1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to more effective calibration and use of light-emitting diodes. More particularly, the present invention relates to an apparatus and method of calibrating and using light-emitting diodes in a sensor for use with an oximeter system.
2. Description of the Related Art
Light-emitting diodes (LEDs) are used in many applications. In certain applications, knowledge of the particular wavelength of operation of the LED is required to obtain accurate measurements. One such application is noninvasive oximeters conventionally used to monitor arterial oxygen saturation.
In conventional oximetry procedures to determine arterial oxygen saturation, light energy is transmitted from LEDs, each having a respective wavelength, through human tissue carrying blood. Generally, the LEDs are part of a sensor attached to an oximeter system. In common usage, the sensor is attached to a finger or an earlobe. The light energy, which is attenuated by the blood, is detected with a photodetector and analyzed to determine the oxygen saturation. Additional constituents and characteristics of the blood, such as the saturation of carboxyhemoglobin and scattering can be monitored by utilizing additional LEDs with additional wavelengths.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,653,498 to New, Jr., et al., discloses a pulse oximeter that utilizes two LEDs to provide incident light energy of two different, but carefully selected, wavelengths.
In conventional oximeters, the wavelength of each LED in a sensor must be precisely known in order to calculate accurately the oxygen saturation. However, the sensors are detachable from the oximeter system to allow for replacement or disinfection.
When a sensor is replaced, the LEDs of the new sensor may have a slightly different wavelength for the predetermined LED drive current due to manufacturing tolerances. Accordingly, conventional oximeters provide for indicating to the oximeter the particular wavelength of the LEDs for a given sensor. In one known system, a resistor is used to code each transmission LEDs. The resistor is selected to have a value indicative of the wavelength of the LED. The oximeter reads the resistor value on the sensor and utilizes the value of the resistor to determine the actual wavelength of the LEDs. This calibration procedure is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,621,643, assigned to Nellcor, Inc. Such a prior art sensor is depicted in
In conventional oximeters which provide an indication of the operational wavelength of each LED for each sensor, the oximeter systems are programmed to perform the desired calculations for various wavelengths. This complicates the design of the oximeter system, and therefore, adds expense to the oximeter system. Accordingly, it would be advantageous to provide sensors which exhibit the same wavelength characteristics from sensor to sensor.
In addition, conventional sensors require an additional LED for each additional wavelength desired. For replaceable sensors, each LED can add significant total additional cost because of the large number of sensors that are used in hospitals and the like. Therefore, it would be desirable to provide a sensor which provides more than one wavelength from a single LED.
Many LEDs are observed to exhibit a wavelength shift in response to a change in drive current, drive voltage, temperature, or other tuning parameters such as light directed on the LED. The present invention involves an improved method and apparatus to calibrate LEDs by utilizing this wavelength shift. In addition, the present invention involves utilizing the wavelength shift to allow a single LED to provide more than one operating wavelength. The addition of a wavelength provides the ability to monitor additional parameters in a medium under test without adding an LED. In oximetry, this allows monitoring of additional constituents in the blood without adding additional LEDs to the oximeter sensor.
The present invention also involves an application of the wavelength shift in LEDs to obtain physiological data regarding the oxygen saturation of blood without knowing the precise operational wavelength of an LED in the sensor.
One aspect of the present invention provides a tuned light transmission network for transmitting light energy at a preselected wavelength. The network has a current source configured to provide a preselected source current with a light emitting diode coupled to the current source. The light emitting diode is of the type that exhibits a shift in wavelength with a shift in a selected tuning parameter. Advantageously, the tuning parameter is drive current or drive voltage. A tuning resistor connected in parallel with the light emitting diode has a value selected to draw at least a first portion of the preselected source current such that a second portion of the preselected source current passes through the light emitting diode. The second portion of the preselected source current is selected to cause the light emitting diode to generate light energy of a preselected wavelength.
In the present embodiment, the tuned light transmission network also comprises a detector responsive to light energy from the light emitting diode to generate an output signal indicative of the intensity of the light energy.
Another aspect of the present invention involves a method for precalibrating a light generating sensor. The method involves a number of steps. A first level of current passing through a light source as required to operate the light source at a preselected wavelength is determined. A second level of current is then defined. The second level of current is higher than the first level of current. The second level of current forms a drive current. A resistor is then selected which when coupled in parallel with the light source forms a tuned light source network. The resistor is selected such that when it is connected in parallel with the light source, it draws a sufficient amount of the drive current such that the first level of current passes through the light source.
Another aspect of the present invention is a method of providing two wavelengths from a single light emitting diode. A light emitting diode is selected of the type that exhibits a wavelength shift with a change in drive current through the light emitting diode for a range of drive currents. A source of electrical energy is coupled to the light emitting diode to provide the drive currents. The light emitting diode is driven with a first level of drive current within the range of drive current to cause the light emitting diode to become active and operate at a first wavelength in response to the first level of drive currents. The light emitting diode is then driven with a second level of drive current within the range of drive current and different from the first level of drive current to cause the light emitting diode to become active and operate at a second wavelength in response to the second level of drive current.
