The inventions described below relate to emergency medical devices and methods and the resuscitation of cardiac arrest patients.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is a well-known and valuable method of first aid used to resuscitate people who have suffered from cardiac arrest. CPR requires repetitive chest compressions to squeeze the heart and the thoracic cavity to pump blood through the body. Artificial respiration, such as mouth-to-mouth breathing or a bag mask apparatus, is used to supply air to the lungs. When a first aid provider performs manual chest compression effectively, blood flow in the body is about 25% to 30% of normal blood flow. However, even experienced paramedics cannot maintain adequate chest compressions for more than a few minutes. Hightower, et al., Decay In Quality Of Chest Compressions Over Time, 26 Ann. Emerg. Med. 300 (September 1995). Thus, CPR is not often successful at sustaining or reviving the patient. Nevertheless, if chest compressions could be adequately maintained, then cardiac arrest victims could be sustained for extended periods of time. Occasional reports of extended CPR efforts (45 to 90 minutes) have been reported, with the victims eventually being saved by coronary bypass surgery. See Tovar, et al., Successful Myocardial Revascularization and Neurologic Recovery, 22 Texas Heart J. 271 (1995).
In efforts to provide better blood flow and increase the effectiveness of bystander resuscitation efforts, various mechanical devices have been proposed for performing CPR. In one variation of such devices, a belt is placed around the patient's chest and the belt is used to effect chest compressions. Our own patents, Mollenauer et al., Resuscitation device having a motor driven belt to constrict/compress the chest, U.S. Pat. No. 6,142,962 (Nov. 7, 2000); Sherman, et al., CPR Assist Device with Pressure Bladder Feedback, U.S. Pat. No. 6,616,620 (Sep. 9, 2003); Sherman et al., Modular CPR assist device, U.S. Pat. No. 6,066,106 (May 23, 2000); and Sherman et al., Modular CPR assist device, U.S. Pat. No. 6,398,745 (Jun. 4, 2002), and our application Ser. No. 09/866,377 filed on May 25, 2001, show chest compression devices that compress a patient's chest with a belt. Each of these patents is hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety. Our commercial device, sold under the trademark AUTOPULSE®, is described in some detail in our prior patents, including Jensen, Lightweight Electro-Mechanical Chest Compression Device, U.S. Pat. No. 7,347,832 (Mar. 25, 2008) and Quintana, et al., Methods and Devices for Attaching a Belt Cartridge to a Chest Compression Device, U.S. Pat. No. 7,354,407 (Apr. 8, 2008).
These devices have proven to be valuable alternatives to manual CPR, and evidence is mounting that they provide circulation superior to that provided by manual CPR, and also result in higher survival rates for cardiac arrest victims. The AUTOPULSE® CPR devices are intended for use in the field, to treat victims of cardiac arrest during transport to a hospital, where the victims are expected to be treated by extremely well-trained emergency room physicians. The AutoPulse® CPR device is uniquely configured for this use: The components are stored in a lightweight backboard, about the size of a boogie board, which is easily carried to a patient and slipped underneath the patients thorax. The important components include a motor, drive shaft and drive spool, computer control system and battery.
In certain in-hospital situations, it is desirable to provide chest compressions with the AutoPulse® CPR device while imaging the patient. For example, doctors may wish to continue CPR compressions, or limit any interruptions in compressions, while the patient is placed within advanced imaging devices such an MRI device, fluoroscope system or CT scanner, X-Ray machine or any such imaging device to image the thorax, heart or coronary arteries of the patient, or the head of the patient. This may be needed to assess trauma, visualize a catheter placement, or diagnose organ function. The current AutoPulse® CPR device can fit within the imaging device, but the number of metal components which would thus fall within the imaging area of the imaging device would make it difficult to obtain a usable image. The metal components create such large and numerous artifacts that the patient's anatomy is poorly visible in imaging devices. Under fluoroscopy, the anterior/posterior view is the most clinically useful view, but is totally disrupted by artifacts caused by the metal components. Under MRI, no images can be obtained at all, while under CT scanning, some useful images may be obtained but they are typically obscured with significant artifacts. When in use, the AutoPulse motor, drive spool and chassis is disposed beneath the heart of the patient, and this creates significant artifact in any scan of the thorax. When in use, the AutoPulse battery is disposed beneath the head of the patient, and this creates significant artifact in any scan of the head. For other mechanical CPR systems, such as the LUCAS® system, the artifact in thorax images is significantly greater. In addition, chest mounted CPR systems, in which significant large mechanisms are mounted above the chest, do not fit into the gantry of many imaging devices (the gantry is the donut-shaped part of the CT scanner that supports moving components as they pass over the patient project and detect x-rays to create a CT image). This includes the LUCAS® device and the THUMPER® mechanical CPR devices.
