for TG-901T CO2 sensor kit shows even the specified low accuracy of CO2 measurement using semi-quantitative method no longer holds true once CO2 is present during the inspiration phase.

This is because actual CO2 value will be more.


It is impossible for users to know if measurements are reliable when they cannot tell if CO2 is present during inspiration!
  
Measurements are invalid when CO2 is present during inspiration, but CO2 is not measured during this period

 
As seen from the duty cycle, there is no measurement being made during the inspiration phase, how does the manufacturer assure measurement accuracy? The specified measurement tolerance has no meaning for the users!

It should be clear each semi-quantitative CO2 measurement is only an estimation since its accuracy is rendered uncertain by the inability to confirm if CO2 is present during the inspiration phase.

Since the users are also not alerted on screen there is no CO2 measurement being made during the inspiration phase, they are unknowingly made to take on unnecessary risk.

 

Semi-quantitative methodology means cost-effective estimations and the design cannot be used in a general way, only on a selective basis with known risks
 
 
For example, semi-quantitative methodology can be used as a simple estimation tool for obtaining the numerical value of End-tidal Carbon Dioxide level (etCO2).
 
Below picture shows the semi-quantitative method in the way it was intended for, estimating only the etCO2 numerical value for purpose of airway tube placement confirmation. It is not for continuous waveform display.

A hand-held semi-quantitative etCO2 estimation tool (with SpO2) for airway tube placement confirmation

 
 
How can you properly display a continuous CO2 waveform when your semi-quantitative measurement kits do not have the ability to make continuous measurements?
 
 
NIHON KOHDEN also allows data from semi-quantitative measurements to be displayed on screen with the non-measurement period reset to zero level. The insistence to display a continuous waveform using discontinuous measurement data from semi-quantitative mainstream CO2 estimation kits is unacceptable; the manufacturer is just subjecting the monitored patients and users to dangerous misinterpretation risks.
 
A zero CO2 reading on the waveform means zero measured value. No measurement can only mean a defective sensor, not by design!

Note the end tidal CO2 (etCO2) value shown is also not alerted as "estimated etCO2" only.
 
A flawed CO2 waveform with non-measurement intervals reflected as zero measured CO2 value


As seen from the two true CO2 traces below, expiratory upstrokes do not always start from zero CO2 level!
 
Quantitative measurements confirming expiratory upstrokes do not always start from zero CO2 level

  
Check the latest updated table to make sure you only use quantitative method for critical measurements and true CO2 waveform display on screen.
 
Use only quantitative method for waveform display; the quantitative TG-950P (P905) shown here was already discontinued.
 
 

  How about fully-quantitative type miniaturized mainstream CO2 sensor?
 
The TG-907P CO2 Sensor kit (order code P909) shown in above table is declared as using quantitative method. This sensor was designed for non-intubated adult CO2 monitoring, as well as neonatal CO2 monitoring. Nihon Kohden is thus offering an alternative to sidestream CO2 sampling methodology.
 
The miniaturized CO2 sensor is easily broken by the bigger and stronger adapter
 
 
In addition to the dead space problem, they had not foreseen miniaturized mainstream CO2 sensors could be easily broken by the disposable adapters. This happened because the disposable adapters are now relatively bigger and stronger!

These are common defects of a TG-970P CO2 sensor kit (P909). The design is impractical.
 
 

  The fragile miniaturized CO2 sensor is clearly of poor design, and easily broken
 
 
The key point is, it does not last