In an embodiment where the light emitting diode is configured to transmit light energy to a medium under test, the method comprises further steps. While the light emitting diode is operating at the first wavelength, light is transmitted as a first light energy at the first wavelength through the medium under test. The first wavelength is chosen for a first predetermined attenuation characteristic of the light energy as it propagates through the medium under test. The attenuated light energy is measured from the light emitting diode with a photodetector. In addition, while the light emitting diode is operating at the second wavelength, light energy is transmitted at the second wavelength through the medium under test. The second wavelength is chosen for a second predetermined attenuation characteristic of the light energy as it propagates through the medium under test. The attenuated light energy is measured at the second wavelength from the light emitting diode.
In one advantageous embodiment, the method is used to determine the oxygen saturation of blood, and the medium under test comprises a portion of the human body having flowing blood. In this embodiment, the method further involves coupling the source of energy to a second light emitting diode which operates at a third wavelength distinct from the first and the second wavelengths. Further, the change in wavelength between the first and second wavelengths has a preselected value. Third light energy is transmitted at the third wavelength through the medium under test, and the third light energy is measured after propagation through the medium under test. Based upon the measurements, the oxygen saturation of the blood is determined.
In one embodiment, parameters in addition to oxygen saturation may also be determined relating to the medium under test when the first wavelength has a known value, and the change in wavelength between the first and the second wavelengths has a preselected value. In this embodiment, value of the second wavelength is determined, and another parameter is calculated relating to the blood. In one embodiment, the another parameter is the saturation of carboxyhemoglobin. Alternatively, another parameter is scattering. Yet another parameter is Methhemoglobin.
Advantageously, using the apparatus described above for tuning, the first light emitting diode is adjusted with an adjusting resistor such that the change in wavelength for an incremental change in current matches a preselected wavelength change. Preferably, adjusting involves placing the adjusting resistor in parallel with the first light emitting diode, and selecting the value of the adjusting resistor to cause the first light emitting diode to exhibit the preselected change for the incremental change in current.
Yet a further aspect of the present invention provides an oximeter sensor having a first light emitting device configured to generate a light at a first known wavelength with a resistor in parallel with the first light emitting device. Preferably, the light emitting device comprises a light emitting diode. In one embodiment, the resistor comprises an encoding resistor having a value indicative of the first known wavelength value. The value of the encoding resistor is sufficiently high such that the encoding resistor draws effectively insignificant current during active operation of the first light emitting device.
In another embodiment, the resistor comprises a security resistor, having a value indicative that the oximeter sensor is of a predetermined type. In addition, the value of the security resistor is sufficiently high such that the security resistor draws effectively insignificant current during active operation of the first light emitting device.
Still a further aspect of the present invention involves a method of tuning a light emitting diode to operate at a preselected wavelength within a range of wavelengths the method involves selecting a light emitting diode that exhibits a wavelength shift in response to a change in drive current within a range of drive current and driving the light emitting diode with a first drive current. The wavelength of the light emitting diode during operation at the first drive current is measured, and, if the light emitting diode is not operating at the preselected wavelength, the drive current is adjusted within the range of drive current to a second drive current such that the light emitting diode operates at the preselected wavelength.
Another aspect of the present invention involves a sensor configured to transmit and detect light. The sensor has at least one light emitting element, the light emitting element having an emission with a centroid transmission wavelength. The sensor further has first and second photodetectors, the emission of the light emitting element being within the response of the first and second photodetectors. A light directing member is configured to direct light from the at least one light emitting element to the first and second photodetectors. A filter positioned between the second photodetector and the at least one light emitting element has a transition band selected to encompass the centroid transmission wavelength.
In one embodiment, the sensor comprises an oximeter sensor, and the at least one light emitting element comprises first and second light emitting diodes. Advantageously, the first light emitting diode has a centroid wavelength in the red range and the second light emitting diode has a centroid wavelength in the infrared range. Advantageously, the filter has a transition band which encompasses the centroid wavelength of the first light emitting diode.
In one advantageous embodiment, the light directing member comprises an integrating optical sphere having the first and second photodetectors positioned about the sphere so as to receive substantially equivalent portions of light from the at least one light emitting element.
In another embodiment, light directing member comprises a beam splitting member positioned to substantially equally divide light from the at least one light emitting member and to direct substantially equal portions of the light to the first and the second photodetectors.
Still another aspect of the present invention involves a method of determining the centroid wavelength of a light emitting element. The method involves providing a set of a plurality of predetermined ratios, each of the plurality of predetermined ratios corresponding to an associated centroid wavelength. Light is transmitted from the light emitting element to a first light detecting element to obtain a first intensity, and light is transmitted from the light emitting element through a filter which attenuates the light to a second light detecting element to obtain a second intensity. A ratio of the second intensity to the first intensity is then calculated. The ratio is compared to the set of predetermined ratios to reference the centroid wavelength of the light emitting element.
In one embodiment, the first and second light detecting elements comprise the same light detecting element.
