The present disclosure relates generally to medical fluid treatments and in particular to the heating of treatment fluid during dialysis fluid treatments.
Due to various causes, a person's renal system can fail. Renal failure produces several physiological derangements. It is no longer possible to balance water and minerals or to excrete daily metabolic load. Toxic end products of metabolism, such as, urea, creatinine, uric acid and others, may accumulate in a patient's blood and tissue.
Reduced kidney function and, above all, kidney failure is treated with dialysis. Dialysis removes waste, toxins and excess water from the body that normal functioning kidneys would otherwise remove. Dialysis treatment for replacement of kidney functions is critical to many people because the treatment is lifesaving.
One type of kidney failure therapy is Hemodialysis (“HD”), which in general uses diffusion to remove waste products from a patient's blood. A diffusive gradient occurs across the semi-permeable dialyzer between the blood and an electrolyte solution called dialysate or dialysis fluid to cause diffusion.
Hemofiltration (“HF”) is an alternative renal replacement therapy that relies on a convective transport of toxins from the patient's blood. HF is accomplished by adding substitution or replacement fluid to the extracorporeal circuit during treatment. The substitution fluid and the fluid accumulated by the patient in between treatments is ultrafiltered over the course of the HF treatment, providing a convective transport mechanism that is particularly beneficial in removing middle and large molecules.
Hemodiafiltration (“HDF”) is a treatment modality that combines convective and diffusive clearances. HDF uses dialysis fluid flowing through a dialyzer, similar to standard hemodialysis, to provide diffusive clearance. In addition, substitution solution is provided directly to the extracorporeal circuit, providing convective clearance.
Most HD, HF, and HDF treatments occur in centers. A trend towards home hemodialysis (“HHD”) exists today in part because HHD can be performed daily, offering therapeutic benefits over in-center hemodialysis treatments, which occur typically bi- or tri-weekly. Studies have shown that more frequent treatments remove more toxins and waste products and render less interdialytic fluid overload than a patient receiving less frequent but perhaps longer treatments. A patient receiving more frequent treatments does not experience as much of a down cycle (swings in fluids and toxins) as does an in-center patient, who has built-up two or three days' worth of toxins prior to a treatment. In certain areas, the closest dialysis center can be many miles from the patient's home, causing door-to-door treatment time to consume a large portion of the day. Treatments in centers close to the patient's home may also consume a large portion of the patient's day. HHD can take place overnight or during the day while the patient relaxes, works or is otherwise productive.
Another type of kidney failure therapy is peritoneal dialysis (“PD”), which infuses a dialysis solution, also called dialysis fluid or PD fluid, into a patient's peritoneal chamber via a catheter. The PD fluid comes into contact with the peritoneal membrane in the patient's peritoneal chamber. Waste, toxins and excess water pass from the patient's bloodstream, through the capillaries in the peritoneal membrane, and into the PD fluid due to diffusion and osmosis, i.e., an osmotic gradient occurs across the membrane. An osmotic agent in the PD fluid provides the osmotic gradient. Used PD fluid is drained from the patient, removing waste, toxins and excess water from the patient. This cycle is repeated, e.g., multiple times.
There are various types of peritoneal dialysis therapies, including continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (“CAPD”), automated peritoneal dialysis (“APD”), tidal flow dialysis and continuous flow peritoneal dialysis (“CFPD”). CAPD is a manual dialysis treatment. Here, the patient manually connects an implanted catheter to a drain to allow used PD fluid to drain from the patient's peritoneal cavity. The patient then switches fluid communication so that the patient catheter communicates with a bag of fresh PD fluid to infuse the fresh PD fluid through the catheter and into the patient. The patient disconnects the catheter from the fresh PD fluid bag and allows the PD fluid to dwell within the patient's peritoneal cavity, wherein the transfer of waste, toxins and excess water takes place. After a dwell period, the patient repeats the manual dialysis procedure, for example, four times per day. Manual peritoneal dialysis requires a significant amount of time and effort from the patient, leaving ample room for improvement.
APD is similar to CAPD in that the dialysis treatment includes drain, fill and dwell cycles. APD machines, however, perform the cycles automatically, typically while the patient sleeps. APD machines free patients from having to manually perform the treatment cycles and from having to transport supplies during the day. APD machines connect fluidly to an implanted catheter, to a source or bag of fresh PD fluid and to a fluid drain. APD machines pump fresh PD fluid from a dialysis fluid source, through the catheter and into the patient's peritoneal chamber. APD machines also allow for the PD fluid to dwell within the chamber and for the transfer of waste, toxins and excess water to take place. The source may include multiple liters of dialysis fluid, including several solution bags.
