Body temperature is universally accepted as an important indicator of the physical condition of humans and other warm blooded animals. For many years, the most common method of measuring body temperature was to insert a mercury-in glass thermometer into the patient's mouth or rectum. These thermometers are potentially hazardous because of a possibility of mercury spill and glass breakage. The closest alternative is an the electronic “pencil” thermometers. These traditional thermometers will not register a body temperature until after they are left in the patient's mouth, rectum or other location for several minutes, thus making the measurement slow and uncomfortable.
A more advanced instrumentation has been developed to measure human body temperature by non-contact readings of the infrared (IR) emissions from the tympanic membrane and the ear canal. This technology was the subject of many patents, including O'Hara et al. U.S. Pat. No. 4,790,324 and Fraden U.S. Pat. No. 4,854,730. The determination of body temperature from an IR reading of the ear drum or ear canal avoids a need to insert a probe into the mouth or anus and allows a measurement of body temperature within a few seconds. However, the IR thermometers have their own problem, the most important of which is susceptibility to operator's technique of taking a temperature. Other drawbacks include effects of ambient temperatures, sensitivity to the cleanliness of the IR lens, etc. The IR thermometers are also relatively expensive.
Another IR thermometer which is exemplified by U.S. publication No. 2002/0114375 by Pompei, describes estimation of a core temperature by measuring the skin temperature and the ambient temperature by use of an IR emission detector. This method, however, suffers from other limitations, such as inability to accurately measure ambient temperature adjacent to the skin, perspiration effects, influence of an operator's technique, higher cost and other factors.
Any traditional contact (non-IR) thermometer has a probe with a temperature sensor that responds to temperature of an object. The rate of response depends on the degree of a thermal coupling with the object, nature of an object, the sensor's isolation from other components and its thermal capacity. There are two known techniques in art of a contact thermometry. One is the equilibrium and the other is the predictive technique. The equilibrium demands a sufficiently long time to allow the sensor to stabilize it's response, meaning that the sensor's temperature and the object's temperature become nearly equal. The predictive technique is based on measuring rate of the sensor's response and estimation of its would be equilibrium level which is not actually achieved during the measurement but rather anticipated mathematically. The latter technique allows a much quicker measurement alas on the expense of some loss in accuracy. The predictive method is covered by numerous U.S. patents exemplified by U.S. Pat. No. 3,978,325. Some of the predictive techniques rely on a software data processing, while others—on a hardware design. For instance, U.S. Pat. No. 3,872,726 issued to Kauffeld et al. teaches forecasting the ultimate temperature of a slow responding thermistor in a contact thermometer by using a hardware integrator.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an electronic thermometer that can register a core body temperature of a mammal without being inserted in the mouth or rectum.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an electronic thermometer that can register a core (deep body) body temperature of a mammal within seconds of contacting the patient skin.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a thermometer that determines core body temperature that is less susceptible to the operator's technique.
Further and additional objects are apparent from the following discussion of the present invention and the preferred embodiment.
The intermittent contact hand-held medical thermometer contains a probe with at least one temperature sensors. If more than one sensor is used, these sensors are thermally separated from each other, and one of the sensors contacts the patient skin while the other is thermally separated from the skin. By measuring responses of both sensors, the patient's deep body (core) temperature is computed by the microcontroller that takes into account temperature of the sensor prior touching the skin, ambient temperature, thermal resistance between the two temperature sensors and other factors.
Two major issues of a patient temperature measurement are solved by this invention. The first is the speed response and the second is measurement of the core temperature without penetrating the body surface. The thermometer is intended for the intermittent measurement of a patient temperature by touching a selected location on the patient's body.
Appearance of a basic device in operation is shown in
Primarily, this thermometer is intended for the surface temperature measurements from such body sites as an a carotid artery region behind the ear lobe, armpit, chest, abdomen, groin, and forehead. Design of a practical probe will be influenced by a selected measurement site. The basic design principles outlined below are exemplified for a forehead probe and in most parts will be applicable for other body site probes.
For stabilizing a thermal response, sensor 7 can be attached to thermal mass 9 that may be a metal plate. Thermal mass 9 may be supported by circuit board 36. Likewise, sensor 6 can be attached to plate 20 that is also fabricated of metal. It is important to provide a good thermal coupling between first sensor 6 and plate 20. To improve thermal contact with a patient, plate 20 may be made movable. It is supported by shaft 8 that is mechanically connected to first spring 11 and can move in and out of probe 3. The spring helps to assure a constant and reliable pressure applied by plate 20 to skin 15. Shaft 8 should be fabricate of a material with low thermal conductivity and preferably should be made hollow (see
To protect a delicate probe tip (plate 20 and shaft 8) while handling or in storage, another movable component may be employed (
Tc=ATs2+(B+CTr)Ts+DTr+E (1)
where A, B, C, D and E are the experimentally determined constants.
It is important to note that Ts is the skin temperature and not exactly what is measured by first sensor 6 that touches skin 15. The reason is that skin is a poor heat conductor and has rather low thermal capacity. Thus, touching skin 15 with plate 20 changes the skin temperature from true value of Ts to some altered value Tx which is actually measured by first sensor 6. Hence, before Eq. (1) can be employed, value of Ts should be computed from two temperatures: temperature T0 and Tx, where T0 is temperature of first sensor 6 before it touched skin 15. The following Eq. (2) for computation of Ts provides a practically sufficient accuracy for a relatively narrow ambient temperature range.
Ts=(Tx−T0)μ+Tx (2)
where μ is an experimentally determined constant.
In some applications, there is no need to employ second temperature sensor to measure Tr used in Eq. (1). This function may be accomplished by first temperature sensor 6 prior it comes in contact with the patient skin and preferably immediately after the device's power up. Since at that time first sensor is at housing 1 temperature, its response will be nearly the same as it would be from second sensor 7. Therefore, second sensor 7 may not be required. Thus, responses of first sensor 6 taken at different times can be used as different temperatures needed to compute the patient core temperature. Naturally, when the same sensor, that is, first sensor 6, is used for all temperature entries into Eq. (1), a number of components can be eliminated. Specifically, in that case, the following are not needed: second sensor 7, thermal insulator 10, thermal mass 9, and second pull up resistor 19 (
When ambient temperatures are colder, first sensor 6 may change the skin temperature so much that it may take a much longer time to measure and compute an accurate skin temperature Ts with use of Eq. (2). To speed-up the first sensor 6 response, it can be pre-warmed by an imbedded heater 21 as illustrated in
where k is an experimental constant, primarily dependent on the probe design and selected time delay t0 (see
To make the thermometer more user-friendly, some of its functions can be automated. For example, switch 5 can be eliminated entirely. Power to the circuit may be turned on automatically by a motion detector when the device is picked-up.
The thermometer in this embodiment operates as follows. Initially, it is located in some storage place and its power is off. After being picked-up, motion detector 28 turns power on and temperatures from both sensors 6 and 7 are measured and computed continuously with a predetermined rate. Microcontroller constantly checks temperature changes of sensor 6 over predetermined time intervals td (
The invention has been described in connection with a preferred embodiment, but the invention is greater than and not intended to be limited to the particular form set forth. The invention is intended to cover such alternatives, modifications, and equivalents as may be included within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
This invention is based on U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/495,952 filed on Aug. 19, 2003 and relates to medical thermometers. More particularly it relates to intermittent thermometers that display core body temperature.
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