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Electromagnetic High-Frequency Chest Wall Oscillation on Pulmonary Mucus Clearance in Patients With Impaired Self-Expectoration
Sponsor: Pusan National University Yangsan Hospital
Summary
This exploratory study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of an electromagnetic high-frequency, low-strain chest wall oscillation device for enhancing pulm
Official title: Effects of Electromagnetic High-Frequency Chest Wall Oscillation on Pulmonary Mucus Clearance in Patients With Impaired Self-Expectoration: An Investigator-Initiated, Single-Center, Prospective, Exploratory Study
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
45
Start Date
2025-09-23
Completion Date
2026-12-31
Last Updated
2026-01-16
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
CAREWAY
CAREWAY , A high-frequency chest wall oscillation device in the form of a vest (Todaki) is used in patients who require clearance of mucus retained in the lungs, providing high-frequency chest wall vibrations to dislodge sputum adherent to the bronchial walls and facilitate removal of secretions.
EM HFLS CWSE(Nine-Motor)
This bed-type medical device delivers vibrational energy across the chest wall for patients with respiratory conditions aiding in the clearance of accumulated sputum in the airways and lungs. It incorporates nine electromagnetic high-frequency, low-strain vibration motors to produce distributed vibrational energy, which is applied via the chest wall oscillation plate to multiple lung regions, enhancing comprehensive sputum clearance through multi-point oscillation
EM HFLS CWSE(Single-motor)
This bed-type medical device applies vibrational energy to the chest wall of patients with respiratory diseases , to facilitate sputum clearance from the airways and lungs. The device employs a single electromagnetic high-frequency, low-strain vibration motor that generates vibrational energy, which transmits through the chest wall oscillation plate directly to the patient's chest, promoting effective mucus mobilization via targeted oscillations.
Locations (1)
Rehab lab, Pusan National University Yangsan Hospital
Yangsan, Gyeongsangnam-do, South Korea