The following relates generally to the respiration gas monitor (RGM) device arts, gas detection cell calibration arts, and related arts.
Respiration Gas Monitor (RGM) devices are used for measuring partial pressure or concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in respired air, or some other respired gas such as oxygen (O2), nitrous oxide (N2O), or an administered anesthetic gas. An RGM device for measuring CO2 is commonly referred to as a capnometer. Various gas component detection technologies may be employed. In certain RGM devices employing an optical detector, an infrared light source launches broadband infrared light that passes through a sampling cell through which respired air flows. The opposing optical detector module includes a narrowband filter and an infrared detector. The filter is tuned to pass a wavelength that is strongly absorbed by the target gas, e.g. 4.3 micron for CO2.
In such a design, the optical detector is calibrated by measuring a reference signal in the absence of the target gas. This entails diverting the respired air flow from the sampling cell, and introducing flow of a reference gas such as air or nitrogen through the sampling cell. The reference gas is chosen to have negligible concentration of the target gas (e.g. negligible CO2 in the case of a capnometer). Consequently, the measured signal output by the optical detector with the reference gas flowing is the maximum value, as there is negligible absorption by the target gas. With this reference signal determined, the ratio of the signal measured with the infrared light launched through the respired air flow versus the reference signal measured with the infrared light launched through the reference gas flow provides the signal reduction due to infrared absorption by the target gas in the respired air flow.
The following discloses new and improved systems and methods.
In one disclosed aspect, a respiration gas monitor (RGM) device comprises a respired air flow path for carrying respired air, an infrared light source arranged to launch infrared light through the respired air flow path, and an optical detector arranged to detect the infrared light after passing through the respired air flow path. An absorption line bandpass filter has a passband that encompasses an absorption line of a target gas. A reference line bandpass filter has a passband over which the respired air is transparent. A control device is operative to switch the RGM device between: a monitoring state in which the absorption line bandpass filter is in the path of the infrared light and the reference line bandpass filter is not in the path of the infrared light; and a calibration state in which the reference line bandpass filter is in the path of the infrared light and the absorption line bandpass filter is not in the path of the infrared light.
In another disclosed aspect, a method of operating a respiration gas monitor (RGM) device is disclosed. Respired air is flowed through a respired air flow path. Infrared light is launched through the respired air flow path. While flowing the respired air through the respired air flow path, target gas monitoring is performed, including measuring an infrared transmission signal indicating transmission of the launched infrared light through the respired air flow path with an absorption line bandpass filter disposed in the path of the infrared light and determining a value for the target gas in the respired air from the infrared transmission signal and a reference infrared signal. While flowing the respired air through the respired air flow path, a calibration is performed including measuring the reference infrared signal indicating transmission of the launched infrared light through the respired air flow path with a reference line bandpass filter disposed in the path of the infrared light.
In another disclosed aspect, a respiration gas monitor (RGM) device comprises: a respired air flow path for carrying respired air; a measurement device configured to measure optical transmission through the respired air flow path; a switched optical filtering device configured to switch between filtering the measured optical transmission using an absorption line bandpass filter and filtering the measured optical transmission using a reference line bandpass filter; and electronics configured to output a concentration or partial pressure of the target gas in the respired air using a comparison of the measured optical transmission filtered using the absorption line bandpass filter and the measured optical transmission filtered using the reference line bandpass filter.
One advantage resides in providing more accurate monitoring of carbon dioxide or another target gas in respired air.
Another advantage resides in providing more frequent calibration of a respiration gas monitor (RGM) device.
Another advantage resides in providing an RGM device that does not require connection to nitrogen or another calibration gas.
Another advantage resides in providing an RGM device in which the respired gas flow through the RGM device is not interrupted to perform calibration.
A given embodiment may provide none, one, two, more, or all of the foregoing advantages, and/or may provide other advantages as will become apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art upon reading and understanding the present disclosure.
The invention may take form in various components and arrangements of components, and in various steps and arrangements of steps. The drawings are only for purposes of illustrating the preferred embodiments and are not to be construed as limiting the invention.
