This application is the US national phase entry of International Patent Application no. PCT/EP2013/061059, filed May 29, 2013, which claims priority to Swiss patent applications no. 00768/12, filed Jun. 4, 2012 and 01169/12, filed Jul. 26, 2012.
The present invention relates to a laryngeal mask head having a cover plate positioned dorsally and a supraglottic tube connected thereto, the laryngeal mask head having a cuff surrounding a ventral respiration chamber.
A variety of laryngeal masks based on different design principles are known and available on the market. The majority of all the laryngeal mask heads have a cover plate that is positioned dorsally and is connected to a supraglottic tube. A respiration chamber, which is surrounded by a cuff, is present on the ventral side of the laryngeal mask head. In the majority of all known laryngeal mask heads, this cuff is inflatable. Typical examples of such laryngeal masks in which the laryngeal mask head has a cover plate positioned dorsally and a ventral respiration chamber, wherein the respiration chamber is surrounded by an inflatable cuff, are disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,878,745, US Patent 2003/0037790 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,040,322. Laryngeal masks in which the laryngeal mask head has a non-inflatable cuff are much less common. Such laryngeal masks are usually designed in one piece by forming the laryngeal mask head and the supraglottic tube in one piece having approximately the shape of a handheld showerhead. EP 0 389272 discloses a laryngeal mask, which may also be designed with a non-inflatable cuff, in which case this cuff has a peripheral collar facing the ventral direction to improve the seal. This laryngeal mask or laryngeal mask head is considered to be the most proximate prior art. GB Patent 2,404,863 also discloses a laryngeal mask, wherein the laryngeal mask and the supraglottic tube are connected to one another in one piece here. The adjustment in the shape of this laryngeal mask is also accomplished here, as in the aforementioned EP 389272, by means of a peripheral collar having an integrally molded cuff.
On the other hand, EP 1875937 discloses a type of laryngeal mask similar to that in the aforementioned GB Patent 2,404,863, wherein the seal here is implemented essentially by an improved anatomically adjusted shape. Ultimately reference is also made to EP 1938855, in which a supporting ring is integrally molded on the cuff by means of a thin-walled elastic connection instead of the peripheral collar.
All the laryngeal masks having non-inflatable cuffs described here provide only a certain elastic adjustment, which is performed in the ventral-dorsal direction. None of the aforementioned approaches discloses an adjustability in size and shape using only non-pneumatic means in the lateral-medial and/or ventral-dorsal directions.
The object of the present invention is therefore to create a laryngeal mask head, which can be manufactured in a compact one-piece design by injection molding and allows an adjustment of shape in the lateral-medial direction. This object is achieved by a laryngeal mask head made of plastic having a cover plate positioned dorsally and a supraglottic tube connected thereto, wherein the laryngeal mask head has a cuff surrounding a ventral respiration chamber, characterized in that the cuff has only non-pneumatic means for flexible size adjustment in the medial-lateral and/or dorsal-ventral direction.
This size adjustment is preferably accomplished by the fact that the non-pneumatic means are open channels, wherein the channels for medial-lateral size adjustment have a ventral-dorsal direction of penetration or depth extension, and the channels that are provided for ventral-dorsal size adjustment have a medial-lateral direction of penetration or depth extension.
The resilient effect of the channels is obtained through the choice of materials, on the one hand, and, on the other hand, by determination of the wall thickness of the side walls of the channel. However, one is limited to certain given factors with respect to the choice of materials and also with respect to the wall thickness embodiment, and resiliently supporting members, by means of which the spring force of the channels can be influenced, are proposed accordingly. These members are explained in the additional claims.
Such a laryngeal mask head may of course also be designed in one piece with the supraglottic tube connected to it.
A preferred exemplary embodiment of the subject matter of the invention is illustrated in the drawings and described on the basis of the accompanying description with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The sections of channel running on both sides of the cover plate 9 have approximately a partially elliptical path guide. When discussing the channel 10 below with respect to this embodiment according to
These channels 10, as mentioned previously, here represent the means 6 for medial-lateral size adjustment. This direction is represented symbolically with the double arrow 12. A double arrow 13 running perpendicular to this arrow in the longitudinal direction indicates the ventral-dorsal direction, and the means 7 lead in this direction to adjustment in the ventral-dorsal direction. In the example shown here, these means 7 consist of a peripheral resilient sealing lip 15. Such resilient sealing lips for sealing elastic adjustment in the ventral-dorsal direction are also already known from the documents cited in the introduction.
