The first modern and practical respirator nicknamed the "iron lung" was invented by Harvard medical researchers Philip Drinker and Louis Agassiz Shaw in 1927. The inventors used an iron box and two vacuum cleaners to build their prototype respirator. Almost the length of a subcompact car, the iron lung exerted a push-pull motion on the chest.
In 1927, the first iron lung was installed at Bellevue hospital in New York City. The first patients of the iron lung were polio sufferers with chest paralysis.
Later, John Emerson improved upon Philip Drinker’s invention and invented an iron lung that cost half as much to manufacture. http://inventors.about.com/od/istartinventions/a/iron_lung.htm
2 comments:
This is interesting. I have always wondered what one looked like.
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Hey, thats pretty interesting. I've forgotten that something like this used to exist. For someone to really live in something like that is hard to imagine. Good grief!
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