In a respiration gas monitor (RGM) device employing optical detection of the target gas, the infrared light source typically includes an infrared emitting element (e.g. a ceramic element) that is resistively heated by conducting an electrical current pulse train through the infrared element. The infrared element is resistively heated is to a temperature effective to produce broadband blackbody radiation with strong emission in the infrared. This infrared emission is strongly dependent on the precise temperature of the heated infrared element. The temperature of the heated infrared emitting element can drift over time during operation of the RGM device. The infrared light detector may be a lead selenide (PbSe) detector, a microbolometer, thermocouple, pyroelectric detector, or the like, and its sensitivity is also usually strongly temperature dependent. The detector temperature can also drift over time during operation of the RGM device. Depending upon the thermal stabilities of the IR source and sensor, the calibration of the optical detection cell may need to be repeated at intervals as frequent as every few minutes to tens of minutes to ensure sufficient accuracy for robust medical monitoring of a critically ill patient.
In existing RGM devices, the calibration of the optical detection cell is performed by flow switching, in which the respired air flow is diverted away from the sampling cell and the reference gas flow (e.g. nitrogen gas or air) is flowed through the sampling cell. This approach has certain disadvantages as recognized herein. In the case of a reference gas other than air, such as nitrogen, the reference gas must be available in the patient's hospital room and connected with the RGM device. If air is used as the reference gas, then there is potential for error due to residual levels of the target gas (e.g. CO2 in the case of a capnometer) which may be present in the air.
Another disadvantage recognized herein is that the respiration gas monitoring is interrupted for a time interval as the flow through the sampling chamber of the RGM device is switched from the respiration gas flow to the reference gas flow, and then is switched back from the reference gas flow to the respiration gas flow. Besides the apparent interruption of monitoring data, there is the potential for generating erroneous measurements if the respiratory gas monitoring measurements are resumed before the respiration gas flow through the sampling cell is reinstated and reaches equilibrium.
In view of these difficulties, it is disclosed herein to provide a respiration gas monitor (RGM) device that includes an infrared light source launching infrared light through a respired air flow path, and an optical detector that detects the infrared light after passing through the respired air flow path. An absorption line bandpass filter has a passband encompassing an absorption line of a target gas. A reference line bandpass filter has a passband over which the respired air is transparent. A control device switches the RGM device between: a monitoring state in which the absorption line bandpass filter is in the path of the infrared light; and a calibration state in which the reference line bandpass filter is in the path of the infrared light and the absorption line bandpass filter is not in the path of the infrared light. In this way, the calibration can be performed rapidly, without requiring any interruption of the flow of the respired air through the respired air flow path.
With reference to
The illustrative RGM device setup has a sidestream configuration in which respired air is drawn into the RGM device using the pump 22, and the target gas measurement cell 20 is located inside the RGM device 10. The sidestream configuration is suitably used for a spontaneously breathing patient, i.e. a patient who is breathing on his or her own without assistance of a mechanical ventilator. In an alternative configuration, known as a mainstream configuration (not illustrated), the target gas measurement cell is located externally from the RGM device housing, typically as a target gas measurement cell patient accessory that is inserted into the “mainstream” airway flow of the patient. Such a mainstream configuration may, for example, be employed in conjunction with a mechanically ventilated patient, with the target gas measurement cell patient accessory being designed to mate into an accessory receptacle of the ventilator unit, or is installed on an airway hose feeding into the ventilator.
The target gas measurement cell 20 comprises an infrared optical absorption cell in which the target gas in the respired air drawn from the patient accessory 14 produces absorption in the infrared that is detected optically. By way of non-limiting illustration, CO2 has an absorption peak at about 4.3 micron. By way of further non-limiting illustration, other target gases may include oxygen (O2), nitrous oxide (N2O), or an administered anesthetic gas, each of which have specific characteristic absorption lines in the infrared. An infrared light source 30 includes an infrared emitting element 32 that is resistively heated by a drive current IP which in some embodiments comprises an electric current pulse train. The electric current IP heats the infrared emitting element (e.g. a ceramic element or other thermally radiating element) to emit blackbody radiation with strong emission in the infrared. Thusly launched broadband infrared light 34 (diagrammatically indicated by a block arrow in
An optical detector 40 is configured to detect the infrared light 34. In some illustrative embodiments, the optical detector 40 may be a lead selenide (PbSe) detector, a microbolometer, thermocouple, pyroelectric detector, or the like. To provide specificity to the target gas, an absorption line bandpass filter 42 having a passband tuned to an absorption line of the target gas is interposed between the infrared emitting element 32 and the optical detector 40. For example, in the case of the target gas being CO2, the absorption line bandpass filter 42 suitably has a passband that encompasses, and is preferably centered at, 4.3 micron which is a wavelength at which carbon dioxide is strongly absorbing. For other target gases, the bandpass filter is designed to have a passband that encompasses, and preferably is centered on, a strong absorption line of the other target gas. The absorption line bandpass filter may, for example, comprise a stack of layers on an infrared light-transmissive substrate such as sapphire, in which the layers of the stack of layers have thicknesses, refractive indices, and arrangement designed to form an interference filter with a narrow passband having the requisite center frequency (e.g. 4.3 micron for CO2 detection).
