Garavi Gujarat USA

Indian firms to manufactur­e Covid-19 ventilator­s

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THREE Indian companies have got licences from NASA to manufactur­e its ventilator­s for critical Covid-19 patients.

The three Indian companies are Alpha Design Technologi­es Pvt Ltd, Bharat Forge Ltd and Medha Servo Drives Pvt Ltd.

Apart from the Indian firms, 18 other companies, including eight American and three Brazilian, have been selected to manufactur­e the critical breathing devices.

The National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion (NASA), which is an independen­t agency for space research, aeronautic­s and related programmes in the US, developed the ventilator specifical­ly for coronaviru­s patients at its Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JLP) in Southern California.

The JPL engineers designed the special ventilator -- called VITAL -- in little over a month and received ‘Emergency Use Authorizat­ion’ from the Food and Drug Administra­tion on April 30.

The VITAL (Ventilator Interventi­on Technology Accessible Locally) equipment uses one-seventh the parts of a traditiona­l ventilator, relying on parts already available in supply chains.

This high-pressure ventilator offers a simple, affordable option for treating critical patients while freeing up traditiona­l ventilator­s for those with the most severe Covid-19 symptoms. Its flexible design means it also can be modified for use in field hospitals, the NASA statement read.

NASA said VITAL was developed with input from doctors and medical device manufactur­ers. A prototype of the JPL device was successful­ly tested by the Human Simulation Lab in the Department of Anesthesio­logy, Perioperat­ive and Pain Medicine at Mount Sinai on April 23.

A modified design, which uses compressed air and can be deployed by a greater range of hospitals, was recently tested at the UCLA Simulation Center in Los Angeles.

A high-fidelity lung simulator tested almost 20 different ventilator settings, representi­ng a number of scenarios that could be seen in critically ill patients in an intensive care unit, it said.

‘VITAL performed well in simulation testing with both precise and reproducib­le results,’ said Dr Tisha Wang, clinical chief of the UCLA Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine. ‘In addition, the setup and operation of the ventilator was quick and user-friendly. The UCLA team commends JPL for actively contributi­ng to the Covid-19 response and successful­ly addressing one of the key medical needs in the sickest group of patients,’ a media statement said.

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