FIGS 10A, 10B, 10C, and 10D depict graphs relating to the wavelength detection aspect of the present invention; and
The present invention has applicability to the use of medical probes and LEDs in general. However, an understanding is facilitated with the following description of the application of the principles of the present invention to oximetry.
The advantages of noninvasive techniques in monitoring the arterial oxygen (or other constituents) saturation of a patient are well-known. In oximetry, light of a known wavelength is transmitted through a medium (e.g., a human digit such as a finger) under test. The light energy is partially absorbed and scattered by the constituents that make up the medium as the light propagates through the medium. The absorption and scattering of the light energy by any given constituent depends upon the wavelength of the light passing through the constituent, as well as several other parameters. The absorption by a constituent is characterized with what is known as the extinction coefficient.
One wavelength is required for each separate constituent in the medium. The wavelengths used for oximetry are chosen to maximize sensitivity of the measurement (i.e., oxygen saturation, etc.). These principles are well understood in the art.
The amplitude of the energy incident on a homogeneous media having at least one constituent under test is approximately related to the amplitude of the energy transmitted through the media as follows:
where Io is the energy incident on the medium, I is the attenuated signal, di is the thickness of the ith constituent through which light energy passes, εi is the extinction (or absorption) coefficient of the ith constituent through which the light energy passes (the optical path length of the ith constituent), and ci is the concentration of the ith constituent in thickness di. As well-understood in the art, this basic relationship is utilized to obtain oxygen saturation using conventional oximetry techniques.
It should be understood that the above equation is simplified for discussion purposes. Other factors such as multiple scattering also contribute to the resulting attenuation of the light energy. Multiple scattering is discussed in a paper by Joseph M. Schmitt entitled, “Simple Photon Diffusion Analysis of the Effects of Multiple Scattering on Pulse Oximetry,” IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, vol. 38, no. 12, December 1991.
However, for further discussion purposes, the simplified equation (1) will be utilized. In procedures based on oximetry technology, the accuracy of the physiological measurement is impacted by the accuracy of the wavelength of the transmission LEDs because, as depicted in
Wavelength Tuned LEDs
One aspect of the present invention provides an apparatus and method for tuning each LED in a sensor such that the operating wavelengths for LEDs do not vary significantly from sensor to Sensor. The tuning is performed by utilizing the. wavelength shift exhibited in many LEDs in response to a change in drive current.
Accordingly, one way to obtain a selected wavelength is to drive the LEDs with the current necessary to obtain the wavelength. However, such embodiment would require an oximeter design which varies the LED drive current for each sensor.
In one advantageous embodiment, in order to avoid the added complexity of oximeter system design, a resistor is placed in parallel with an LED in order to adjust the drive current through the LED to a level which will result in a selected wavelength. In such embodiment, the oximeter system is designed to operate at the selected wavelength for each LED in the sensor. And, the oximeter need only provide a fixed drive current. Accordingly, in one embodiment, the design of the oximeter is simpler in that it need not take into account variations of wavelength from sensor to sensor. The oximeter can simply be designed to operate at the selected wavelengths and have a fixed drive current.
Each LED sensor manufactured for the oximeter is tuned, using the wavelength shift, such that the LEDs in the sensor generate light at the selected wavelengths for the oximeter.
The sensor 150 is illustrated with a first light source 160 and a second light source 170, typically LEDs. A first tuning resistor 162 connected in parallel with the first LED 160 forms a first tuned LED network 164. Similarly, a second tuning resistor 172 is connected in parallel with the second LED 170 to form a second tuned LED network 174. The sensor 150 further comprises a photodetector 180. A power source in the oximeter system, such as an LED driver 182, is coupled to the tuned LED networks 164, 174 in order to provide a predetermined drive current at the input of the tuned LED networks 164, 174. Advantageously, the LED driver 182 provides current to only one of the tuned LED networks 164, 174 at any given time. The photodetector 180 is coupled to receiving and conditioning circuitry 184 in the oximeter system 152. In operation, the photodetector receives the attenuated light energy and responds with an output signal representing the intensity of the alternative light energy. The oximeter system 152 further comprises a controller 190 with supporting resources and a display 192. The oximeter system receives the signals obtained from the sensor 150 and analyzes the signals to determine information regarding the medium through which the light energy has been transmitted. It should be understood that the oximeter system is depicted in simplified form for discussion purposes. Oximeter systems are well known in the art. One possible oximeter system comprises the oximeter system disclosed in pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/320,154 filed Oct. 7, 1994, which has been assigned to the assignee of the present application. Other oximeter systems are well known and can be designed to operate at the selected wavelengths.
As depicted in
The tuning is now explained with reference to the first LED 160. The tuning is also applicable to the second LED 172. As explained above, in response to a particular drive current, different LEDs respond with different wavelengths, even though the LEDs were manufactured to generate the same wavelength. Tuning the first LED 160 in accordance with the present invention involves determining the amount of current required to operate the first LED 160 at the selected wavelength and adjusting the current through the first LED 160 in order to obtain the selected wavelength.