For performing the calibration, the illustrative embodiment of
The RGM device 10 further includes RGM device electronics 46 that provide electrical biasing of, and readout for, the optical detector 40. The electronics 46 optionally provide the drive current IP for the infrared light source 30 (connection not shown in
Another aspect of the conversion is compensating for drift in the signal output by the optical detector 40. Such drift may be due to drift in the detector 40, and/or due to drift in the intensity of the infrared radiation 34 launched by the infrared light source 30, and/or due to other factors such as condensate buildup on walls of the path 36 through which the respired air flows. To account for such drift, a calibration is occasionally performed using the reference line bandpass filter 44 as described elsewhere herein in order to generate a reference infrared (IR) signal 50. By employing a ratio of the signal from the optical detector 40 versus the reference IR signal 50, such drift is compensated.
In the case of the RGM device electronics 46 being implemented at least in part by DSP, such DSP may be implemented by a microcontroller or microprocessor or the like programmed by instructions stored on a read only memory (ROM), electronically programmable read-only memory (EPROM), CMOS memory, flash memory, or other electronic, magnetic, optical or other non-transitory storage medium that is readable and executable by the microcontroller or microprocessor or the like to perform the digital signal processing. For DSP processing, a front-end analog-to-digital (A/D) conversion circuit is typically provided to digitize the detector signal from the optical detector 40. To provide useful target gas monitoring, an output component 52 is provided. In the illustrative embodiment, the output component 52 is a display 52, e.g. an LCD display or the like. The illustrative display 52 plots target gas concentration or partial pressure versus time as a trend line. Additionally or alternatively, the display may show a numerical value, e.g. of the target gas concentration at a particular time in the respiratory cycle, e.g. etCO2 in the case of a capnometer. The output component may additionally or alternatively take other forms, such as being or including (possibly in addition to the display 52) a USB port or other data port via which the target gas data may be read out.
It will be further appreciated that the RGM device 10 may include numerous other components not illustrated in simplified diagrammatic
With reference to
The design of the filter flipper assembly 62, 64 can take various forms. In one embodiment each bandpass filter 42, 44 is mounted on a rotating axis and the two filter flippers 62, 64 are motors that rotate the respective filters 42, 44 about those axes into and out of the path of the infrared light 34, as diagrammatically shown in
With reference to
With reference to
With reference to
The control device embodiments of
With reference to
At a decision operation 104, it is determined whether the RGM device 10 should switch from the monitoring state to the calibration state in order to update the value of the reference IR signal 50. The decision 104 can be based on various chosen factors. In one embodiment, the decision 104 switches to the calibration state after a fixed time interval, e.g. after every 5 minutes of monitoring. In another embodiment, the decision 104 switches when the target gas signal 48 drifts over time by more than some threshold amount, in order to ensure that the drift is not due to a change in the reference signal (e.g. due to drift of the intensity of the infrared light 34 output by the infrared light source 30, or due to drift of the optical detector 40, or due to contamination of the walls of the respired air flow path 36, or so forth). So long as the decision operation 104 does not call for updating the calibration, flow returns to the monitoring state IR transmission measurement operation 100 to continue monitoring the target gas.
On the other hand, if the decision operation 104 calls for a calibration update, then in an operation 108 the RGM device 10 switches from the monitoring state to the calibration state by switching from the absorption line bandpass filter 42 to the reference line bandpass filter 44, e.g. using any one of the control devices described with reference to
The invention has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments. Modifications and alterations may occur to others upon reading and understanding the preceding detailed description. It is intended that the invention be construed as including all such modifications and alterations insofar as they come within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2018/057077 | 3/20/2018 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62473514 | Mar 2017 | US |