The present invention relates to equipment for use in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), and more particularly a device for placement between the hands of a person performing chest compression and the chest of a patient. The device may also be used for CPR training. Even more particularly the device is designed to emit a sound when chest compression is performed with a force exceeding a pre-defined value and optionally also to emit a sound indicating the desirable rate of chest compression. Even more particular the device is defined by the features indicated in the preamble of the subsequent claim 1, 5 or 11.
Numerous studies have shown that acquisition and retention of CardioPulmonary (CPR) skills are poor. This has been reviewed extensively by Kaye and Mancini (Kaye W, Mancini M E. Teaching adult resuscitation in the United States—time for a rethink, Resuscitation 1998; 37: 177-87).
During testing on manilcins, few compressions and ventilations are performed correctly with slow rate and inadequate depth of compressions and under-inflation being the most common errors. Similarly when the quality of CPR on patients has been studied, less than half of bystanders were performing good CPR defined as a palpable pulse during chest compressions and chest expansion. Whilst chest expansion can be observed by a second operator if present, few lay people (and also some medical professionals) can palpate a pulse accurately. As a result lay rescuers are no longer taught or expected to perform a pulse check (Guidelines 2000 for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care. Supplement to Circulation 2000; 102: I 22-59).
Accordingly an alternative means of ensuring adequate chest compressions is needed that could be easily used by lay persons. One reason why rescuers do not compress the chest significantly is felt to be concern about possibly injuring the patient by either pressing too hard or in the wrong place. A simple device that facilitated pressing in the correct place and alerted the rescuer when the compression was sufficient should help to allay this concern.
Good chest compressions are defined (according to Guidelines 2000 denoted above) as those, which depress the chest in an adult, by 4 cm at a rate of 100 per minute. In order to depress the chest of an average adult this distance, a force of about 35 kPa (kilo pascal) is required. In a child, the chest should be depressed about 2.5 cm requiring a force of about 20 kp. Audio prompts have been shown to improve the timing of compressions and ventilations and are now recommended for use during CPR (Guidelines 2000).
Devices incorporating a pressure gauge have been available for many years. When placed on the patient's chest, these guide the rescuer on the amount of force required. More recently a device has been marketed that combines this feature with audio prompts to guide the timing of chest compressions (Boyle A J et al. Improvement in timing and effectiveness of external cardiac compressions with a new non-invasive device: the CPR Ezy. Resuscitation 2002; 54: 63-7).
The CPR-Ezy is a generally rectangular device to be placed between the hands of a treating person and the chest of a patient. It comprises an LED-display that indicates the pressure visually. The device also contains an electronic metronome that emits both sound and light.
The CPR-Ezy and similar devices are too expensive (USD 150 to USD 250) and bulky to be accepted for widespread use by lay rescuers. In comparison, ventilation aids are widely used by lay rescuers: they generally cost about USD 2 to USD 15 and fit in a wallet or pocket. Furthermore the CPR-Ezy is dependent on an electric power source, e.g. a battery. A battery will be susceptible to drainage even when not in use. A lay person may have the device in his possession for several years before facing a situation in which he may bring it into use. By that time the battery may have run flat and the device will be useless. If the battery still works the rescuer has to give his visual attention to the LED-display to be able to observe if the compression is sufficient. This means that he is unable to observe the patient's reactions while compressing. A LED-display will also be difficult to observe in bright light conditions, e.g., sunshine. Furthermore, the treating person usually will need to contact an emergency rescue centre on the telephone. He may then get guidance from health personnel. If the health personnel can hear over the phone if the treating person is compressing with sufficient force or not, they may provide better guidance. In the CPR-Ezy the lack of sound indicating compression force preclude the health personnel from this valuable information.
Another prior art device is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 4,554,910. This device has a lower surface that is intended to be placed on a patient's chest and an upper surface that the treating person presses against. Between the surfaces are a spring and a rectangular spring steel body. The spring steel body has sidewalls with inwardly directed dimples. When the spring steel body is compressed the dimples will be deflected outwardly creating an audible click.
Although, this device gives an indication of when the pressure required is attained, and is independent of a battery, it has a large size that makes it awkward to carry around and does not fit in most pockets. The sound generator is a box shaped member that has to be deformed. It contains a large amount of metallic parts that are costly to produce and increase the weight. This makes the availability of the device poor. Availability is very important, and the user should be able to carry the device with him at all time, e.g. on a key ring. Very little difference in size and weight may be the difference between a device that the user accepts to carry around at all times and a device that is left in a drawer.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,863,385 describes a fully electronic device. It is seemingly very advanced, incorporating synthetic speech, indicator lamps and buzzers. It can also be set for different person sizes, and it can detect pulse. However, it does not include a significant feature: detection of the compression force. This prior art device is consequently, except for the pulse detection, a pure “instruction manual”. The object is that the user turns on the device and the device will give the user instructions (in the form of synthetic speech) about what he is supposed to do, in which sequence and a which time. The indicator lamps are switched on to give the user a signal on what is the next task. This device has no means to detect if the user is performing correct chest compression, at least not if the chest compression is performed with sufficient force. The device is not intended for placement between the hands of the performer and the chest of the patient.