APD machines pump used PD fluid from the patient's peritoneal cavity, though the catheter, to drain. As with the manual process, several drain, fill and dwell cycles occur during dialysis. A “last fill” may occur at the end of the APD treatment. The last fill fluid may remain in the peritoneal chamber of the patient until the start of the next treatment, or may be manually emptied at some point during the day.
Dialysis fluid or treatment for HD, HF, HDF and PD is typically heated prior to being delivered to a dialyzer (HD, HDF), blood line (HF, HDF) or the patient (PD). The dialysis fluid is typically heated to body temperature or 37° C. so that the patient does not experience a thermal shock when the dialysis fluid comingles with the patient's blood or is delivered to the patient's peritoneal cavity. One type of dialysis fluid heater is an inline dialysis fluid heater, which heats the dialysis fluid as it passes through the inline heater. Inline heaters are advantageous because they operate online as treatment is taking place and do not require a separate amount of time offline from the treatment. One drawback to online heating however is that if there is no dialysis fluid flowing when the inline heater is powered, the inline heater may overheat.
There is accordingly a need for an effective, low cost way of preventing or mitigating overheating in an inline heater due to a no or low flow condition.
The present disclosure involves the use of an inline heater in a dialysis machine, which may be any type of dialysis machine, such as a peritoneal dialysis (“PD”) machine, hemodialysis (“HD”) machine, hemofiltration (“HF”) machine, hemodiafiltration (“HDF”) machine or continuous renal replacement therapy (“CRRT”) machine. The inline heater heats dialysis fluid as it flows through the heater towards the patient (PD), dialyzer (HD, HDF), or blood line (HF, HDF, CRRT) for treatment. The inline heating method is opposed to a batch heater commonly used with PD for heating a bag of dialysis fluid prior to being delivered for treatment. The inline heater of the present disclosure is advantageous because it does not require the footprint involved with maintaining a bag for batch heating. The inline heater also heats the dialysis fluid as it is needed, eliminating the need for a heating period prior to beginning treatment.
The inline heater of the present disclosure is disadvantageous from one standpoint in that if it is attempted to heat dialysis fluid while no dialysis fluid is flowing, the inline heater can overheat. A flow switch may be placed ahead of the inline heater to make sure that flow is present as a condition for energizing the heater. Flow switches add cost however and can become stuck or otherwise not function properly.
The inline fluid heating system of the present solution involves determining the resistance of the heater element of the inline heater. The resistance of the heater element increases in a typical manner with an increase in temperature. The resistance of the heater element is one embodiment calculated by knowing an amount of voltage or current applied to the heater element and measuring the other of the current or voltage at the heater element while the inline heater is being powered. Heater element resistance Re is then equal to Ve/Ie. The calculated resistance is applied to an algorithm stored in a control unit of the dialysis machine to determine if a low flow or no flow condition within the inline heater exists.
One possible algorithm sets a maximum heater element resistance increase or resistance derivate (change in heater element resistance over time). By looking at heater element resistance rate of change or increase, a no or low flow condition through the inline heater may be detected early before the temperature increases too much or to a point that could damage the inline heater. When there is no fluid flow in the energized inline heater, the temperature increases rapidly and hence the heater resistance increases rapidly. If the change in heater element resistance over a period or of time (rate of change), e.g., a sample period meets or exceeds a set maximum rate of change of resistance per the period of time, the algorithm triggers the control unit to automatically deenergize the inline heater, stop treatment, and alarm the patient, caregiver or nurse.
One possible implementation of the overheating algorithm is to run a characterizing program that characterizes the inline heater at the time of manufacture and/or servicing of the dialysis machine. The characterizing program characterises how the inline heater resistance relates to temperature. Here, the inline heater is energized while receiving a known flowrate of fluid. Input power is varied while the flowrate is held constant. A temperature sensor may be used to measure the test fluid temperature downstream from the inline heater to confirm that the heater is heating the test fluid properly. The characterising program enables measured heater element resistances (correlated with heater element temperature) to be known for a given fluid flowrate and over a common or use range of input power settings. A resulting calibration data table is then stored in the memory of the control unit of the dialysis machine. The control unit uses the calibration data during treatment to detect when the inline heater is overheating, that is, to detect for a given or commanded flowrate and a commanded input power setting, that the measured heater element resistance Re is greater than it should be for the commanded dialysis fluid temperature.