The devices and methods shown below provide for an automated CPR with a device that can be used within an imaging device without creating substantial metal artifacts. The CPR device is based on the AutoPulse® device described in our previous patents, modified in that the backboard is substantially lengthened to extend well out of the imaging field of an CT Scanner or MRI imaging system, and the motor, battery and control systems are disposed outside of the imaging field. The linkage between the belt driving apparatus and the compression belt proper is provided through a system of straps and spindles which translate inferior/superior movement of belt at the point of attachment to the belt driving apparatus to anterior/posterior force on that portion of the belt disposed over the chest of the patient. The belt may be driven by a pneumatic piston with small volumes of air at pressures regularly supplied in hospitals, or it may be driven by the motor and batteries described in relation to the AutoPulse® CPR device in our prior patents.
The piston driven system, though ideally suited for the CPR device to be used in conjunction with an imaging device, can also be used as a primary power source in an compression belt CPR device similar to the AutoPulse® CPR device. Also, the spindle arrangement which transforms superior/inferior movement of the piston can be implemented in a short board version for use in the field.
The pull straps 5L and 5R continue with superior/inferior extension portions 27L and 27R that runs along the superior/inferior (head-to-toe vis-à-vis the patient) axis of the device to join an actuator rod 28 also extending along the superior/inferior axis of the device to a pneumatic piston 29. The pneumatic actuator and actuator rod, and the superior/inferior extension portions of the belt extend inferiorly/superiorly, relative to the patient, from the second set of spindles. The pneumatic piston is operable to pull the rod superiorly (upward relative to the patient) and thereby tighten the band around the patient and push the rod inferiorly (downward relative to the patient). The pneumatic piston is supplied with fluid through hoses 30 and 31, communicating with a pressurized fluid source 32 through valve 33. The valve may be controlled through control system 34. Using commonly available 150 psi (10.2 atmospheres) air supply, and an actuator with a volume of approximately 10 cubic inches (about 164 milliliters) or larger, and a stroke of about 6 inches (about 15.24 cm), the piston can pull and push the rod and thus pull and release the straps, such that the compression belt is tightened about the patient at a rate sufficient for CPR and a depth sufficient for CPR (i.e., at resuscitative rate and depth).
The superior/inferior tension and movement of the superior/inferior portions of straps 5L and 5R (labeled as 27L and 27R) is transformed to lateral tension and movement of the lateral portions of straps 5L and 5R by threading the straps downwardly from the patient, around the lateral spindles 9L and 9R to guide them medially (inwardly) around spindles 35L and 35R which are disposed medially to the lateral spindles and also oriented parallel to the superior/inferior axis of the device (generally parallel to the patient's spine, and with their axes horizontal in normal use). The straps are routed over the top of these medially located horizontal spindles, and then twist while running toward, and then inside centrally located, vertically oriented spindles 36L and 36R, and thereafter running to join the actuator rod at joint 37. The combined length of the superior/interior portions 27L and 27R of the strap, and the rod 28 (if it is MRI/CT compatible) are sufficient such that any MRI/CT incompatible or artifact-creating structures are well outside the imaging field. The spindles and any necessary hardware to secure them to the structure of the backboard are preferably made of MRI/CT compatible plastic, wood, metal (aluminum), ceramic or composite material. In place of the spindles, other translating means may be used to translate the superior/inferior movement of the linear actuator into downward tension on the pull straps and load distributing band, including gears, actuators and pulleys, though the pull straps and spindle arrangement shown in
To effectuate the slack take-up function disclosed in our U.S. Pat. No. 6,616,620, the position of the actuator rod 28 can be detected with a linear encoder system, with an index on the actuator rod and a nearby encoder reader mounted within the platform, with an linear variable differential transformer (LVDT), string potentiometer, or other means for detecting the linear position of the actuator rod, or with the load cells. The point at which the belt has been tightened and there is no slack in the belt around the patient, and the belt is merely snug about the patient but has not exerted significant compressive force on the patient's chest, may be detected by sensing a rapid increase in the actuator pressure, a slow-down in the movement of the actuator rod (as determined by the encoder, LVDT or other means for detecting the linear position of the actuator rod, or a sharp initial increase in load on the load plate and load sensor. The control system may be programmed to detect such signals indicative of the point at which slack has been taken up, and establish the corresponding position of the actuator rod as a starting point for compressions.
