A Window into the Functioning of Your Lungs
See Your Breath gives you a window into the functioning of your lungs through the sound of your breathing.
You record your breathing for 15 seconds and "See Your Breath" shows you a recording curve that is derived from the proportions of different tones found in your recording. Next we will explain how to use the recording curves.
Your recordings may look one way when your breathing is normal and another way when your breathing is troubled.
We see four recordings made on one occasion in quick succession.
We have added three more recordings made in quick succession on a different occasion when the user was experiencing lung congestion.
One representative recording made during "troubled" breathing has been colored red by the user and one representative recording made during the "normal" session has been colored green by the user. The red and green recordings form landmarks for judging new recordings.
This new recording in black looks like the green "normal" recording.
The second black recording looks like the "troubled" red recording.
The third black recording looks like it is somewhere between the "normal" green recording and the "troubled" red recording. Such a recording may give you an early actionable warning that trouble is ahead.
"See Your Breath" allows you to sort out your breathing patterns – which are fleeting – in a clear and permanent way that you judge by eye. The changes you see in your recordings may help you control lung problems.
"See Your Breath" allows you to sort out your breathing patterns – which are fleeting – in a clear and permanent way that you judge by eye. The changes you see in your recordings may help you control lung problems.
Disclaimer: This mobile app is intended for informational, educational, and research purposes only. It is not, and is not intended, for use in the diagnosis of disease or other conditions, or in the cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease, in humans or other animals. Health care providers should exercise their own independent clinical judgment when using the mobile app in conjunction with patient care.