3.1 — Spo2 Assistant

  • Erratic or noisy readout:
  • Persistent discrepancy vs. clinical oximeter:
  • Alerts not firing:

  • SpO2 Assistant 3.1 is a hypothetical (or unspecified) software/firmware tool for monitoring peripheral blood oxygen saturation (SpO2) and related metrics. This guide covers typical features, setup, interpretation, troubleshooting, privacy/accuracy considerations, and best practices relevant to a SpO2 monitoring assistant versioned 3.1.

    If you meant a specific commercial product, say which one and I’ll tailor this to it.


    | Item | Typical Value / Action | |---|---:| | Normal SpO2 (adult) | 95–100% | | Concerning SpO2 | <90% (seek care) | | Perfusion Index concern | <0.5–1.0% | | Spot-check wait | 10–30 seconds | | Common error sources | Motion, nail polish, ambient light, cold fingers | | Default alert example | 92% SpO2 | spo2 assistant 3.1


    If you want this tailored to a specific vendor’s SpO2 Assistant 3.1 (screenshots, exact menus, or policy text), tell me the product name and platform (iOS/Android/Windows). Also indicate whether to include step-by-step screenshots or export templates.


    Users can set three personalized zones:

    Unlike basic alarms, SpO2 Assistant 3.1 delays the alert for 45 seconds to avoid reacting to transient dips (e.g., holding your breath briefly).

  • Software Crashes on Startup:
  • Data is All Zeros:
  • Within 2-3% of a clinical oximeter for users with normal perfusion, but it fails on dark skin tones or cold fingers. For medical decisions, Bluetooth hardware is strongly recommended. Erratic or noisy readout:

    This software does not work on its own; it requires a compatible hardware device.

    Note: SpO2 Assistant 3.1 drops support for legacy serial-port oximeters. Users with older hardware should remain on version 2.9. Persistent discrepancy vs