The resilient effect of the means 6 can be determined through the choice of the material, i.e., the choice of the plastic used here, but also through the geometric design, namely the wall thickness of the channel 10. This channel 10 has a bottom 100 and side walls 101. The thickness of the bottom as well as that of the side walls can of course be defined in almost any way and the softness or hardness of the resilient effect of the means 6 is designed for medial-lateral size adjustment accordingly. Nevertheless, one is not as totally free in the choice of materials specifically in the medical technical field as one might like and also one is of course bound to anatomical relationships with respect to the geometry. To be able to nevertheless adjust the resilient effect in the lateral-medial or dorsal-ventral direction, various elastic supporting members 11 are proposed and explained with reference to
In the description of the following simplified representation of the channel, the terms “lateral” and “medial” are used according to the position shown here. Similarly, one could speak of dorsal and ventral side walls in the case of a channel represented as horizontal.
A first variant is illustrated in
However, it is also quite possible to provide such supporting ribs 111, 112 on both side walls, as illustrated symbolically in
The variant according to
The channel 10 in
Such supporting walls naturally need not always run in a straight line. For example,
Since the laryngeal mask head 1 is made of plastic on the whole, this also results in relative displacements between the side walls 101 of the channel 10 on insertion of the laryngeal mask. This can lead to certain blockages in unfavorable cases, which allow a spring movement only under difficult conditions, these problems are not encountered in the choice of the S-shaped curved supporting walls, such as the supporting walls 117.
Although not shown here, instead of only one channel 10, it is of course also possible to have two or more such channels running in parallel, one on each side of the cover plate in the cuff 4. In such an approach, the channels would then be designed of different lengths. The channels would then be made shorter when closer to the central axis 14 in the medial direction, while the parallel channels 10 disposed farther toward the outside in the lateral direction would be designed longer. This would result in a greater stiffness in the region close to the respiration chamber, while the flexibility would be increased further toward the outside in the lateral direction.
The embodiment according to
The cuff 4 is therefore divided into two parts on the ventral contacting side, forming a seal. This two-part design is especially advantageous because it results in practically two sealing surfaces and a higher specific pressure can be achieved at the sealing edges thanks to the smaller contact surfaces, so that an increased sealing effect is implemented.
Although all the previous embodiments have illustrated approaches having means 6 for medial-lateral size adjustment, the following figures illustrate approaches having means 7 for ventral-dorsal size adjustment. These means 7 are in turn implemented here as channels, but these channels having a lateral-medial direction of penetration into the cuff are labeled as 20. These channels 20 having the lateral-medial direction of penetration produce a ventral-dorsal size adjustment. This again shows the laryngeal mask head 1 with the supraglottic tube 2 integrally molded thereon. This tube has the ventral respiration chamber 3 and the esophageal passage 5 beneath the cover plate 9, as shown in
In the embodiment according to
Finally, a combined approach is shown in the embodiment according to
Thanks to the multiplicity of possible variants, which may of course also be provided with the corresponding supporting ribs, supporting lobes or straight or curved supporting walls, this yields a variety of possible combinations, which make it possible in practical terms to achieve any desired spring characteristics of the cuff. Manufacturers are given an opportunity to offer a variety of embodiments on the market with relatively minor changes in shape through the choice of the corresponding combination and/or design of the laryngeal mask head with one or more channels 10, with a ventral-dorsal direction of penetration or one or more channels 20 running parallel to one another with a lateral-medial direction of penetration.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
768/12 | Jun 2012 | CH | national |
1169/12 | Jul 2012 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2013/061059 | 5/29/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2013/182460 | 12/12/2013 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6070581 | Augustine et al. | Jun 2000 | A |
6095144 | Pagan | Aug 2000 | A |
6439232 | Brain | Aug 2002 | B1 |
6546931 | Lin | Apr 2003 | B2 |
20040020491 | Fortuna | Feb 2004 | A1 |
20060102186 | Adler | May 2006 | A1 |
20080099026 | Chang | May 2008 | A1 |
20110220117 | Dubach | Sep 2011 | A1 |
20110226256 | Dubach | Sep 2011 | A1 |
20120090609 | Dubach | Apr 2012 | A1 |
20150114400 | Dubach | Apr 2015 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1875937 | Jan 2008 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20150114400 A1 | Apr 2015 | US |