This invention relates generally to temperature probes used in the medical field and more particularly to temperature probes that are connected to medical monitors used to measure conditions such as blood pressure, oxygen content in the blood and body temperature.
Many medical monitors in use today have a port for connecting a temperature probe. This port is often used for connecting a resistive type probe where the monitor measures the resistance of the temperature probe to determine its temperature and thus the temperature of the tissue that the probe is in contact with.
Temperature probes, when they come in contact with a body that is at a temperature different from themselves, generally take about three minutes to adjust to the temperature of that body. The goal of some applications is to continuously measure a patient's temperature over a prolonged period of time such as during an operation. Waiting for a few minutes for a probe to come to temperature before an operation begins is acceptable but other temperature measurements require a faster response time. For example, when a practitioner is taking a patient's temperature once every hour it requires a quick response so the practitioner can acquire the temperature reading and then proceed to other duties.
Predictive type thermometers use techniques to determine or predict what the final stabilized temperature will be before the probe has reached thermal stability. These types of thermometers generally show the predicted temperature on an attached display and are usually not connected to a monitor where other vital signs are taken.
Previous to this invention, a monitor that has been constructed for use with a resistive temperature probe could not readily be adapted for use with a predictive temperature probe. This is because the monitor is designed to receive a resistive input to indicate temperature whereas the output from the predictive probe is a digital output of the temperature. Thus, the output from a predictive probe cannot be input to a monitor designed to receive an input from a resistive probe.
This invention in one embodiment allows a predictive temperature probe to be used with multipurpose monitors that are designed to receive resistive temperature inputs. A patient's temperature can be quickly taken and recorded on the same device as other vital signs. In another embodiment, this invention allows the resistive output of a temperature probe to be modified to reflect other corrections and adjustments as described herein in more detail.
In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, the resistive output of a temperature sensing device such as a thermistor is adjusted using predictive or correlative techniques and a modified resistive output is generated that is input to a multipurpose monitor. In one embodiment in particular, the sensed temperature is input to a microprocessor that determines a modified temperature reading that is translated in to a potentiometer setting required to achieve an output resistance that corresponds to the modified temperature reading.
With reference now to the drawings, and particularly to
The present invention is particularly useful in conjunction with a YSI 400 series temperature probe which has a single thermistor output. In accordance with this embodiment of the invention, the 400 series output is modified by the microprocessor as illustrated in
The invention is also useful to simulate the output of a YSI 700 series temperature probe. This probe is different than the 400 series probe in that it includes two thermistors sandwiched together. As such, this probe includes two thermistor outputs.
A further embodiment of the invention uses a FET in place of the digital potentiometer to modify the resistive output and is illustrated in
If the polarity of the monitor 58 is not compatible with the FET configuration shown in
In a further embodiment illustrated in
Other embodiments of this invention can be foreseen where the temperature to be reported to the medical monitor is determined from some other means. The temperature could be reported to the microprocessor via a serial port and then reported to the medical monitor via the resistive output.
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/783,491, entitled DIGITALLY MODIFIED RESISTIVE OUTPUT FOR A TEMPERATURE SENSOR, filed Feb. 20, 2004, which also claims priority to the provisional U.S. Application Ser. No. 60/448,692, which was filed on Feb. 20, 2003, the disclosures and content of both of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.
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| Number | Date | Country | |
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| Number | Date | Country | |
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| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parent | 10783491 | Feb 2004 | US |
| Child | 12101962 | US |