For instance, typical operational values for red LEDs used in oximetry range between 645 nm and 670 nm. For a particular embodiment of an oximeter, the oximeter may be designed to operate with a selected wavelength within that range, for example, 670 nm. However, the LEDs manufactured to produce the selected wavelength of 670 nm involve manufacturing tolerances typically in the range of ±2-10 nm for the same drive current. However, for a typical LED used in oximetry, the drive current can be varied in order to obtain the desired output wavelength for the LED. For instance, as illustrated in
For purposes of discussion, the first LED 160 is defined to exhibit the wavelength characteristic depicted in
One particular advantageous method of selecting the tuning resistor involves the use of a semiconductor substrate resistor, such as the resistor 210 depicted in
Other methods of selecting the first tuning resistor 162, such as calculating the wavelength shift for a given current change for the first LED 160, and then selecting the appropriate resistor to cause the correct amount of current to flow through the LED to obtain the selected operating wavelength, can also be used. Similarly, a potentiometer could be used. Preferably, each LED for each sensor is tuned in a similar manner such that the operating wavelength is a selected operating wavelength for the sensor. For instance, a two wavelength oximeter operating may have selected wavelengths for the two LEDs of 670 nm and 905 nm. For each sensor, a first LED is tuned for the 670 nm selected wavelength, and a second LED is tuned for the 905 nm selected wavelength.
In sum, the tuning aspect of the present invention involves using the principle of wavelength shift in an LED to tune each LED to obtain a respective selected operating wavelength.
It should be understood that for some LEDs, the manufacturing tolerance may be too far from the respective selected wavelength to enable the use of the shift in wavelength to properly tune the LED; or the wavelength shift may be insufficient to obtain the selected wavelength. In one embodiment, such LEDs would not be utilized, and would be considered out of tolerance. Alternatively, if the obtainable wavelength shift is not sufficient to allow for proper tuning, it is also possible to use two LEDs having wavelengths very near each other and near the selected wavelength. One LED has a wavelength below the selected wavelength, and one LED has a wavelength above the selected wavelength. As the graph of
As another alternative, if sufficient wavelength shift is not available to allow for tuning all LEDs to the selected wavelengths, a few selected wavelengths could be used. For instance, for determining oxygen saturation, the selected red wavelengths could be 660 nm, 670 nm and 680 nm. The selected infrared wavelengths could be 900 nm, 920 nm, and 940 nm, independent of the red wavelengths. Each sensor would be tuned using the tuning resistors described above such that the red and infrared LEDs operate at one of the selected red and infrared wavelengths, respectively. An indicator would then be provided on the sensor, or the connector attached to the sensor, to allow the oximeter to determine which of the selected wavelengths is present on the sensor attached to the oximeter. Alternatively, a wavelength detection device could be provided with the oximeter system to determine which of the selected wavelengths is present in a sensor attached to the oximeter system. Although this embodiment requires some means for the oximeter to determine which of the selected wavelengths is present on the attached sensor, the selected wavelengths are precise from sensor to sensor.
Two-Wavelength LED
Another aspect of the present invention involves using the principle of wavelength shift in an LED for a given change in current in order to use a single LED to provide two operating wavelengths. This is advantageous in making physiological measurements, such as blood oximetry measurements, because for each additional wavelength added, the saturation of an additional constituent in the blood can be measured. For instance, with a two-wavelength oximeter, only the ratio of one of two constituents to the total of the two constituents (e.g., oxygen saturation) can be accurately monitored. If oxygen saturation is monitored with two wavelengths, other constituents which are significantly present in the blood affect the measurement of oxygen saturation.
If an additional constituent present in the blood has a significant effect upon the oxygen saturation reading for a particular patient, the failure to detect the constituent can be detrimental to the patient. An example of a constituent which, when present in the blood, will significantly impact the oxygen saturation reading provided by a two-wavelength oximeter is carbon monoxide. This is because the extinction coefficient magnitude for carboxyhemoglobin (depicted in the curve 106 of
In accordance with the present invention, the principle of wavelength shift in an LED is utilized in order to drive one LED with two appropriate drive current levels to provide two distinct wavelengths. In its simplest form, this is accomplished by first driving an LED (which exhibits wavelength shift with drive current change) with a first known drive current to a first known wavelength, and then driving the same LED with a second known current to a second known wavelength.
In the present example for blood oximetry, the first LED 254 is the shifting LED and is used to provide two wavelengths. In order to accurately provide two wavelengths, the wavelength shift principle is utilized. According to one embodiment, LEDs are evaluated at the time a sensor is manufactured, and an indicator is provided on the sensor which can be read by the oximeter system 252 to indicate the drive current change necessary in order to effectuate a desired shift in wavelength. Indicators may comprise a resistor on the sensor or sensor connector, a memory on the sensor or sensor connector, or a similar device. Alternatively, the indicator can provide a indication to the oximeter of the amount of wavelength shift which is obtained due to a preset drive current change. Another alternative is to provide a wavelength detector 268 for the oximeter, which allows the oximeter system 252 to detect the transmission wavelength of an active LED. Wavelength detectors, such as a monochrometer, are well known in the art. However, conventional monochrometers are expensive and bulky. This description sets forth a more practical approach to detecting wavelength below. In this embodiment, the LED driver 260 changes the drive current until the desired wavelength is obtained, utilizing the wavelength detector 268 to monitor the wavelength.
