Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6585660
-
Patent Number
6,585,660
-
Date Filed
Friday, May 18, 200123 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, July 1, 200321 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Leydig, Voit & Mayer, Ltd.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 600 486
- 600 488
- 600 505
- 600 487
- 600 483
- 600 485
- 600 506
- 128 920
- 128 922
- 073 708
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A signal conditioning device is disclosed that interfaces a variety of sensor devices, such as guide wire-mounted pressure sensors, to physiology monitors. The signal conditioning device includes a processor for controlling sensor excitation and signal conditioning circuitry within the signal conditioning device. The processor also supplies signals to an output stage on the signal conditioning device representative of processed sensor signals received by a sensor interface of the signal conditioning device. Power for the signal conditioning device processor is supplied by an excitation signal received from a physiology monitor that drives the output stage. In addition, a temperature compensating current source provides an adjustment current to at least one of a pair of resistive sensor elements to compensate for differences between temperature change upon the pair of resistive sensor elements, thereby facilitating nullifying temperature effects upon the resistive sensor elements.
Description
AREA OF THE INVENTION
The present invention generally relates to the area of diagnostic medical equipment, and more particularly to diagnostic devices for identifying problematic blockages within coronary arteries by means of a sensor mounted upon the end of a flexible elongate member such as a guide wire.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In the past decade, innovations in the diagnosis of cardiovascular disease have migrated from external imaging processes to internal, catheterization-based, diagnostic processes. Diagnosis of cardiovascular disease has been performed through angiogram imaging wherein a radiopaque dye is injected into a vasculature and a live x-ray image is taken of the portions of the cardiovascular system of interest. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has also been utilized as well. More recently, however, diagnostic equipment and processes have been developed for diagnosing vasculature blockages and other vasculature disease by means of ultra-miniature sensors placed upon a distal end of a flexible elongate member such as a catheter, or a guide wire used for catheterization procedures.
One such ultra-miniature sensor device is a pressure sensor mounted upon the distal end of a guide wire. An example of such a pressure sensor is provided in Corl et al. U.S. Pat. No. 6,106,476, the teachings of which are expressly incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. Such intravascular pressure sensor measures blood pressure at various points within the vasculature to facilitate locating and determining the severity of stenoses or other disruptors of blood flow within the vessels of the human body. Such devices are commonly used to determine the effectiveness of an angioplasty procedure by placing the pressure sensor proximate a stenosis and measuring a pressure difference indicating a partial blockage of the vessel.
As one can imagine, the aforementioned intravascular pressure sensors are utilized in operating room environments including many types of sensors and equipment for diagnosing and treating cardiovascular disease. Clearly, the room for error is very limited. Therefore, there is substantial interest in simplifying every aspect of the operating room to reduce the incidence of errors.
Notwithstanding the interest to keep equipment simple, there is a necessity to provide an interface device between the intravascular guide wire-mounted pressure sensor and a physiology monitor that displays a human-readable output corresponding to the sensed pressure. The interface device receives synchronization information, in the form of an excitation signal, from the monitor and provides conditioned, standardized output in the form of an analog voltage signal. The interface device drives the guide wire-mounted pressure sensor with a sensor current, conditions a sensed analog sensor input signal, and performs mathematical transformations (by means of a microcontroller) to render the standardized output to the physiology monitor. The interface device thus provides a means for attaching multiple types of sensor devices to a physiology monitor such that input to the physiology monitor is standardized and not dependent upon the sensing device's signal requirements and operational characteristics.
In a known prior intravascular pressure sensor-to-physiological monitor interface arrangement, marketed by JOMED Inc. of Rancho Cordova, Calif. and depicted in
FIG. 1
, a signal conditioning interface, comprising an amplifier module
10
(e.g., the Model 7000 Patient Cable) and a WAVEMAP™ processor box
12
, is interposed between a physiology monitor
14
and a WAVEWIRE™ pressure sensing guide wire
16
. The guide wire
16
is a disposable device connected via a connector
15
to the amplifier module
10
. The amplifier module
10
receives power and an excitation signal through two separate and distinct electrically conductive lines within cable
17
connected to distinct output leads of the WAVEMAP™ processor box
12
. The WAVEMAP™ processor box receives power from a standard wall outlet
18
via a standard three-pronged (grounded) power cord
20
plugged into the wall outlet
18
. Though not shown in the drawing, the physiology monitor is powered via standard AC wall outlet power as well.