The algorithm stored in the control unit of the dialysis machine may accordingly analyze two factors (i) rate of change in heater element resistance (derivative) indicating that a no or low flow condition is beginning and (ii) the determine resistance compared to the calibration resistance. That is, the rate of change in heater element resistance may be high, indicating that a no or low flow condition may be beginning, but if the determined heater element resistance (and corresponding temperature) is lower than what the calibration data says the heater element resistance should be for a given flowrate and power input setting, then the algorithm allows the control unit of the dialysis machine to continue treatment.
In an embodiment, the cycle rate for the current or voltage measurement may be very high and noisy, and thus the algorithm may be configured in an embodiment to take many measurements, e.g., over the period of a second or more, before making a no or low flow determination, deenergizing the inline heater, stopping treatment, and alarming the patient, caregiver or nurse. Taking many measurements over a safe time period that is too short for the inline heater to overheat significantly helps to prevent false trips. Taking many measurements also provides an adequate number of samples to efficiently supress measurement signal noise.
An analog heater protection circuit may be provided as part of the control unit of the present system to detect the rate of change or derivative, discussed herein, in either one or both of current and/or voltage. The analog heater protection circuit may include one or more of measurement circuitry, divider circuitry, a differential circuit, a comparator, and/or a lowpass/timer circuit.
In light of the disclosure set forth herein, and without limiting the disclosure in any way, in a first aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, an inline heating system includes an inline heater including a heater element; a control unit configured to cause one of voltage or current to be applied to power the inline heater; and at least one of a current or voltage meter outputting to the control unit and arranged to measure at least one of the current or voltage at the heater element due to the applied voltage or current, wherein the control unit is further configured to determine a heater element resistance using the applied voltage or current and the measured at least one of the current or voltage as part of a no flow or low flow condition detection algorithm implemented by the control unit, wherein the voltage or current applied to power the inline heater is stopped if the no flow or low flow condition is detected.
In a second aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the control unit includes the at least one of the current or voltage meter.
In a third aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the control unit is configured to determine multiple heater element resistances using the applied voltage or current and the measured at least one current or voltage at different times over a sample period to determine if the no flow or low flow condition is detected.
In a fourth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the heater element is a first heater element, and which includes at least one additional heater element, wherein the control unit is configured to determine a heater element resistance for each heater element as part of the no flow or low flow condition detection algorithm.
In a fifth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the at least one current or voltage meter is a first current or voltage meter, and which includes at least one additional current or voltage meter arranged to measure the at least one current or voltage at the at least one additional heater element.
In a sixth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the control unit is configured to stop the voltage or current applied to power the inline heater if the no flow or low flow condition is detected at any of the heater elements.
In a seventh aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the control unit is configured to compare a rate of change in determined heater element resistance to a set maximum rate of change in determined heater element resistance as part of the low flow condition detection algorithm implemented by the control unit.
In an eighth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the rate of change in determined heater element resistance is a positive rate of change.
In a ninth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the control unit is configured to compare the determined heater element resistance to a calibrated heater element resistance as part of the low flow condition detection algorithm implemented by the control unit.
In a tenth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the calibrated heater element resistance is determined remote from the inline heating system and then stored in the control unit.
In an eleventh aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the calibrated heater element resistance is specific to at least one of (i) fluid flowrate through the inline heater or (ii) input power to the inline heater.
In a twelfth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the control unit is configured to measure the at least one of the current or voltage at a sample rate that is of at least one of (i) 100 Hz or greater or (ii) at least two times greater than a frequency of a pulsed voltage source powering the inline heater.
In a thirteenth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the control unit includes an analog heater protection circuit configured to filter the measured at least one of the current or voltage.
In a fourteenth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, an inline heating system includes an inline heater including a heater element; a voltage source or a current source positioned to apply a voltage or current to power the inline heater; and an analog heater protection circuit configured to (i) measure at least one of the current or voltage at the heater element due to the applied voltage or current, (ii) determine a heater element resistance using the applied voltage or current and the measured at least one of the current or voltage, and (iii) provide a stop power signal if the inline heater element resistance indicates a no flow or low flow condition.