In one preferred embodiment allowing for a simpler oximeter design, in order to accurately provide two wavelengths with a single LED such as the first LED 254, a network 270 of a slope adjusting resistor 272 and the first LED 254 is slope adjusted such that a preselected change in drive current (ΔI) entering the first slope adjusted network, causes a preselected shift in wavelength (Δλ) in the first LED 254. In other words, as depicted in
Just as the first tuning resistor 162 tunes the first LED 160 to a particular selected wavelength for a selected drive current, a slope adjusting resistor, such as the slope adjusting resistor 272, can be used to alter the slope of the curve 122 exhibited for the particular corresponding LED network (e.g., the first slope adjusted LED network 270). In most instances, the slope adjusting resistor 272, if used to alter the slope, cannot also be used to tune the precise wavelength of the first LED 254. However, other methods and procedures to indicate to the oximeter what the particular wavelength of operation of the first LED for a given drive current can be utilized. For instance, an indicator (such as a resistor or low cost memory device) can be provided with the sensor 250 which can be read by the oximeter 252, which indicator provides the initial operating wavelength of the slope adjusted LED network 270.
Slope adjustment can be accomplished in the same manner as described above with respect to the semiconductor substrate resistor 210. However, the substrate resistor functions as the slope adjusting resistor rather than a wavelength tuning resistor (i.e., the substrate resistor is adjusted to cause a preselected change in wavelength for a preselected change in drive current for the LED/resistor network). In other words, for the first LED 254, the substrate resistor 210 depicted in
It should be noted that if LEDs are available that exhibit the same wavelength shift with respect to the same change in drive current, the first slope adjusting resistor 272 is unnecessary.
For determining oxygen saturation, the second LED 256 operates at a fixed infrared wavelength (e.g., 905 nm). Preferably, if the infrared LEDs exhibit manufacturing tolerances, the infrared LEDs can be tuned using a tuning resistor 274, in the same manner as the tuning resistor 162 of
In use, the sensor 250 of
In an oximeter system where monitoring of carbon monoxide and oxygen is desired, the first wavelength may be 660 nm, the second wavelength may be 675 nm or 680 nm and the third wavelength will be an infrared wavelength such as 900 nm or 905 nm. With these three wavelengths provided by two LEDs, the saturation of both oxyhemoglobin and carboxyhemoglobin in blood can be determined. The use of two LEDs to perform measurements at three wavelengths reduces the cost of the sensor, which is particularly advantageous if the sensor is a disposable or replaceable sensor.
In addition to the uses described above, it should also be noted that the wavelength shift principal described above could be used to obtain, an additional wavelength with one LED for use in the ratiometric method of determining blood oxygen as described in copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 07/672,890, filed Nov. 21, 1991, which has been assigned to the assignee of the present application.
Measurements without Precise Wavelength Information
A further aspect of the present invention involves an apparatus and method of measuring the saturation of a selected constituent in a medium under test (e.g., oxyhemoglobin in blood) without knowing the precise operational wavelength of one LED. According to this aspect of the present invention, if the wavelength shift for an LED is known for a known change in drive current, the operational wavelength for the LED need not be known if other information is also available, as further explained below.
As explained above, obtaining a known wavelength shift for a selected change in current can be accomplished by adjusting presently existing LEDs, such that the LEDs react to a preselected change in drive current (ΔI) with a preselected change in wavelength (Δλ). Alternatively, if LEDs are available having a repeatable (from LED to LED) change in wavelength for a selected change in current, those LEDs can be used without adjustment. An understanding of this aspect of the present invention is explained with reference to arterial oxygen saturation determination using two-wavelength oximeters.
