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Table 2 Summary of EIT devices used in the papers discussed in the review

From: Electrical impedance tomography in perioperative medicine: careful respiratory monitoring for tailored interventions

Study

Device

Commercially available (Y/N)

Number of electrodes

Image reconstruction type

Frierichs, 2016

Goe-MF II EIT device (CareFusion, Höchberg, Germany)

N

16

GREIT; Back-projection algorithm (Krause, 2014)

Vogt, 2012

Vogt, 2016

Krause, 2014

Frerichs, 2019

Bläser, 2014

Erlandsson, 2006

Dräger/GoeMFII, Lübeck, Germany

N

Nestler, 2017

PulmoVista 500; Dräger Medical, Lübeck, Germany

Y

16

Eronia, 2017

Zhao, 2018

Grieco, 2016

Becher, 2018

Schaefer, 2014

EIT Evaluation Kit 2, Dräger Medical, Lübeck, Germany

N

32

Steinmann, 2008

Zhao, 2009

Zhao, 2013

Pereira, 2018

Enlight 1800, (Timpel, Brazil)

Y

32

da Silva Ramos, 2018

Spadaro 2018

Swisstom BB2, Swisstom AG, Landquart, Switzerland

Y

32

Karagiannidis, 2018

Braun, 2018

Reinius 2015

Enlight impedance tomography monitor (Timpel, Brasil)

N

32

 

Yoshida, 2013

Enlight impedance tomography monitor (Dixtal, Brasil)

N

32

3-D finite element mesh and a linearized sensitivity-matrix algorithm

Alves, 2014

Vonk-Noordegraaf, 2000

Smit, 2002

Sheffield Applied Potential Tomograph (DAS-01P portable data acquisition system, mark I, IBEES, Sheffield, UK)

N

16

Maisch, 2011

Enlight (Dixtal, Sao Paulo, Brazil)

N

32

Karsten, 2014

EIT (Dräger Medical AG, Germany)

N

32

Rossi F, 2013

Enlight® technology model DX-1800 (Dixtal, Sao Paulo, Brazil)

N

16

3-D finite element mesh

De La Oliva, 2017

Customized textile belt and a computed tomography-based patient-specific 3-dimensional chest model (Swisstom, Landquart, Switzerland

N

Frerichs 2019

Goe-MF II EIT system; Viasys Healthcare, Höchberg, Germany

N

  1. In the table are reported the devices, number of electrodes, commercial availability and reconstruction algorithm of the EIT devices used in the papers discussed in the current review