In a fifteenth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the analog heater protection circuit includes at least one of: measurement circuitry, divider circuitry, a differential circuit, a comparator, or a lowpass/timer circuit.
In a sixteenth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, an inline heating system includes an inline heater including a heater element; and a control unit configured to compare a rate of change in heater element resistance to a set maximum rate of change in heater element resistance as part of a no flow or low flow condition detection algorithm implemented by the control unit, wherein power applied to the inline heater is stopped if the no flow or low flow condition is detected.
In a seventeenth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the control unit is further configured to compare at least one determined heater element resistance to at least one calibrated heater element resistance as part of the low flow condition detection algorithm implemented by the control unit.
In an eighteenth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the at least one calibrated heater element resistance is determined remote from the inline heating system and then stored in the control unit.
In a nineteenth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the at least one calibrated heater element resistance is specific to at least one of (i) fluid flowrate through the inline heater or (ii) input power to the inline heater.
In a twentieth aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, the inline heating system is provided as part of a peritoneal dialysis machine, hemodialysis machine, hemofiltration machine, hemodiafiltration machine, continuous renal replacement therapy machine, water purification unit, dialysis fluid preparation unit, or blood warmer.
In a twenty-first aspect, which may be combined with any other aspect, or portion thereof, any of the features, functionality and alternatives described in connection with any one or more of
In light of the above aspects and the present disclosure, it is accordingly an advantage of the present disclosure to provide a dialysis machine having an inline heater that is deenergized upon a no or low flow condition.
It is another advantage of the present disclosure to provide a dialysis machine having cost effective inline heater no or low flow protection.
It is a further advantage of the present disclosure to provide a dialysis machine having inline heater no or low flow protection that does not require significant additional hardware.
Additional features and advantages are described in, and will be apparent from, the following Detailed Description and the Figures. The features and advantages described herein are not all-inclusive and, in particular, many additional features and advantages will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art in view of the figures and description. Also, any particular embodiment does not have to have all of the advantages listed herein and it is expressly contemplated to claim individual advantageous embodiments separately. Moreover, it should be noted that the language used in the specification has been selected principally for readability and instructional purposes, and not to limit the scope of the inventive subject matter.
Referring now to the drawings and in particular to
Inline heating system 10 includes a fluid source 12s, which may be a PD fluid source, HD fluid source, replacement fluid source (HF, HDF, CRRT), or water source for example. Inline heating system 10 includes a fluid destination 12d, which may be the patient's peritoneal cavity (PD), a dialyzer (HD, HDF), a blood line (HF, HDF, CRRT), a dialysis fluid preparation unit if inline heating system 10 is employed in or provided by a water purification unit, or a dialysis machine (e.g., PD cycler) if dialysis inline heating system 10 is employed in or provided by a dialysis fluid preparation unit. Fluid source 12s and fluid destination 12d may alternatively both be the patient when inline heating system 10 is provided as part of a blood warmer.
Fluid from source 12s (which will hereafter be termed dialysis fluid even though the fluid is not limited to same as discussed above) is pumped along a fluid line 14 via a pump 16. Pump 16 may be any type of fluid pump, e.g., a durable (reusable) pump that contacts the dialysis fluid directly, such as a piston, gear, centrifugal or rotary vane pump. Pump 16 may alternatively have a disposable component, such as a pneumatic pump operating with a disposable cassette, an electromechanical pump operating with a disposable cassette, or a peristaltic pump operating with a peristaltic tubing segment.
It is contemplated that there be many different components located along fluid line 14 between fluid source 12s and fluid destination 12d, such as one or more valve, air trap and various sensors. For ease of illustration inline heating system 10 is shown having a pressure sensor 18p and a temperature sensor 18t. The output of pressure sensor 18p may be used as feedback for controlling pump 16 so as not to exceed a positive or negative pressure limit. The output of the temperature sensor 18t may be used as feedback for controlling the input power to inline heater 20. Temperature sensor 18t is located downstream from inline heater 20 so as to sense the temperature of the dialysis fluid exiting the heater. If desired, an additional temperature sensor may be located upstream of inline heater 20 to provide feedforward information concerning the temperature of dialysis fluid entering inline heater 20.
