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  1. Glenn Allan Millikan (May 23, 1906 – May 25, 1947) was an American physiologist, inventor and mountaineer. Millikan invented the first practical, portable oximeter in 1940–1942. [2] The Millikan oximeter "is generally acknowledged as the beginning of oximetry in physiology and clinical medicine."

  2. 25 de jun. de 2010 · Glenn A. Millikan joined the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine faculty to head the Department of Physiology in 1946. He was educated in Chicago, at Harvard University, at several German universities, and at Cambridge University, England.

  3. Glenn A. Millikan joined the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine faculty to head the Department of Physiology in 1946. He was educated in Chicago, at Harvard University, at several German universities, and at Cambridge University, England.

  4. When Glenn Allan Millikan was born on 23 May 1906, in Chicago, Cook, Illinois, United States, his father, Robert Andrews Millikan, was 38 and his mother, Greta Erwin Blanchard, was 29. He married Frances Clare Mallory in 1938, in Surrey, England, United Kingdom.

    • Male
    • Frances Clare Mallory
  5. 20 de oct. de 2020 · Pulse oximetry (pulse ox) is an expedient and accurate tool to measure noninvasively the oxygenation status of any patient in whom this might be a clinical concern. It was developed during World War II by Glenn Allan Millikan, an American physiologist and mountaineer. 1 The term “oximetry” is

    • Walter A Schrading, Ben McCafferty, Jordan Grove, David B Page
    • 10.1002/emp2.12292
    • 2020
    • 2020/12
  6. Glenn Allan Millikan (23 de mayo de 1906 - 25 de mayo de 1947) fue un fisiólogo, inventor y alpinista estadounidense. Millikan inventó el primer oxímetro portátil práctico en 1940-1942. El oxímetro Millikan "es generalmente reconocido como el comienzo de la oximetría en fisiología y medicina clínica".

  7. journal.chestnet.org › article › S0012-3692(16)30698Pulse Oximetry - CHEST

    Pulse Oximetry. During World War II, a young physiologist named Glenn Allen Millikan developed a light-weight optical device which, when placed upon the earlobe, could provide a noninvasive, continuous estimate of SaO 2.