This invention relates generally to methods and medical apparatuses for non-invasive monitoring of arterial blood pressure, and specifically to the devices and methods that use inflatable cuffs.
Blood pressure monitoring has rapidly become an accepted and, in many cases, essential aspect of human and veterinary treatment. Blood pressure monitors are now a conventional part of the patient environment in emergency rooms, intensive and critical care units, in the operating theater, and in homes.
Several well known techniques have been used to non-invasively monitor a subject's arterial blood pressure waveform, namely: auscultation, oscillometry, tonometry and flowmetry. The auscultation, oscillometric and flowmetry techniques use a standard inflatable cuff that occludes an artery (for example, the subject's brachial artery). The auscultatory technique determines the subject's systolic and diastolic pressures by monitoring certain Korotkoff sounds that occur as the cuff is slowly deflated or inflated. The oscillometric technique, on the other hand, determines these pressures, as well as the subject's mean pressure, by measuring the small pressure oscillations that occur in the cuff as the cuff is deflated or inflated. The flowmetric technique relies on detecting variations in blood flow downstream from the cuff
The oscillometric method of measuring blood pressure is currently the most popular method in commercially available automatic systems. This method relies on measuring changes in arterial counter pressure, such as imposed by an inflatable cuff, which is controllably relaxed or inflated. In some cases, the cuff pressure change is continuous, and in others it is incremental. In all oscillometric systems, a transducer (pressure sensor) monitors arterial counter pressure oscillations, and processing electronics convert selected parameters of these oscillations as represented by signals produced by the transducer into blood pressure data.
In the oscillometric method, the mean blood pressure value is the mean of the cuff pressure values that correspond in time to a peak of the envelope of the pressure oscillations. Systolic blood pressure is generally estimated as the pressure of a decaying pressure slope prior to the peak of the pressure oscillations envelope, corresponding to a point in time where the amplitude of the envelope is equal to a fraction of the peak amplitude. Generally, systolic blood pressure is the pressure on the decaying pressure of the cuff prior to the peak of the envelope where the amplitude of the envelope is 0.57 to 0.45 of the peak amplitude. Similarly, diastolic blood pressure is the pressure on the decaying pressure of the cuff after the peak of the envelope that corresponds to a point in time to where the amplitude of the envelope is equal to a different fraction of the peak amplitude. For example, diastolic blood pressure may be conventionally estimated as the pressure on the decaying pressure of the cuff after the peak where the amplitude of the envelope is equal to 0.82 to 0.74 of the peak amplitude. Other algorithms are also well known in the art.
The auscultatory method also involves inflation of a cuff placed around a cooperating artery of the patient. Systolic pressure is indicated when the Korotkoff sounds disappear as the cuff is inflated above the highest pressures exerted by the heart onto the arterial walls. Diastolic pressure is indicated when the Korotkoff sounds first appear as the cuff pressure is elevated above the atmospheric pressure. The auscultatory method can only be used to determine systolic and diastolic pressures, and it does not determine mean pressure.
To use either of the oscillometric and ausculatory methods of arterial pressure computation, an oscillatory signal of sufficient quality must be obtained from the artery. The signal quality (for example, as determined by pulse shape distortion and noise level) is greatly influenced by a matching between the inflatable cuff and the patient limb geometry. The cuff size should correspond to the length and circumference of the limb. A fluid bladder positioned inside the cuff should be wrapped around at least a portion of the limb in such a manner as to fully envelop the arterial path, and to effect a gradual and full compression of the artery when pressure in the bladder reaches the systolic pressure inside the artery. The pressure generated by the cuff should not be affected by a gravitational force exerted by the weight of the limb. In other words, the bladder should not compressed by any external forces except the fluid pump and the arterial blood pressure. In addition, when the cuff is positioned on or near the wrist, the wrist should be elevated approximately at the aorta level, otherwise a hydrostatic pressure of blood will cause additional errors. Generally speaking, with consideration of the above-described objectives, prior art pressurizing cuffs have had the following deficiencies: a need for a manual adjustment of the cuff size to match the limb size, and deleterious effects caused by hydrostatic pressure and the limb weight on the accuracy of the pressure measurement.
