Accession No

6374


Brief Description

Transrite III portable electrocardiograph (ECG), by Cambridge Instruments (India) Ltd., India, c. 1963


Origin

India


Maker

Cambridge Instruments (India) Ltd.


Class

medical; electrical


Earliest Date

1963


Latest Date

1975


Inscription Date


Material

plastic (perspex, at least 4 others); metal (at least 4 white metals); paper (card); paint


Dimensions

length 245 mm; breadth 245 mm; height 150 mm.


Special Collection


Provenance


Inscription

‘Cambridge’
(top)

‘TRANSRITE III MADE IN INDIA’
(top)

‘C|66058’
(written in pencil on piece of cardboard inside instrument, just above recording unit)


Description Notes

Transrite III portable electrocardiograph (ECG); Cambridge Instrument Company; India; c. 1963

Beige, moulded, plastic casing with several apertures. One aperture exposes the ‘patient lead’ which consists of several coiled, grey electrical leads. The leads would have originally lead to electrodes or other cardiographic accessories for the purpose of patient examination, but several of the wires have been cut. A second aperture reveals a grey, plastic covered control panel. Six controls exist, the first (moving left to right) has a missing plastic knob and is marked ‘0’, ‘I’, ‘II’, ‘III’, ‘aVr’, ‘aVl’, ‘aVf’, ‘V’ and ‘CR’; second is a switch marked ‘stop’ and ‘1mV’; third is a push button marked ‘÷2’; fourth has a missing plastic knob for an unmarked dial; fifth is a plastic knob moving over dial marked with increasing symbol; sixth has a missing plastic knob for a dial marked with four circuit symbols. A third aperture houses a recording unit which is covered, half with transparent perspex and have by a black plastic with ‘Cambridge’ etched in white on it’s surface. The recording unit consists of a metal ‘heated’ stylus suspended above a runway and small wheel that the recording paper one run over during recording.

Condition fair; incomplete (3 black plastic knobs are missing from the front control panel, electrodes missing from the end of the ‘patient lead’. and carrying case is missing that the Cambridge catalogue states is supplied with the instrument).


References


Events

Description
Electrocardiographs (ECGs) are medical instruments used to measure the rhythm at which the heart contracts and the relative strength of different parts of the heart muscle. Electrical impulses in the heart are created at the sinoatrial node – a ‘pacemaker’ tissue in the right atrium – and travel to the heart muscle. On receiving this impulse, a contraction of the muscle fibres is induced and blood is pumped. Electrodes placed on the skin of a patient measure the voltage at different sides of the heart muscle and the ECG subsequently measures the difference in voltage between pairs of electrodes. The product of these measurements is a cardiogram – a record that displays an interpretation of the electrical activity of the heart over time. ECG’s are particularly useful for the diagnosis of irregular heartbeat rhythms caused by damage to the conductive tissue in the heart or by an inadequacy or abundance of electrolytes, such as Potassium and other dissolved salts. However, it is not capable of measuring all aspects of muscle activity in the heart and is ineffective in measuring pumping ability in comparison to echocardiographic methods.

Although technologies that recorded electrical traces of the heartbeat had been developed at the end of the nineteenth-century, Willem Eithoven’s String Galvanometer was found to be capable of more sensitive measurements than its predecessors. Eithoven characterised several ECG measurements, described electrocardiographic features of several cardiovascular disorders, and was later awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his discovery.

The Cambridge Scientific Instrument Company developed their first ECG in 1912 based on Eithoven’s design. However, the instrument covered a floor space of 6ft by 3ft and weighed 336lb. It was far from portable and one of the most astonishing elements of the history of the ECG is the shift from a cumbersome piece of equipment used by the hospital specialist to the portable instrument of the general clinician. The CSI manufactured its first ECG with a valve amplifier in 1952. Named the ‘Electrite’, it had a heated stylus that recorded heart activity on wax paper by evaporating wax on the recording paper to reveal a dark line where the hot stylus had travelled, thus tracing its movement. However an instrument that utilised the same heated stylus, but replaced the valve with a transistor-based amplifier, superseded the ‘Electrite’. Named the ‘Transrite’, this instrument was remodelled in 1963 and became the ‘Transrite III’. It was designed to be portable, sold in a carry case and able to run on batteries. The product catalogue even reports that it is capable of being used in the high ambient temperatures or more tropical climates. The exact date of manufacture of this particular ECG is unknown, as are its origins and specific use.
16/09/2009
Created by: M.A. Coxhead on 16/09/2009


FM:44362

Images (Click to view full size):