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Customer benefits

Ventilation in harmony with the baby
Sensitive, accurate synchronisation and continuous adaptation features work together to provide the necessary ventilator support, allow optimal levels of spontaneous breathing, facilitate the weaning process and protect the baby from adverse effects such as volutrauma or atelectasis.
Pressure support ventilation – the standard for neonates
Our pressure support ventilation (PSV) features automatic leak compensation and gives the infant more control over the breathing pattern by synchronising inspiration and expiration. Continuous, automatic leak compensation maintains optimal inspiration times.
Consistent volume guarantee
The Volume Guarantee (VG) feature combines the advantages of pressure and volume controlled ventilation. Here, a constant, preset tidal volume is maintained regardless of the strength of spontaneous breathing or changes in respiratory lung conditions. Volume Guarantee ensures sufficient ventilation while avoiding the risk of volutrauma.
BabyFlow nasal CPAP
The Babylog® 8000 plus gives you all the advantages of non-invasive support with an easy to use nasal CPAP system especially designed for the smallest patients. The unique mask design circumvents the pitfalls of the past and enables stable, atraumatic CPAP delivery.
High frequency ventilation*
The Dräger Babylog® 8000 plus gives you the option of High Frequency Ventilation (HFV) at the touch of a button, which can be used in combination with CPAP or IMV modes. The ventilator accurately measures even the smallest tidal volumes, letting you fine tune your therapy to suit your patients’ needs (*not available in the USA).
Easy operation, ergonomic design
Highly user oriented, a high-visibility monitor displays your choice of numeric, graphic, real-time or trend data. The combination of user-adjustable monitoring functions and intelligent alarms facilitates workflow and lets the operator concentrate on caring for the baby.

Product Information

Brochure Babylog 8000 plus (PDF)

The secret of harmonious breathing

Product information: Babylog 8000 plus (PDF)

The Babylog 8000 plus is intended for the ventilation of premature babies, newborns and infants with a body weight of up to 20 kg.

Training

Webinar - Neonatal ventilation
(56 MB / ZIP)

Recorded webinar Neonatal Ventilation conducted by Dr. Martin Keszler. (Incl. presentation in PDF format.)

Basics of Respiration and Ventilation Cover
Dräger Academy – Basics of Respiration and Ventilation

But how exactly does breathing work?
And what happens when a person actually "runs out of air" and must be ventilated?
Click on the link to our eLearning program to learn more.

Accessories

accessories_d-7383-2009
Complete Accessories Portfolio

For product details, please see the pdf of the accessories catalogues.

Accessories Catalogue (PDF)

Breathing Systems and Accessories, Monitoring Accessories, Perinatal Care Accessories, Sensors Oxygen/Flow, Soda lime, Ward Equipment

Downloads

Webinar - Neonatal ventilation
(56 MB / ZIP)

Recorded webinar Neonatal Ventilation conducted by Dr. Martin Keszler. (Incl. presentation in PDF format.)

Basics of Respiration and Ventilation Cover
Dräger Academy – Basics of Respiration and Ventilation

But how exactly does breathing work?
And what happens when a person actually "runs out of air" and must be ventilated?
Click on the link to our eLearning program to learn more.

Related Products

Literature

A practical guide to neonatal volume guarantee ventilation

Journal of Perinatology

Article “A practical guide to neonatal volume guarantee ventilation”
This article written by C Klingenberg, KI Wheeler, PG Davis and CJ Morley was published in the September 2011 issue of the Journal of Perinatology.

Article Link
Booklet: Ventilation modes in intensive care (PDF)

With the compilation of a common nomenclature for all patient groups in intensive care, anesthesia and during monitoring, Dräger Medical makes an important contribution to these efforts. Dräger Medical recognizes the necessity of practical clarity when describing modes.

Booklet: Non-invasive ventilation: A century of experience (PDF)

Since the first use of positive end-expiratory pressure ventilation in the late 1930's non-invasive ventilation (NIV) has come a very long way.

Booklet: High-Frequency Ventilation (PDF)

Basics and Practical Application

Booklet: Volume Guarantee (PDF)

New Approaches in Volume Controlled Ventilation for Neonates

Booklet: Pressure Support Ventilation (PDF)

A New Triggered Ventilation Mode for Neonates