The WAVEMAP™ processor box
12
includes a separate and distinct signal interface connected to the physiology monitor
14
. The WAVEMAP™ processor box receives a differential voltage excitation signal (either AC or DC) from the physiology monitor
14
via a cable
22
. The excitation signal transmitted via the cable
22
is considerably lower power than the AC power deliverable to the WAVEMAP™ processor box
12
from the wall outlet
18
via the power cord
20
. The cable
22
also transmits a signal representing sensed pressure (5 microvolts/mmHG) from the WAVEMAP™ processor box
12
to the physiology monitor
14
. Yet another cable
24
transmits an aortic pressure (Pa) sensed by another device, from the physiology monitor
14
to the WAVEMAP™ processor box
12
. Due to the multiple devices and separate power sources required by the prior known devices, physically setting up the intravascular pressure reading devices can be both complex and cumbersome due to the multiple cords and connections required by this known arrangement. Also, once set up, the multiple cords create clutter within the vicinity of the patient.
A presently used temperature compensation/signal conditioning scheme for a signal conditioning interface (e.g., the above-mentioned WAVEMAP™ processor
12
) relies upon a digital processor to compensate for temperature and pressure effects upon a guide wire mounted intravascular pressure sensor. The compensation equation comprises a polynomial including a set of six coefficients for temperature compensation, pressure sensitivity, and temperature effect on pressure sensitivity for each of the two resistive elements in a characterized sensor device. The compensation value is computed for each pressure reading (with constant terms computed in advance to reduce the processing load to the extent possible). Calculating the polynomial result for each pressure reading presents a considerable processing load on a signal conditioning interface processor.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention comprises a signal conditioning device having low power requirements and a simplified connection scheme for interfacing intravascular diagnostic devices, such as a pressure sensor disposed upon a distal end of a guide wire, and a physiology monitor providing an excitation signal for the intravascular diagnostic devices.
The present invention comprises a signal conditioning device that is connected via cables to an intravascular measurement device and a physiology monitor. The signal conditioning device includes a number of analog and digital circuits that cooperate to perform amplification, filtering and/or compensation on signals passed between the pressure sensor and the physiology monitor.
The signal conditioning device includes a sensor interface circuit that supplies a sensor drive signal for energizing a sensor carried by an attachable intravascular measurement device and providing a measurement signal. The conditioning device also includes a physiology monitor interface. The physiology monitor interface includes an input for receiving a sensor excitation signal from the physiology monitor and an output for transmitting an output signal corresponding to sensed measurements provided by the attached sensor arising from the sensor drive signal.
The signal conditioning devices also comprises a power supply circuit interposed between the physiology monitor interface and the signal conditioning circuitry of the signal conditioning device. The power supply circuit includes a signal converter that receives a portion of power supplied by the sensor excitation signal and powers at least portions of the signal processing circuitry within the signal conditioning device with power derived from the portion of power supplied by the sensor excitation signal.
In accordance with another aspect of the new signal conditioning device, a temperature compensating current source within the signal conditioning device provides an adjustment to the current supplied to at least one of a pair of resistive sensor elements of an attached sensor to compensate for differences between temperature change upon the pair of resistive sensor elements, thereby facilitating nullifying temperature effects upon the resistive sensor elements.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
While the appended claims set forth the features of the present invention with particularity, the invention, together with its objects and advantages, may be best understood from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings of which:
FIG. 1
is a schematic drawing depicting a prior connection scheme between a diagnostic pressure sensing guide wire and a physiology monitor;
FIG. 2
is a schematic drawing depicting an exemplary connection scheme between a diagnostic pressure sensing guide wire and a physiology monitor in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 3
is a schematic circuit diagram illustrating a portion of the pressure sensor for performing temperature compensation of pressure sensor elements in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 4
is an illustrative depiction of a signal conditioning device in exemplary packaging for commercial use;
FIG. 5
is a schematic diagram of the primary functional components of an exemplary signal conditioning device;
FIG. 6
is a schematic circuit diagram of a power supply circuit incorporated into a signal conditioning device embodying the present invention;
FIG. 7
is a waveform diagram illustratively depicting a demodulation scheme for extracting peak voltages from an output waveform of analog signal conditioning components of the signal conditioning device;
FIG. 8
is a waveform diagram illustratively depicting another aspect of the demodulation scheme enabling signal sampling at a rate that is twice the input waveform repetition rate;
FIG. 9
is a schematic circuit diagram of an output stage providing a differential output from the signal conditioning device to a physiology monitor;
FIG. 10
is a flowchart summarizing the operation of an exemplary signal conditioning device embodying the present invention;
FIG. 11
illustratively depicts a front view of a slide rule device utilized to compute a blood flow restriction measure, known as fractional flow reserve; and
FIG. 12
illustratively depicts a back view of the slide rule device.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
In general, an exemplary signal conditioning device embodying the present invention, described herein below with respect to
FIG. 2
, is designed to interface a guide wire-mounted pressure sensor to a standard physiology (e.g., blood pressure) monitor. The signal conditioning device processes a signal received from the guide wire-mounted pressure sensor and presents a normalized signal to any of multiple different physiology monitors having potentially differing signal requirements.