Video controller 58 of control unit 50 interfaces with a user interface 60 of the machine or unit, which may include a display screen operating with a touchscreen and/or one or more electromechanical button, such as a membrane switch. User interface 60 may also include one or more speaker for outputting alarms, alerts and/or voice guidance commands. User interface 60 may be provided with the machine or unit as illustrated in
Referring now to
Inline heater 20 in the illustrated embodiment includes a plurality of heater elements 26a, 26b, such as two heater elements. Inline heater 20 may alternatively include only a single heater element or more than two heater elements 26a, 26b. Heater elements 26a, 26b in the illustrated embodiment are located between housing 22 and fluid heating pathway 24, on the inside of housing 22 and on the outside of fluid heating pathway 24. Inline heater 20 may be configured differently however. For example, heater elements 26a, 26b may instead be located along the center of housing 22. Fluid heating pathway 24 here extends around the outside of the centrally located heater elements 26a, 26b, between the heater elements and housing 22, which in any heater embodiment may be thermally insulated. Control unit 50, for any configuration of inline heater 20, controls the power provided to heater elements 26a, 26b. Control unit 50 may do so by controlling either the voltage or current to heater elements 26a, 26b. The more voltage or current supplied, the more power is provided to inline heater 20, and thus more heating of dialysis fluid flowing through inline heater 20 takes place, resulting in a higher dialysis fluid temperature.
In the illustrated embodiment, control unit 50 controls the voltage from a voltage source 62 to each heater element 26a, 26b. Voltage source 62 may be a 90 to 130 VAC, a 200 to 240 VAC voltage source, or a voltage source supplying direct current voltage to heater element 26a, 26b. A positive voltage source line 64a extends to one end of each heater element 26a, 26b, while a negative voltage source line 64b extends to the other end of each heater element 26a, 26b.
Control unit 50 in the illustrated embodiment also includes current meters 66a, 66b for heater elements 26a, 26b, respectively. Current meters 66a, 66b are connected in series with heater elements 26a, 26b to be able to measure the current applied to each heater element. In the illustrated embodiment, current meters 66a, 66b are located along positive voltage source lines 64a extending to one end of each heater element 26a, 26b. In an alternative embodiment shown in dashed line, a single current meter 66 may be used to read the current flowing through multiple heater elements 26a and 26b, wherein control unit 50 may index or switch through readings from each heater element in a cyclical manner. Control unit 50 may alternatively operate with single current meter 66 so as to read both currents (through lines 64a and 64b) along the common line having single sensor 66. Here, it is not required to cycle sensor 66 to read the different lines 64a, 64b individually.
It is contemplated for control unit 50 to instead measure both voltage and current simultaneously to obtain good accuracy for the resistance value Re of each heater element 26a, 26b. As discussed below in connection with
Inline heater 20 of inline heating system 10 is disadvantageous from one standpoint in that if it is attempted to heat dialysis fluid while no dialysis fluid is flowing, inline heater 20 can overheat. A flow switch may be placed ahead of inline heater 20 to make sure that flow is present as a condition for control unit 50 to energize the heater. Flow switches add cost however and can become stuck or otherwise not function properly.
Inline heating system 10 solves the overheating problem by configuring control unit 50 to determine the resistance Re of each heater element 26a, 26b of inline heater 26. The resistance Re of each heater element 26a, 26b increases in a typical manner upon an increase in temperature. The resistance Re of each heater element 26a, 26b is in one embodiment calculated by knowing an amount of voltage or current applied to each heater element 26a, 26b (in
Referring now to
As illustrated in
The voltage corresponding to heater element resistance Re is fed from divider circuitry 74 to a differential circuit 76 that creates a second new voltage representing a rate of change of heater element resistance Re. Differential circuit 76 may be (i) a passive capacitive differential circuit that includes a capacitor and resistor, (ii) a passive inductive differential circuit that includes an inductor and a resistor, or (iii) an active differential circuit, which may also include a capacitor and a resistor as well as an operation amplifier. The second new voltage representing the rate of change of heater element resistance Re is then delivered from differential circuit 76 to a comparator 78, the output of which may be used to disable or to turn off inline heater 20 if the rate of change of heater element resistance Re meets or exceeds a threshold rate of change of heater element resistance Re set at comparator 78. A lowpass/timer circuit 80 may be provided after comparator 78 to remove potential glitches/disturbances. Lowpass/timer circuit 80 ensures that the no/low flow signal does not go high based on noise that may have gotten through to the lowpass filter/timer circuit. Lowpass/timer circuit 80 instead ensures that the signal is stable/triggered for a certain amount of time and that inline heater 20 is not depowered or shut off for small signal spikes or noises that may occur.
