Hamilton T1 Ventilator

Circuit Leak or Disconnect Alarms

Asset Type

Ventilator

Manufacturer

Hamilton

Model

T1

What This Guide Helps With

This guide assists Clinical Engineering in troubleshooting circuit leak or disconnect alarms on a Hamilton T1 ventilator. These alarms typically indicate loss of pressure or volume in the breathing circuit and are most often caused by loose connections, circuit damage, or setup issues before assuming internal faults.

Step-by-Step Troubleshooting

Ensure Patient Safety First

Inspect the Entire Breathing Circuit

Check Patient Interface (ET Tube / Mask)

Verify Proper Circuit Assembly

Inspect Filters and Water Traps

Check for Excess Condensation

Run Pre-Use Check / Leak Test

Verify Alarm Settings and Sensitivity

Swap with a Known-Good Circuit

Check Flow Sensor and Connections

If the Problem Persists

If all external causes have been ruled out and the ventilator continues to alarm:

Recognizing when the issue is no longer external is an important part of proper troubleshooting.

Clinical Use Tip

Always transition the patient to another ventilator before troubleshooting leak alarms. Loss of pressure or volume can directly impact ventilation and patient safety.

Work Order Documentation (CCR Method)

CCR = Complaint, Cause, Resolution

Complaint

What was reported by the clinical staff.

Example:
“Ventilator alarming for circuit leak/disconnect during use.”

Cause

What was observed during troubleshooting.

Example:
“Loose connection identified at expiratory limb and minor crack in breathing circuit tubing.”

Resolution

What action was taken.

Example:
“Re-secured all connections, replaced breathing circuit, and verified proper operation with leak test.”

Helpful Details to Include

Final Thought

Circuit leak alarms are most often caused by simple external issues that can be quickly identified with a systematic approach. Prioritizing patient safety, starting with basic checks, and knowing when to escalate ensures effective and professional troubleshooting.

That is successful troubleshooting.

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