The device has a manual switch that can be turned into one of four different on positions. Consequently, the user must himself remember to turn on the device.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,496,257 is also fully electronic. The chest compression is displayed in a display. Electronic sound signals may be given to indicate to little or to large chest compression force. These signals are electronic and the force is measured electronically. Consequently, the device is depending on a battery to function. Without a battery the device will be completely useless.
This device has an external switch that may be turned to one of two on positions. Each position is connected to a separate battery, so that an extra power supply is available if the first battery is flat. This shows the importance of a functioning device when the need occurs. However, this results in an expensive device that is awkward to operate.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,013,041 is intended solely for simulation of chest compression. Consequently, it is shaped like a long telescopic tube, providing a certain compression stroke, which is supposed to give a substantially realistic movement during training. The device is not suitable for use on a patient. If an attempt was made to use the device on a patient, the device would absorb a substantial part of the movement and the force from the performer. Consequently, the performer would have no control on how much of the movement was transferred to the patient. The effect would be similar to placing several pillows between the hands of the performer and the chest of the patient. Due to its length the device would also be hard to control and very easily tip sideways during the compression. Furthermore it is much too large to fit in a pocket.
The object of the present invention is to provide an aid to improving the timing and effectiveness of chest compressions during both training and patient use at a price and size that would enable all lay responders to purchase it and carry it at all times, preferably together with their ventilation aid.
In a first aspect of the present invention this is achieved by the novel features given in the subsequent claim 1. In a second aspect of the present invention this is achieved by the novel features given in the subsequent claim 5. The novel features of claim 11 define a third aspect of the invention in which a device with two pre-defined forces is achieved. The third aspect may be carried out with or without the first or the second aspect of the invention.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will be described in detail as examples, referring to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The battery 3 is connected to the microcontroller 4, at least partly through the switch 2. The microcontroller 4 is connected to the beeper 5 and the programming connector 6.
The mechanical sound generator 1 may be integrated with the switch 2 so that when the CPR feedback device is compressed for the first time the mechanical sound generator switches on the power to the microcontroller 4.
The mechanical sound generator 1 comprises a plate IS made from spring steel or a material with similar properties. The plate 18 has an indentation 19 formed therein. The plate 18 is at a first end attached to a foot 20, the opposite end being free. Directly above the free end of the plate 18 on the interior surface 21 of the upper part 8 is a peg is 22. Directly below the free end of the plate 18 is a contact 23, which is connected to the PCB 16.
In the previous and the following the terms upper and lower, above and below etc. are used purely with reference to the drawings (except for
The general function of the device according to the present invention will now be described.
When the device is brought into use for the first time the treating person simply positions the device in the correct area on the chest of the patient. On one or both of the surfaces 14, 15 of the upper and lower parts 7, 8 there may be printed instructions that shows where to place the device and how to use it, preferably in the form of text, drawings and/or symbols.
When the device is thus placed on the right spot, the treating person starts pressing with his hands on the upper surface 14. This pressing action will move the upper part 7 towards the lower part 8 against the pliability of the central part 9, which will be compressed. As the peg 22 contacts the free end of the plate 18 this will bend downward towards the contact 23. About the same tune as the free end of the plate reaches the contact 23, the indentation 19 will flex in the opposite direction and emit a clicking sound. The contact between the contact 23 and the plate 18 will close the power supply circuit to the microcontroller circuit 4. This may preferably be done by way of an electronic holding circuit, e.g. a relay or a transistor that closes the power supply circuit. Optionally, a timer circuit may be present that automatically discontinues the power supply to the microcontroller 4 after a certain period of time of inactivity.
The means for turning on the power supply may also be in the form of a microphone or other piezoelectric device that picks up the sound energy of the first click of the plate 18 and uses this energy input to turn on the power supply.
The microcontroller circuit 4 contains an electronic metronome that with a predetermined rate activates the beeper 5 to emit a sound. The rate may be fixed or variable by programming of the microcontroller 4.
Thus, the device, once activated will give out a beep each time the treating person is supposed to compress the chest of the patient. Optionally the microcontroller may provide pauses in the beeping, e.g., every 15th beep, to allow for lung inflation. The pause may be a set time, which is adapted to the time required for giving, e.g., two lung inflations.
