Abstract
The development by Dr. Hans Pasterkamp and his team at the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, of computer software for acoustic imaging of the chest originated in the need for a noninvasive, nonthreatening way to obtain information about lung function and lung disease in infants and children. Pasterkamp's team is developing a single computer program with potential applications in three areas: the measurement of lung sounds in addition to lung function, the multiple-site mapping of chest sounds to help identify the site of disease, and the assessment of upper airways, with potential use in the diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea. Computer-assisted acoustic imaging promises to augment and enhance more traditional methods of pulmonary testing.
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