Pre-Hospital Advanced Life Support (ALS) Solution

Designed for EMS medical directors, paramedics and casualty response coordinators, Ambuer’s Pre-Hospital ALS Solution serves as an integrated and regulation-compliant platform for on-site emergency resuscitation.This solution unifies cardiac rhythm management, circulation support, airway treatment and trauma hemostasis into one standardized workflow. It shortens intervention time and raises survival rates with stable neurological functions for emergency patients.It empowers EMS directors and field paramedics to deliver complete resuscitation services, covering patient initial contact, on-scene rescue and seamless handover to emergency departments.

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Deploying Monitor/Defibrillator and AED for Early Defibrillation and Cardiac Surveillance

Ambuer installs the Defibrillator/Monitor as the central clinical hub of every frontline ambulance and rapid response vehicle. The unit is configured with a 7 inch high brightness LCD, multi parameter capability including 3 lead and 12 lead ECG, NIBP, SpO2 and capnography, and a biphasic defibrillation module delivering escalated energy from 150 J to 360 J. Alongside the monitor, an Automated External Defibrillator (AED) is stowed in the first responder bag for immediate bystander or basic life support use. Pre connected adult and paediatric electrode pads help operators finish shock preparation within 40 seconds after powering on.

 

The monitor’s ECG algorithm supports real time ST segment trend analysis. It sends alerts when ST segment elevation exceeds 0.2 mV on two adjacent leads. The device can synchronize cardioversion based on R wave peak with a default 30 ms delay, and users may switch to 40 ms delay for atrial fibrillation treatment. The non invasive pacing module is designed for post resuscitation recovery. It outputs current ranging from 40 mA to 170 mA at 30 to 180 pulses per minute with gel electrodes placed under standard anterior posterior layout.

 

Technical Note: Operators need to activate capacitor maintenance every week by charging the device to 200 J and completing internal discharge. The built in maintenance log will remind users for regular operation. Defibrillation pads feature a 24 month shelf life. The system will show an orange expiry reminder 90 days ahead of expiration, and this warning cannot be dismissed manually.

Integrating the Mechanical CPR Machine for Sustained High-Quality Compressions

Ambuer regards the CPR machine as the standard mechanical compression device for all advanced life support units. This device adopts load distributing band and piston driven structure. It provides steady chest compressions at 100 to 120 cycles per minute, with controlled depth from 5.0 to 5.5 cm and a fixed 50 percent duty cycle. The matching radiolucent backboard allows medical teams to perform angiography and emergency PCI without removing the CPR device. The machine pauses shortly every two minutes to support rhythm checking and defibrillation, and it restarts compression automatically after electric shocks.

The CPR machine supports long term outdoor rescue. It features 45 minute battery life and a dual oxygen supply system to ensure stable performance during extended missions. The built in dashboard shows real time data including compression depth, compression rate and chest recoil ratio. Audible alarms will trigger if recoil performance drops below 90 percent to help staff adjust band tension. Paired with defibrillator monitors through Bluetooth, the machine can record accurate timestamps of mechanical CPR in patient medical logs.

Technical Note: Operators should replace the load distributing band after 50 service cycles or once surface wear is found. Disposable adhesive liners on the backboard need to be replaced for every patient after rescue missions. This standardized replacement procedure helps maintain infection control and meet clinical safety regulations.

Configuring the Portable Ventilator for Advanced Airway Management

Ambuer outfits all advanced life support units with turbine powered portable ventilators that handle invasive and non invasive breathing support. Tidal volume adjusts between 50 mL and 2000 mL. The unit locks onto a fast detach mount inside ambulance patient areas and holds a lithium battery lasting four hours for transit care. Standard working modes cover volume controlled continuous mandatory ventilation, pressure controlled ventilation and synchronized intermittent mandatory ventilation with pressure support. A preset resuscitation mode serves non breathing patients, delivering 6 mL per kilogram tidal volume, 10 breaths each minute, full oxygen concentration and 5 cm water PEEP level.

The ventilator connects to defibrillator monitors and sends real time data including tidal volume, total minute ventilation, peak inhalation pressure and end tidal carbon dioxide for every breathing cycle. A main flow capnography sensor sits between endotracheal tubes and breathing circuits, supplying carbon dioxide curves and readings with response delay less than 150 ms. The high pressure warning defaults to 40 cm water for patients with pneumothorax or severe airway spasms, and paramedics may tweak the limit step by step in 1 cm water changes.

Technical Note: The oxygen mixing component requires calibration every three months with approved testing equipment at 21 percent and 100 percent oxygen levels. Check and dry the turbine intake filter after wet or rainy conditions. A soaked filter cuts peak inhalation flow by one quarter.

Equipping Trauma Intervention with Hemorrhage Control and Splinting

Ambuer places unified trauma first aid kits inside every advanced life support vehicle. Supplies are sorted by color coded sections: red for bleeding control, blue for airway tools, green for bone injury stabilization.

The red bleeding control section holds two combat style windlass tourniquets, kaolin coated hemostatic gauze, and a pelvic binder that delivers 30 kg surrounding compression force. The green fracture set includes vacuum splints for adults and children. These splints fit injured limbs tightly and turn solid once air is removed. Six sizes of adjustable rigid cervical collars are also included.

All ambulances use identical kit layouts. Staff training ensures paramedics can grab tourniquets within three seconds after opening the kit. During large scale injury events, multiple kits link together quickly via built in fast straps to form a dedicated trauma supply station. Disposable supplies carry RFID tags. An inventory scanner inside each ambulance alerts crews if any section lacks full supplies before work shifts begin.

Technical Note:
Tourniquet placement time and position must be written into patient records. A sticker marking a two hour tissue safety window is stuck on the patient’s forehead. Hemostatic gauze needs steady firm pressure for three full minutes. Short compression time often causes bleeding to restart once pressure lifts.

Coordinating On-Scene Data Transmission to Destination Hospital

Ambuer connects all advanced life support devices via a heavy duty onboard network hub. Data including ECG curves, defibrillation records, ventilation settings and CPR compression quality combines into one unified pre hospital patient file. Files transfer through 4G and 5G networks to target emergency departments.

Hospital dashboards receive patient data five minutes ahead of ambulance arrival. This allows trauma and cardiology teams to prepare catheter labs or large volume blood transfusion plans in advance.

The dashboard shows a continuous 15 minute timeline of rescue steps marked by different colors. Red stands for shock delivery, blue for airway intubation and yellow for medicine injection. A weighted system calculates a vital sign stability score so emergency nurses can judge patient severity quickly. After rescue tasks finish, full data saves to electronic medical files. Medical supervisors can replay records to check service quality.

Technical Note:
Stable data transmission needs 4G signal strength no weaker than -95 dBm. The system stores up to 30 minutes of data temporarily when network connection fails. The stability scoring model has passed tests on one thousand patient cases. Annual recalibration against real treatment results is required.

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