As explained above,
As illustrated by the first curve 102, the extinction coefficient of oxyhemoglobin for light transmitted between approximately 665 nm (indicated as λ1 on the graph) and 690 nm (indicated as λ2 on the graph) is substantially constant (more apparent when the Y-axis of
Assuming that incident light is represented by the letter Io and the attenuated signal is represented by I, the attenuated signal is represented by Equation (1) above. In other words, for the LED sensor 250 of
Where light of wavelength λ is transmitted through tissue with blood containing two forms of hemoglobin (oxyhemoglobin and reduced hemoglobin), Equation (1) can be expanded for these two constituents of blood:
where:
Equation (2) can be further expressed as follows:
For determining oxygen saturation, where the light is transmitted at a first red wavelength λ1, Equation (3) is expressed as follows:
Where light is transmitted at an infrared wavelength λIR, Equation (3) is expressed as follows:
When the wavelength λ1 and the wavelength λIR are both known, the oxygen saturation can be determined, as well-understood in the art. This is briefly illustrated with the following derivation:
Equations (4) and (5) become:
N1=C2ε2λ
N2=C2ε2λ
In matrix notation, Equations (7) and (8) become:
As well understood in the art, oxygen saturation is defined as the following ratio:
and multiplying the numerator and denominator by −1:
and Simplifying:
Multiplying numerator and denominator by d:
Substituting Equation (12) into Equation (11) above:
Simplifying:
AND FINALLY:
When the wavelength λ1 and the λIR are both known, the extinction coefficients, ε1λ
However, if the wavelengths for the transmission LEDs are not specifically known, the extinction coefficients ε will not be known. In accordance with one aspect of the present invention, the oxygen saturation can be computed without knowing the precise wavelength of one of the LEDs. For purposes of discussion herein, the LED in the red range is chosen for illustration of this aspect of the present invention. In accordance with the present invention, and as explained above, the red LED can be adjusted to exhibit a preselected wavelength shift, even though the precise wavelength may not be known. Accordingly, the red LED can be driven with two different drive currents to obtain two different wavelengths, the shift between which is preselected and known. However, as explained above, the precise wavelength may be unknown without some indication of at least the starting wavelength. In accordance with the present invention, as long as the preselected wavelength shift is known, the starting wavelength need not be known.
In an application where the extinction coefficients vary with respect to shifts in wavelength on the order of 1-3 nm, it would be possible to determine the wavelength without prior information regarding the wavelength or the wavelength shift. This would be accomplished by calculating the desired measurement (e.g., oxygen saturation) at several (e.g., two or more) different LED drive currents and using the change in the measurement in connection with an empirically generated data set (i.e., curves) of measurements with respect to wavelengths to determine the wavelength of the LED.
If the preselected wavelength shift is utilized, the oximeter system can make measurements at three wavelengths λ1, λ2 and λIR. Thus, a third equation in addition to Equations (3) and (4) is obtained.
Where the light is transmitted at a second red wavelength λ2, Equation (3) is expressed as follows:
As depicted in
ε2λ
Furthermore within the same range,
ε1λ
Δε1 is known for a known wavelength shift within the described range, because the change in the extinction coefficient Δε1 is substantially linear.
Substituting Equations (14) and (15) into Equation (4), (5), and (14) results in the following equations:
S1=−d(ε1λ
SIR=−d(ε1λ
S2=−d((ε1λ
As explained above, S1, S2, and SIR are calculated by measuring I and IBL. Accordingly, S1, S2, and SIR, are known values. The extinction coefficients ε1 and ε2 for the infrared wavelength LED are assumed to be known because in the infrared wavelength of interest (e.g., 850 mn-920 nm) and more particularly 890 nm-910 nm), the extinction coefficient is substantially constant for both curves 102 and 104. In another embodiment, the accuracy would be improved slightly by tuning the LED. The extinction coefficients for oxyhemoglobin at λ1 and λ2 are also known, as long as the wavelength is in the range where the extinction coefficient remains constant. In the present example, this range is defined as 665 nm to 690 nm. Furthermore, because the change in the absorption coefficient (Δε1) for reduced hemoglobin is unknown for a known wavelength shift between λ1-λ2=665 nm-690 nm, Δε1 is also a known quantity because ε1 is linear with λ. The total thickness of the medium, d, generally is unknown for most applications. However, for the determination of oxygen saturation, as illustrated above, the thickness (d) cancels because saturation is a ratio.
Accordingly, for the determination of oxygen saturation, Equations (17), (18), and (19) provide three equations with three unknowns (ε1λ
Accordingly, this aspect of the present invention permits the user to obtain physiological data without knowing the precise operational frequency of an LED.
Improved Calibration of LED Sensor
An additional aspect of the present invention involves an improved calibration technique for an oximeter sensor where a resistor is utilized to code the LED rather than tune the LED. As depicted in the prior art calibrated oximeter probe of
In accordance with this aspect of the present invention, one of the LED electrical connections can also be used for the coding resistor.
For instance, the coding resistor could be utilized for security purposes. In other words, the value of the coding resistor, and the placement across the LED 312 could be used to ensure that the probe is configured properly for the oximeter. For instance, the coding resistor could be utilized to indicate that the probe is from an authorized supplier such as a “Masimo” standard probe, “Patient Monitoring Company 1” probe, “Patient Monitoring Company 2” probe, etc.
In addition, it should be noted that the resistor need not be a passive element. Coding information could also be provided through an active circuit such as a transistor network, memory chip, or other identification device, for instance Dallas Semiconductor DS 1990 or DS 2401 or other automatic identification chip.
In order to read the coding resistor 332, the oximeter system 340 drives the first LED 312/coding resistor 332 combination at a level that is low enough that the LED draws effectively insignificant current because of the exponential relationship between I and V, as illustrated in the graph of
The current which flows through the coding resistor for the voltage applied is measured by the oximeter system by measuring the current through the first electrical connection 318. In turn, the oximeter system 340 determines the value of the coding resistor 332 which is preselected to indicate the type of probe, the operating wavelength or other parameters about the probe. In essence, by reducing the drive voltage across the first electrical connection 318 and ground to a low level that does not activate the first LED 312, the first LED 312 is effectively removed from the electrical circuit. In the present embodiment, it has been found that for conventional LEDs in the red and IR range, 0.5V is a particularly advantageous voltage. At 0.5V, current through the LED is generally less than 1 μA (an insignificant amount).
