Holiday Travel Tips
When you have COPD, or any other lung disease requiring supplemental oxygen, preparing for holiday travel is a little different. We are here to help make your travel as easy as possible this season.
Portable oxygen concentrators (POCs) are devices developed in response to demand for a lightweight, portable source of supplemental oxygen.[1] Pulse dose delivery allows concentrators to deliver medical grade oxygen all day, every day while remaining convenient to carry.
To understand the mechanics of pulse dose therapy, knowing the meaning of a few key terms is helpful.
Pulse dose mechanisms utilize an oxygen conserver and other technology to deliver oxygen to the patient based on breathing rate and other factors. The sensor determines when the patient begins inhaling and delivers the oxygen pulse/bolus at that moment, which is most productive[2], meaning the patient gets the oxygen they need, when they need it.
Pulse dosing is more akin to drinking water from a glass with a straw instead of a fountain. The intake will be based purely on the amount and intensity of sips. The bolus of pulse dose oxygen is measured in milliliters per breath, rather than liters per minute.[3]
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The traditional home oxygen therapy is low-flow oxygen, comprising a continuous oxygen flow delivered from a stationary oxygen tank via nasal cannula.[4] Continuous flow (CF) delivers oxygen at a constant adjustable rate, regardless of the user’s breathing, measured in liters per minute.[5]
This method of delivery is simple but inherently inefficient. The oxygen delivered throughout expiration is wasted, with the exception of any oxygen which may ‘pool’ for subsequent inhalation, and may still be potentially wasted. Also wasted is the oxygen flow during late inhalation, which reaches only the conduit airways rather than gas-exchanging lung units.[4]
Think of it like a water fountain: If an individual stands in front of a water fountain flowing at 1 liter per minute, they don’t actually drink one full liter of water in a minute. The amount of water a person drinks is determined by the number of sips and the size of the sip. The rest of the water is not consumed. The same applies to continuous flow oxygen; the net amount of oxygen inhaled is a combination of the flow rate, the number of breaths and the size of the breaths.

If instead, the oxygen is delivered only intermittently, at those times productive for gas exchange, oxygen is conserved[4], and patients get the oxygen they need, when they need it.
The sensor determines when the patient begins inhaling and delivers the oxygen pulse/bolus at that moment, which is most productive[2], meaning the patient gets the oxygen they need, when they need it.

Inogen® POCs feature proprietary Intelligent Delivery Technology, a reliable pulse-dose based algorithm designed to minimize missed breaths. Inogen’s Intelligent Delivery Technology is designed to deliver oxygen effectively and efficiently whether you are sleeping, at rest, or exerting yourself. With patented conserver technology, an Inogen® portable oxygen concentrator ensures oxygen is delivered within the first 250 milliseconds of inspiration, where oxygen has the most effect on lung gas exchange.
Pulse dose oxygen can be delivered using a lightweight, battery powered oxygen concentrator which delivers an oxygen pulse only when an inhalation is detected. These portable devices provide a mobile oxygen source resulting in up to 12 hours of continuous use, depending on the model.[5]
Oxygen use has extended from inpatient to outpatient settings for patients with chronic pulmonary diseases and complications of hypoxemia. Pulse delivery of oxygen, such as that delivered by POCs, can provide prescribed oxygen needs in lightweight systems. Additionally, Inogen® oxygen concentrators may offer the patient one single solution[6] for long term oxygen therapy.
When you have COPD, or any other lung disease requiring supplemental oxygen, preparing for holiday travel is a little different. We are here to help make your travel as easy as possible this season.
For most oxygen therapy patients, learning how to use a nasal cannula as comfortably as possible is an important step in easily incorporating oxygen therapy into their lives. But for many people, figuring out how to wear the oxygen nose piece properly and learning what to do with all the tubing can be confusing. If you are unsure where to put the excess tubing and whether your nasal cannula prongs go up or down, let us walk you through how to wear your nasal cannula comfortably and find the right fit. Read on to learn how to choose the appropriate type of nasal cannula, how to put on a nasal cannula and how to ensure the oxygen nose piece fits properly. After that, you can read some of our tips to help ensure you have the most comfortable nasal cannula possible.
Transient nocturnal desaturation, also known as nocturnal hypoxemia, is defined as a temporary drop in oxygen saturation during sleep. Patients diagnosed with sleep disordered breathing from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) are at a greater risk for nocturnal desaturation. A substantial number of patients will have both COPD and OSA.[1] Transient Nocturnal Desaturation is a significant problem in COPD, affecting a relatively large number of COPD patients. In fact, one study suggests that 27-70% of COPD patients with daytime oxygen saturation levels of 90-95% experience substantial desaturation at night, particularly during a period of sleep known as rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. In people with severe COPD, desaturation during sleep is even more profound than desaturation during exercise, which is also common.[2] OSA is defined by intermittent collapse of the upper airway, which results in repetitive hypoxemia and arousal. It is estimated that OSA occurs in 4% of American men and 2% of women, meaning almost 10 million people in the United States are affected, although that is probably an underestimate. Obesity is a risk factor for the development of OSA. As obesity rates have risen over the last 15 years, the current prevalence of OSA is almost certainly much greater.[1] A substantial number of patients will have both OSA and COPD. This “overlap syndrome” causes more severe nocturnal hypoxemia than either disease alone. This common combination of OSA and COPD has important implications for diagnosis, treatment, and outcome.[1]
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