Referring now to
One possible algorithm stored in memory 54 and interrogated by processor 52 sets a maximum heater element resistance increase or resistance derivate (change in heater element resistance over time). With control unit analysing heater element resistance Re rate change or increase over time, a no or low flow condition through the inline heater 20 is detectable before the temperature of heater elements 26a, 26b increases to a point that could damage inline heater 20. When there is no fluid flow in an energized inline heater 20, the temperature of heater elements 26a, 26 increases rapidly and hence the heater element resistance Re increases rapidly. Control unit 50 is accordingly programmed to look to determine if a change in heater element resistance Re over a period or of time (rate of change), e.g., to determine if a sample period rate of change of resistance Re meets or exceeds a set maximum rate of change of resistance Re over the period of time, the algorithm triggers control unit 50 to automatically deenergize inline heater 20, stop treatment at the corresponding machine or cycler (or stop preparing purified water or stop preparing dialysis fluid at the corresponding unit), and alarm the patient, caregiver or nurse, e.g., at user interface 60.
One possible implementation of the overheating algorithm of inline heating system 10 is to run a characterizing program that characterizes inline heater 20 at the time of manufacture and/or servicing of the dialysis machine (or other unit). The characterizing program characterises how heater element resistance Re relates to input power and flowrate. Here, the inline heater is energized while receiving a known flowrate of fluid. Input power is varied while the flowrate is held constant. Temperature sensor 18t may be used to measure the test fluid temperature downstream form inline heater 20 to confirm that the inline heater is heating the test fluid properly to the commanded temperature. The output of pump 16 is monitored to confirm that the commanded flowrate is met (a weight scale may be used in the test setting). The characterising program enables measured heater element resistances Re (correlated with heater element temperature) for the particular inline heater 20 tested to be known for a commanded flowrate and fluid temperature, and over a common or use range of input power settings. A resulting calibration data table is then stored in memory 54 of control unit 50 of the dialysis machine (or other unit). Control unit 50 uses the calibration data during treatment to detect when inline heater 20 is overheating, that is, to detect that for a given or commanded flowrate and input power setting to achieve a commanded temperature, whether a measured and determined heater element resistance Re is greater than it should be for the commanded dialysis fluid temperature.
The algorithm stored in memory 54 of control unit 50 of the dialysis machine (or other unit) may accordingly analyze two factors (i) rate of change in heater element resistance (derivative) indicating that a no or low flow condition may be beginning and (ii) a comparison between a determined heater element resistance Re to the calibration resistance for the same input power and commanded flowrate. That is, the rate of change in heater element resistance Re may be high, indicating that a no or low flow condition may be underway, but if the determined heater element resistance (and corresponding temperature) is lower than what the calibration data says the heater element resistance should be for a given flowrate and power input setting, then the algorithm allows control unit 50 of dialysis machine (or other unit) to continue treatment.
In an embodiment, the cycle rate for the current or voltage measurement to determine heater element resistance Re may be very high, and thus the algorithm may be configured to take many measurements, e.g., over the period of a second or more, before making a no or low flow determination, deenergizing inline heater 20, stopping treatment, and alarming the patient, caregiver or nurse. Taking many measurements over a safe time period that is too short for inline heater 20 to overheat significantly helps to prevent false trips.
Taking many measurements also provides an adequate number of samples to efficiently supress measurement signal noise. The measurement signal for heater element resistance Re tends to be very noisy due to its environment including a pulsed power source. In one implementation, the high sampling rate was 5 kHz, and a multi- or four step decimation procedure was applied. Each decimation step was performed by applying an 8th order Chebyshev lowpass filter type I and by removing samples to a 10th of a fraction of the original or prior step, e.g., to 500 samples, then 50 samples, etc. There are numerous ways of performing the filtering leading to the heater element resistance Re graph at the top of
It should be understood that various changes and modifications to the presently preferred embodiments described herein will be apparent to those skilled in the art. It is therefore intended that any or all of such changes and modifications may be covered by the appended claims. For example, while inline heating system 10 is shown interrogating two heater elements 26a, 26b (e.g., for redundancy where a rise in resistance at either element can trip a no or low flow outcome), the inline heating systems of the present disclosure may instead interrogate only a single or less than all of the heater elements of inline heater 20.
The present application claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/241,738, filed on Sep. 8, 2021, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated
Number | Date | Country | |
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63241738 | Sep 2021 | US |