Preferably, the coding resistor 332 is chosen to be of a sufficiently high value that when the current supply to the first electrical connection 318 rises to a level sufficient to drive the first LED 312, the coding resistor 332 is effectively removed from the electrical circuit because of its high resistance as compared to the resistance of the first LED 312 at active operating currents.
Accordingly, a coding resistor can be used in connection with an oximeter LED sensor without the addition of an electrical connector dedicated to the coding resistor. This reduces the cost of the sensor in accordance with the present invention.
In one advantageous embodiment, the oximeter can monitor the coding resistor continuously by providing a 0.5V coding resistor reading signal at a frequency different from the LED drive current. For instance, if the LED drive current is turned on and off at a frequency of 625 Hz, the 0.5V coding resistor reading voltage can be provided at a frequency much lower than 625 Hz, such that the 625 Hz signal can be easily filtered with a low pass filter with a cutoff significantly below 625 Hz, but with a pass band which allows the 0.5V signal to pass. This would allow the oximeter to continuously monitor the coding resistor 332 in case of a change in the sensor by the system operator.
This particularly advantageous embodiment of using the coding resistor 332 can also be utilized with a conventional back-to-back configuration for the red and infrared LEDs, as is typical in oximeters. Such a configuration is depicted in
Wavelength Detection
As briefly discussed above, in certain circumstances, it is useful directly to obtain information regarding the wavelength of an LED connected to an oximeter. As illustrated in
As depicted in
As seen in
As is well understood in the art, obtaining a beam splitter to precisely divide the light by 50 percent would be costly to construct. However, it is not necessary to obtain a 50 percent split of the light because imprecision can be accommodated with calibration. In an embodiment where no second filter 411 is provided, the system can be calibrated by activating the infrared LED. This is possible because the first filter 410 is transparent to the infrared wavelength, and thus, each photodetector 404, 406 senses the same signal. In such an embodiment, the intensity outputs from the first and second photodetectors 404, 406 can be compared and equalized through calibration constants during run-time. This compensates for imprecision in the photodetectors, beam splitter 408 and diffuser 407.
In an embodiment where the infrared is not used to calibrate, the photodetectors 404, 406, the beam splitter 408 and the diffuser 407 can be calibrated prior to delivery with a passive or active coding element 415 for each device. It should be understood that the box 415 represents one or more coding elements. It should also be understood that a single coding element could be used for all of the optical devices within the box 515. Preferably, the elements provided for calibration (those within the box in dotted lines labelled 515) in this embodiment are positioned in a reusable portion of the probe such that the increased expense is not too significant.
The filter 410 may also have imprecision due to temperature sensitivity and imprecision of manufacturing process. Therefore, in order to calibrate for imprecision with respect to the filter 410 (preferably a shot glass) due to shift in temperature, a temperature detector 405 is provided in a preferred embodiment. Because temperature sensitivity in shot glass filters are well known, by detecting the temperature, the shift in filter characteristics can also be determined. With respect to the imprecision in manufacturing, a passive or active coding element 415 can be provided on the probe to provide information about the variation from a selected (ideal) filter characteristic (transition band for filter).
Another preferred embodiment utilizing a filter configuration is depicted in
As with the embodiment of
As with the embodiment of
As with the embodiment of
As with the embodiment of
It should also be understood, that in one embodiment, a single memory element or other passive or active element (415, 432) could be provided with enough identification capability to provide characteristic information for each of the diffuser, the photodetectors, filters, and the beam splitter (or optical sphere). For instance, a memory device or transistor network could be provided with several bits of information for device.
In the present embodiment, with red (e.g., 640-680 nm) and infrared (e.g., 900-940 nm) LEDs in the LED networks 402, 420 of
The principle by which the sensors of
The filters 410, 430 preferably have a response as depicted by the curve 450 in
For LEDs having a centroid wavelength in the area of the transition band of the filter, a ratio of the overall intensity detected from a sensor LED without filtering to the intensity of the same sensor LED detected with filtering provides useful information, as further explained.
This ratio of the two areas can be determined from the ratio of intensities received from the photodetectors 404, 406 or 422, 424 as follows: Let the normalized intensity of the unfiltered light IL(λ) and the intensity of the filtered light, If(λ) be represented by the following equations.
The energy of the unfiltered light as received by the photodetector 404, 422 can be expressed as the integral over the range of wavelengths of the LED emission as follows:
E(λ2,λ1)(no filter)=∫λ
where IL(λ) is the LED emission vs. wavelength (λ) and P(λ) is the photodiode response vs. wavelength (λ).