From the point of view of overall system setup, the exemplary signal conditioning device reduces the number of power sources, as well as the distinct cables and physically distinct apparatuses, required to conduct intravascular blood pressure measurements. These desirable attributes are achieved by having the conditioning device receive and/or utilize a differential sensor excitation signal, transmitted by known physiology monitors in a novel manner.
Known signal conditioning devices utilize the excitation signal as a reference voltage for generating an output signal scaled according to a sensed pressure. However, in the exemplary signal conditioning device, a rectifying, AC to DC converting, power supply circuit draws current from the received excitation signal. The drawn current powers a processor, smaller-scale integrated circuits and discrete circuit elements that perform signal generating/amplifying/conditioning functions within the signal conditioning device. Such functions include driving output current to a polysilicon pressure sensor mounted upon a guide wire. An example of such a polysilicon pressure sensor is disclosed in Corl et al. U.S. Pat. No. 6,106,476, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety including any references contained therein. The signal conditioning device, by way of example, drives an output signal to physiology monitors having a sensitivity of about 5 micro Volts per Volt(input)/mmHg. The signal conditioning device also drive an LCD display showing the high and low sensed pressures during a two-second interval.
As in prior signal conditioning interface circuits, a portion of the input excitation signal from the physiology monitor drives (i.e., provides a voltage reference for) a differential voltage output signal transmitted by the signal conditioning device to the physiology monitor representing a sensed pressure. The differential voltage output signal is, for example, generated by a pair of digital-to-analog converters. The generated differential voltage output signal generally comprises a base (i.e., reference) differential voltage signal corresponding to the input differential signal from the physiology monitor. The reference differential voltage is multiplied by a scalar value, representing the sensed and conditioned (e.g., filtered) pressure value provided by the signal conditioning device's processor. Thus, the disclosed embodiment of the present invention accomplishes signal generating, conditioning and amplification without reliance upon a separate signal source to provide DC power to the signal conditioning device's circuits.
With reference now to
FIG. 2
, a signal conditioning device
50
embodying the present invention connects to a physiology monitor
52
via a five line connector cable
54
. The five line connector cable
54
includes a pair of excitation signal lines driven by the physiology monitor
52
. The excitation signal lines are driven as a differential voltage pair at, by way of example, 2.4-11 Vdc, 2.4-8 Vrms sine wave (1 kHz to 5 kHz), or 2.4-8 Vrms square wave (dc to 5 kHz). The sine wave input has a more limited range due to the droop between peak voltages at lower frequencies. The rectified square wave has very little gap, and droop is thus a non-issue.
In an embodiment of the invention, electronic components of the signal conditioning device
50
are powered by current drawn from the excitation signal supplied on the excitation signal lines of cable
54
. Though not present in the exemplary embodiment of the invention, in alternative embodiments the signal conditioning device includes a battery as a supplementary/backup power source when power from an outside source is either insufficient or not available for the signal conditioning device
50
. In a preferred embodiment, no battery is present because the signal conditioning device
50
's design enables the device
50
to operate on less than about 20 mA rms, and such power requirements are met by physiology monitors that meet the Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation (“AAMI”) standard for Sensor Excitation Power. Examples of physiology monitors
50
meeting the above power requirements may include: all hemodynamic instruments with pressure sensor ports meeting American National Standards Institute (“ANSI”)/AAMI BP22-1994; models RM-6000, RMC-2000, RMC-3100, Lifescope-S, RMC-1100, marketed by Nihon Kohden America, Inc. of Foothill Ranch, Calif.; models EP-1102 and EP-1600, marketed by the NEC Corporation of Tokyo, Japan; and models MCS-5500, MCS-7000, DS-3300, marketed by Fukuda Denshi of Tokyo, Japan.