To minimize errors that arise from the above deficiencies, numerous cuff designs have been proposed. U.S. Pat. No. 3,527,204 to Lem, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, discloses a dual cuff having a liquid-filled chamber positioned on the top of an air-filled chamber, configured so that the pressure exerted over a patient's limb is developed by applying pressure to both air and liquid. A dual-cuff design with side-by-side bladders is described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,752,148 to Schmalzbach, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. A dual air chamber cuff design with two chambers positioned in layers is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,250,030 to Sano et al., which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. A cuff designed with a semi-rigid outer layer on an outside surface of the cuff is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,224,558 to Clemmons, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. U.S. Pat. No. 6,336,901 to Itonaga et al., which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, discloses a cuff design including two air bags that are sequentially inflated to provide for a more uniform arterial compression.
Other cuff designs have been proposed to improved the manner in which the cuff is initially fit over a patient's limb. See, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 6,565,524 issued to Itonaga et al. (elastic cuff with elastic plate having a curvature matched to a limb site to be measured), U.S. Pat. No. 7,144,374 to Sano et al. (cuff having adjustable belt applied over a radially changeable elastic member) and U.S. Pat. No. 7,083,573 to Yamakoshi et al. (cuff configured as split ring with pivot), each of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. However, each of the above-referenced cuff designs fails to provide sufficient measurement accuracy. As a result, it would be of benefit to provide a cuff design which can be easily applied to a limb while exhibiting improved measurement accuracy.
The present invention is directed to a cuff for a sphygmomanometer that can be used to measure arterial blood pressure from a patient's limb (for example, at a patient's wrist, upper arm or lower arm) while the limb is positioned in a gravitational field. The cuff includes interconnected first and second sections, where the first section is configured to position a pressurizing device (for example, an air bladder) against an arterial side of the patient's limb, while the second section is mechanically coupled to a support. The pressurizing device is coupled with a pressure sensor for monitoring pressure oscillations in the pressurizing device that are indicative of an arterial blood pressure.
The second section and the support are mutually arranged within the gravitational field to direct a vector of the gravitational field away from the arterial side and toward a rear side of the patient's limb, such that substantially no gravitational force is applied to the pressurizing device. In this arrangement, the force generated by the limb within the gravitational field is instead absorbed by the second section and the support. The cuff has a variable geometry that allows the patient's limb to be easily inserted and then fixedly gripped so that it may be supported by the second section. By diverting the effects of gravitational force away from the pressurizing device, a signal-to-noise ratio of the signals provide by the pressure sensor is improved for more accurate blood pressure measurement
The foregoing and other features of the present invention will be more readily apparent from the following detailed description and drawings of illustrative embodiments of the invention, in which:
Like reference numerals are used in the drawing Figures to connote like components of the sphygmomanometer and measurement cuff.
The present invention relates to non-invasive arterial blood pressure measurement methods using pressurizing cuffs with suitable pressurizing devices (for example, inflatable bladders). Pressure inside the bladder may be generated by a compressed fluid. For example, the compressed fluid may be selected to be air that is compressed and provided to the bladder by a conventional air pump and released from the bladder by a conventional decompression valve). The pressure generated by the bladder is preferably monitored using a pressure sensor coupled to the bladder.
The oscillometric method described above may be performed by analyzing oscillations in cuff pressure measurements caused by blood surges passing through a pliant artery that transmit pressure pulses to the bladder. The auscultatory method described above may be performed by analyzing the characteristics of acoustic waves (Korotkoff sounds) produced inside the compressed artery. In each case, embodiments of the method rely on accurate detection of the mechanical oscillations or vibrations of the artery that are of arteries that are transmitted to the bladder.