For simplicity, where the photodiode response is “1” (P(λ)=1) in the range of interest (λ1-λ2) (in other words, the light emitted from the LED falls within the range of the LED), the signal of the first photodetector 404, 422 (no filter) will be as follows:
E(λ2,λ1)(no filter)=∫λ
Similarly, the energy of the light received by the second photodetector 406, 424 which has passed through the filter 410, 430 can be expressed as follows:
E(λ2,λ1)(with filter)=∫λ
If all LEDs for a batch of sensors have the same peak emission and bandwidth in the area of interest (λ1-λ2), and can be represented by the same equation (30) except for a multiplicative constant Io, then a normalized ratio of the energies can be defined as follows:
The generalized ratio of equation (34) is a ratio of the entire area of the LED emission attenuated by filtering (designated with cross-hatching in
The function Enorm is single valued and monotonic in the area (λ1-λ2) and depends only on the centroid wavelength shift of the LED with respect to the center of the transition band, λ0, of the filter.
Accordingly, for a filter with a center of the transition band at λ0, the ratio of the energy detected by second photodetector (filter present) to the energy detected by the first photodetector (filter not present) in the wavelength range (λ1-λ2), will be a value between 0 and 1. The precise ratio depends upon the centroid wavelength for the LED under test. As can be seen from
In use, a ratio can be calculated to corresponds to each possible LED wavelength in the range (λ1-λ2). For instance, a test batch of LEDs representing the range of wavelengths (λ1-λ2) can be used to obtain corresponding ratios of the intensity of filtered light to unfiltered light. An accurate wavelength detection device, such as a monochrometer, can be used to measure the centroid wavelength for each tested LED. The centroid wavelength can be stored for each tested LED in association with the measured ratio for each tested LED. This leads to a normalized photodiode response, which can be referenced to obtain the wavelength of an LED having an unknown wavelength in the wavelength range (λ1-λ2).
In other words, for any LED having a centroid wavelength in the range (λ1-λ2), with a sensor as depicted in
Accordingly, with the sensor embodiments of
As mentioned above, knowledge about the precise wavelength of the red LED in an oximeter probe is generally more critical than knowledge of the precise wavelength of the infrared LED. Accordingly, the filters of the sensors of
Examples of preferable filter responses are depicted in
However, it should be understood that the principle explained above could also be used for the infrared LED, if the filters are chosen with the center of their transition band at λ0 selected at the anticipated or target infrared wavelength (e.g., 905 nm). In addition, the second filter 411 (
The wavelength detection described above could also be implemented with a sensor having only one photodetector, and a removable filter. The operator would initiate an intensity measurement as prompted by the oximeter without the filter. Then, the operator would place the filter in the light path between the LED and the photodetector, and initiate a second reading. The ratio of the second reading to the first reading provides the ratio Inorm, which is used to reference the operating wavelength.
In use, the wrap-around probe is placed on the digit of a patient, and the photodetector 508 is positioned opposite the emitter 506 so as to receive light from the emitter 506 attenuated by transmission through a fleshy medium.
In this embodiment, the wrap portion 602 is flexible and disposable after each use with a very low cost. The wrap portion has a flexible layer 626 made from polymer or other flexible materials and has a connector port 614 on the flexible layer 626. The connector port 614 has electrical finger friction connectors 616 which are adapted to couple to electrical finger friction connectors 620 (
The wrap around probe 600 has an aperture 624 that provides a window for the transmission of light energy from the emitters in the emitter portion 610. The emitters are positioned to transmit light through an aperture 628 (
In use, the wrap portion 602 is wrapped around a digit of the patient (e.g., a finger) and the detector 622 is positioned to receive light transmitted through the aperture 624 and through at least a portion of the digit. For instance, the wrap portion 602 can be wrapped around a finger in a manner that the detector 622 is opposite the aperture 624 from which light energy is transmitted.
In one embodiment, the probe 600 is used for the calibratable probe of
It will be understood that the apparatus and method of the present invention may be employed in any circumstance where a measurement of transmitted or reflected energy is required, including but not limited to measurements taken on a finger, an earlobe, or a lip. Thus, there are numerous other embodiments which will be obvious to one skilled in the art. Furthermore, the apparatus and method of the present invention may be employed for any LED application that is wavelength sensitive. The present invention may thus be embodied in other specific forms without departing from its spirit or essential, characteristics. The described embodiments are to be considered in all respects only as illustrative and not restrictive. The scope of the invention is, therefore, indicated by the following appended claims. All changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of these claims are to be embraced within their scope.
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/005,711, filed Nov. 8, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,678,543, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/451,151, filed Nov. 30, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,397,091, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/016,924, filed on Feb. 2,1998, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,011,986, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/478,493, filed on Jun. 7,1995, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,758,644. The present application incorporates each of the foregoing disclosures herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10005711 | Nov 2001 | US |
Child | 10757279 | US | |
Parent | 09451151 | Nov 1999 | US |
Child | 10005711 | US | |
Parent | 09016924 | Feb 1998 | US |
Child | 09451151 | US | |
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Child | 09016924 | US |