Another modus is that the first time the device is compressed it will automatically turn itself on and give the first beep. Thereafter the device will continue to give out beeps at a fixed rate until a total of 14 beeps have been given. After the 14th beep the device will turn itself off automatically. When the treating person compresses for the 15th time he will hear no beep. This is to be taken as a signal to stop the compression and perform lung inflations. When the lung inflations, and possibly other necessary work, have been performed, the compression is started again. The device, which in the meantime has been off, will again be switched on as the upper and lower parts are moved together and consequently the internal switch is operated. At the first compression the device will give a first of in total 14 beeps before it turns itself off automatically again.
The mechanical sound generator 1 will emit a clicking sound every time the treating person compresses the device, and thus also the chest of the patient, with a force exceeding a predetermined value, the predetermined force being an estimate of the force required to achieve a sufficient compression depth for effective CPR.
If the force is less than the predetermined value no sound will be emitted from the mechanical sound generator 1. Thus the treating person will realise that he has not pressed hard enough and has to increase his force. The mechanical sound (click) should be heard with approximately the same rate as the beep initiated by the metronome, provided the user is performing correctly.
In order to avoid that the treating person reacts on the metronome beep as the signal for sufficient compression force, the metronome beep may be timed so that the first beep occurs only after the click indicating sufficient chest compression, e.g. when the force is sufficient to activate the click. This may be achieved, e.g., by a microphone picking up the click. When the treating person has heard the first click he will know that this is the sound for sufficient force, and he will listen for this sound every time he performs a chest compression.
For testing purposes it may be possible to turn off the beeper. This may be the case if the object is to practice sufficient chest compression force only. To avoid external switches that may be operated by accident the turning on and off of the beeper may be done by, e. pressing down to the click is heard and maintaining this pressure for a period of time, e.g. 5 seconds. To achieve this function a suitable electronic device may be coupled to the switch turning on the electronic circuit, detecting that the switch is closed for a specific period of time.
The force required for making the mechanical sound is chiefly dependent on the elasticity and design of the central part 9 and the design and stiffness of the plate 18. To vary the force required different types of plates 18 and central parts 9 may be available. Thus it may be possible to make different versions of the device adapted, e.g., for adults and children and mark these accordingly.
If the battery should run flat or be exhausted before the first time use due to a long storage period, the microcontroller circuit 4 will of course not work. However, the most important feature of the device will still work, which is the signal indicating sufficient compression force. Thus the device will still be usable, even without a battery.
A groove 36 for a rubber string is formed on each longitudinal side of the lower part 8. In the area of the holes 30, 31 there are open sections 37, 38 not intended for receiving a rubber string. Through the openings remaining in these areas when the upper and lower parts are joined, the clicking sound from the plate 18 is emitted unobstructed by structural details. At the ends of the-grooves 36 are stoppers 39 that prevent the rubber sting form sliding out of the groove and act as abutments when the lower and upper parts are moved towards each other.
In the central part of the lower part 8 a depressed area 40 is formed to accommodate the electronic components.
Referring to
The adjustment screw 49 is screwed into the hole 45. The further in the adjustment screw is screwed the lesser the force required to create a click from the plate 18 will be. Advantageously, the hole 45 may be sealed by a suitable sealing compound after the adjustment is completed, to avoid tampering.
It is also possible to incorporate ability for different functionality depending on the orientation of the device, i.e. if the upper part is facing up or down. One side of the device could be for adult compressions, the other for child compressions. An embodiment with this feasibility is shown in
In the fully electronic embodiment of the device this feature may be achieved by adding a component coupled to the microcontroller circuit, the component being sensitive to the axis of the gravity. Numerous such components are available, e.g., an orientation sensitive accelerometer or level sensitive switches, e.g. a mercury switch. This means that the device could perform differently depending on the orientation.
Indications on the outer surfaces of the upper and lower parts should be present to clearly indicate to the user, which side to use on which patients.
The device may also have a means to maintain the placement on the chest, e.g., a sticky A surface or a surface shaped such that a small negative pressure is created between the patient's skin and the device.
The mechanical sound may be generated in numerous ways. Other possible means of providing a mechanical sound are:
However, the manner of which the mechanical sound is generated is not of substantial importance, as long as it is generated with reliability and the force required to generate the sound does not vary substantially over the time the device is stored and used.
The switch for switching on the microcontroller circuit may also be provided by a separate switch not integrated with the mechanical sound generator. Most preferably, however, the switch is enclosed within the device and is operated by pressing the upper and lower parts against each other.
Although a mechanical sound generator is preferred for indication of sufficient compression force (strictly speaking: depth), alternatively an electronic sound generator may also be used. This may be a part of the same circuit as the sound generator making the beep indicating the compression rate or be a separate circuit. An electronic sound generator will be dependent on electric power. Instead of a battery a power generator generating electric power from the movement between the upper and lower parts during the compression is also conceivable.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20026218 | Dec 2002 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NO03/00435 | 12/22/2003 | WO | 6/22/2005 |