The device of
The actuator and actuator rod may be operated as necessary to provide chest compressions, which may be halted momentarily for ventilation pauses normally associated with CPR. During these ventilation pauses, MRI or CT imaging system may be operated to image the patient, which entails broadcast of significant electromagnetic radiation (RF or X-rays, as the case may be), and imaging may be halted during compressions performed per ACLS guidelines. With appropriate coordination between the imaging device and the CPR device, the images may be taken at predetermined points in the compression cycle (such as complete relaxation of the belt, or peak compression of the patient), to obtain rough images or pilot images, and, depending on the frame rate of the imaging device, suitable diagnostically useful images.
To achieve such coordination, appropriate communications hardware and software in both the compression device and the imaging device can be used, and the compression device can send signals corresponding to the compression period/ventilation pause, or corresponding to individual compression cycles. In the first instance, the CPR controller or associated communications device will send signals to the imaging system that indicate that the CPR device is actively engaged in applying a series of chest compressions or is suspending chest compressions to allow for imaging (and ventilation) to be performed, and the imaging system or associated communication systems will receive the signals, and the control system of the imaging device, programmed appropriately, will suspend imaging during the period in which compressions are applied, and resume imaging during the period of suspension of compressions. In the second instance, the CPR controller or associated communications device will send signals to the imaging system that indicate the point of the compression cycle (that is, whether CPR device is holding the belt relaxed, is tightening the belt, is holding the belt tight, or is loosening the belt) and the imaging system or associated communication systems will receive the signals, and the control system of the imaging device, programmed appropriately, will suspend imaging during periods in each compression cycle, and resume imaging during other periods in each compression cycle, such that compression do not need to be suspended for imaging pauses or ventilation pauses. In this second instance, images may be obtained, for example, only during complete relaxation, or only during high-compression holds, in which the patient is expected to be stationary and the thorax quiescent. The acquisition of images may be gated, based on the input of a compression sensor (such as a load sensor under the patient's thorax, on the platform) or from a signal from the controller, that indicates that specific point in compression, such as the start of compress, start of the hold period, start of release, or end of a compression cycle (attainment of the slack take-up position of the belt), such that imaged are obtained at specific intervals (such as every ten milliseconds) after the chosen gating point in the compression cycle. For imaging systems with sufficiently high frame rates, useful images can be obtained. For imaging systems with very high frame rates (30 frames per second currently achievable with fluoroscopy), the compression device may be operated continuously and images may be obtained throughout the compression cycle, because such systems have been shown to image even a beating heart with no motion artifact. The operations described above can be accomplished with a single computer control system operable to control both the compression device and the imaging system, or by programming the control systems of each to communicate with each other.
Thus, the compression system can be operated to provide multiple CPR chest compressions in multiple periods separated by ventilation pauses, while performing the imaging during these ventilation pauses. The compression system can be operated to provide multiple CPR chest compressions, where each compression constitutes a compression cycle of tightening and relaxation and hold periods, and performing the imaging during hold periods. With sufficiently fast imaging systems, imaging may be performed throughout the compression cycle.
Several variations of the construction disclosed above provide the benefits of the various inventive aspects.
While described in relation to its use with imaging devices such as MRI and CT imaging systems, the CPR chest compression device may be used with any diagnostic device for which the presence of metal, motors, circuitry and batteries obscure the diagnostic information or otherwise disrupt the diagnostic method. Thus, while the preferred embodiments of the devices and methods have been described in reference to the environment in which they were developed, they are merely illustrative of the principles of the inventions. Other embodiments and configurations may be devised without departing from the spirit of the inventions and the scope of the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20130072830 A1 | Mar 2013 | US |