- A
cannula (/ˈkænjʊlə/ ;
Latin meaning 'little reed'; pl.:
cannulae or cannulas) is a tube that can be
inserted into the body,
often for the
delivery or...
-
between reaction vessels via
cannulae,
avoiding atmospheric contamination.
While the
syringes are not the same as
cannulae, the
techniques remain relevant...
-
operating theater.
Lines (e.g.,
peripheral IV
cannulae,
central lines such as
internal jugular cannulae) are
inserted for drug
administration and monitoring...
-
Another important issue is the
microbial colonisation of catheters, ECMO
cannulae and the oxygenator.
There are
several forms of ECMO; the two most common...
-
separate heat
exchanger is
required for the
cardioplegia line.
Multiple cannulae are sewn into the patient's body in a
variety of locations,
depending on...
- may
require heated humidified high-flow
therapy delivered through nasal cannulae, non-invasive ventilation, or in
severe cases mechanical ventilation through...
-
during colonoscopy).
Oxygen can be
insufflated into the nose by
nasal cannulae to ****ist in respiration.
Mechanical insufflation-exsufflation simulates...
- used form of
adult nasal cannula carries 1–3
litres of
oxygen per minute.
Cannulae with
smaller prongs intended for
infant or
neonatal use can
carry less...
-
purpose of the
injection being death. The
several explanations include:
cannulae are
sterilized and have
their quality heavily controlled during manufacture...
- a
short common limb
attached to the
female ****ing on the
intravenous cannulae. 3-way
connectors allow for "piggybacking", that is,
putting a
second infusion...