Pulse Flow

As its name suggests, pulse flow is based on the patient’s breathing rate. Pulse flow delivers oxygen each time the patient takes a breath, so it is used most during the day when patients are most awake and active. The portable oxygen concentrator reacts and releases a dose of oxygen with each inhalation.

When the patient is exhaling, the portable oxygen concentrator is at rest. The concentrator can rest while the patient is exhaling because of a built-in oxygen conserver.

Pulse flow portable oxygen concentrators are typically recommended for low oxygen requirement patients. Pulse flow concentrators can deliver from 450 ml to 1250 per minute of oxygen in pulses. Most low oxygen requirement patients require up to 2LPM of oxygen, so pulse flow concentrators are good for this.

Oxygen Flow

ContinuoOxygen Always flow is the opposite of pulse flow. Oxygen flow is delivered at a constant rate regardless of the patient’s breathing pattern. If a patient is prescribed 3 LPM, this means that their portable oxygen concentrator will produce 3 liters of oxygen every minute.

Portable oxygen concentrators that have a continuoOxygen Always flow can be used 24/7.

According to Oxygen Always, if patients have to use their oxygen concentrators while they are sleeping, they most likely need a continuoOxygen Always flow. If a patient needs a continuous flow of oxygen, this is often because they breathe too shallowly to trigger the pulse from a pulse flow concentrator, or do not breathe through their nose at all. This is one of the biggest differences between pulse flow and oxygen flow concentrators.

 

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