These oscillations and vibrations may be detected by a corresponding sensor coupled to the bladder. One source of error operating when a conventional cuff is wrapped around a patient's wrist and positioned on a tabletop is the weight of the arm and hand. Even small variations in the gravitational force can result in spurious oscillations and vibrations inside the cuff, and thereby contaminate the signals indicating oscillations and vibrations from the arteries. For example, such pressure variations may be caused by patient motions or external vibrations (generated, for example, when the patient is being transported). To minimize such spurious signals, embodiments of the present invention rely on a combination of two design features: a decoupling of the inflatable cuff from the support structure, and a cuff geometry that is adjusted for the size and shape of the patient limb. A key idea behind preferred embodiments of the invention is decoupling the gravitational force from the arterial side of the limb, and directing it toward a back side of the cuff that is adjacent to the rear side of the limb.
The sphygmomanometer of
As illustrated for example in
Besides the pressure sensor, base 3 may contain other components, such as a power supply, other sensors, electronic circuitry, an internal pump, valves, and the like. A hose assembly for connecting the bladder 11 to the internal pump, pressure sensors and valves may preferably be hidden inside the base 3 and stem 4. A liquid-filled bag 31 as shown in
The sphygmomanometer of
An operator proceeds to press a switch 17, which initiates a measurement cycle of the sphygmomanometer. The internal pump pressurizes the bladder 11 to compress the arteries 22 against supporting bones 23 inside the limb 1. As illustrated in
The bladder 11 receives arterial oscillations from the arterial side of the limb 1, and transmits the oscillations to the internal pressure sensor. In response, the internal pressure sensor transmits a signal to the electronic circuit, and the electronic circuit translates the signal to determine a pressure inside the bladder 11, to compute systolic and diastolic pressure values, and to transmit signals to the display 19 for displaying the systolic and diastolic pressure values. Since the gravity vector 24 is directed away from the bladder 11, distortions in the arterial pressure arising from variations in the weight vector 24 (for example, as would arise from movements by the patient of the limb 1) are reduced. As illustrated in
To minimize effects of hydrostatic pressure generated by the weight of the blood fluid, it is desirable to elevate the cuff approximately to a vertical level 36 substantially equal to the vertical level of an aorta of the patient. In an embodiment of the present invention as illustrated in
Further, to set the cuff 16 at a predetermined position in relation to the wrist 3 of the limb 1, a guide 33 is preferably provided. When the limb 1 is held by the cuff 16, the guide 33 is configured to rest at the base 32 of the patient's thumb, thereby setting a longitudinal position of the cuff 16 relative to the patient's wrist 30. In this manner, the guide 33 positions the cuff 16 consistently, thereby improving repeatability of successive blood pressure measurements. A pillow 85 is preferably provided on the base 3 for supporting an elbow 53 of the limb 1 in a comfortable and stable manner.
Alternate configurations for tilting and supporting the limb 1 to relieve the bladder 11 from the gravity vector 24 are illustrated in
As illustrated in
In addition to relieving the bladder 11 from effects of the gravity vector 24, the cuff 16 may be sized to provide good compliance in gripping the limb 1. In other words, the limb 1 is preferably well-supported by the cuff 16, while at the same time decoupling the weight of the cuff 16 from the bladder 11. Thus, a rear side of the limb 1 (away from the arteries) is preferably not mechanically coupled to the bladder 11, but instead is coupled to a weight-supporting part of the cuff. This is illustrated for example in
The sphygmomanometer of
As illustrated in
An alternative embodiment of the cuff 16 of
The clamps 73 and 77 can be opened by squeezing the grip 67 to move in a direction 80. When the grip 67 is squeezed, the clamps 73 and 77 open so that the bladder 11 may be positioned against the arterial side of the limb 1 in proximity to an interior surface 86 of the base 78. In this position, the artery 22 can be compressed by the bladder 11 against the bone 23. Once the bladder 11 is so positioned, the grip 67 is released, the clamps 73, 77 are rotated to close and tightly encircle the limb 1. To facilitate closure, the clamps 73, 77 are preferably provided with conventional spring-return mechanisms.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to a number of preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is to be limited only by the scope of the claims and their equivalents.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/505,673, filed May 2, 2012, which was the National Stage of International Application No. PCT/US2009/063972, filed on Nov. 11, 2009. The contents of all of these applications are incorporated herein by reference.