The five line connector cable
54
includes a pair of differential output signal lines. The output signal lines are driven by the signal conditioning device
50
's output digital to analog converters (discussed further herein below). The differential output signal, by way of example, operates at 5 microV per volt/mmHG. An operating range of −150 microV/V to 1650 microV/V therefore represents a sensed pressure range of −30 to 330 mmHg. An exemplary resolution (minimum step) for the differential output signal is 0.2 mmHg.
The fifth line of the five line connector cable
54
carries a ground signal. Thus, all signal/power requirements for the signal conditioning device
50
are met by the standard five-line output of the physiology monitor
52
. Thus, the need for any interface device (such as the processor box
12
of
FIG. 1
) is eliminated, and the pressure sensing system set-up complexity is reduced.
On the patient side, the signal conditioning device
50
couples to a replaceable guide wire
56
via a connector
58
and corresponding static cable
59
. The connector
58
couples a set of ten lines in the static cable
59
carrying signals between the replaceable guide wire
56
and the signal conditioning device
50
. A first set of five lines of the connector
58
is utilized to generate and receive pressure sensor-related signals. A second set of five lines of the connector
58
concerns an interface to a guide wire sensor's characterization electrically erasable programmable read-only memory (“EEPROM”) mounted on the static cable
59
that stores a set of values relating to characteristics of a mounted sensor.
With regard to the second set of five lines of the connector
58
, four of the five lines (the fifth line is not used) of the ten-line connector
58
facilitate reading characterization data from an EEPROM carried on the static cable for a guide wire-mounted sensor device
60
, which is by way of example a pressure sensor. The EEPROM includes temperature compensation, gain, and offset values used by the signal conditioning device
50
to process the sensed signals from the sensor device
60
. A power and ground line are provided by the signal conditioning device
50
to the EEPROM via the connector
58
. A clock and data line for reading the EEPROM's data make up the final two lines.
The first set of five lines associated with the connector
58
includes a voltage reference line that is, by way of example, connected to each of two pressure sensing polysilicon resistive sensor elements on guide wire-mounted pressure sensor
60
. The remaining four lines comprise two sets of excite/sense signal pairs. In an embodiment of the invention, a first current flows on a first, shorted, excite/sense pair of lines. A second current, separately adjustable with regard to the first current, flows on a second, shorted, excite/sense pair of lines of the connector
58
. In the configuration of
FIG. 2
, the first and second currents pass through the first and second resistive sensor elements of the pressure sensor
60
mounted upon the distal end of the replaceable guide wire
56
. A pressure sensing circuit including the resistive sensor elements is completed by connecting the remaining two terminals of the resistive sensor elements to the voltage reference line.
In operation, the electrical sensory circuit functions as follows. The polysilicon sensor elements on the pressure sensor
60
are pressure sensitive. In a particular embodiment having a pair of resistive elements, in response to a change in pressure one element increases resistance and a second element decreases resistance. For example, in an embodiment of the present invention each resistive element has a pressure sensitivity (at 100 mmHg 25 degrees Celsius) of 15-35 microOhms per Ohm/mmHg. By applying a steady current through the resistive elements, pressure changes result in changes in resistance that in turn result in voltage changes across the resistive sensor elements.
A common voltage reference, from which voltages across the first and second resistive elements are measured, is established by connecting a first terminal of each of the pair of resistive sensor elements of the sensor
60
to the common reference voltage provided by the signal conditioning device
50
. A differential amplifier within signal conditioning device
50
, via the excite/sense lines, senses a voltage difference corresponding to the voltages at the second terminal of each resistive sensor element to establish a voltage difference signal. An analog-to-digital converter (“ADC”) within the signal conditioning device
50
converts the amplified analog voltage difference signal into a digital value. The digital value is received by the processor and filtered (e.g. finite impulse response filtered, or “FIR” filtered) in a known manner to render a filtered digital pressure value based upon prior calibration of the sensor
60
. The filtered digital pressure value is then utilized to drive a digital input to a pair of output digital-to-analog converters (“DACs”). The pair of output DACs render a differential output signal corresponding to an output signal transmitted on the cable
54
to the physiology monitor
52
.
The drive current for each of the sensor
60
's polysilicon resistive elements is, by way of example, 30 to 90 microA AC (square wave) operating at a frequency of about 630 Hz. The time-varying nature of the square wave signal facilitates AC coupling between amplifier stages in the signal conditioning device. The AC coupling, in turn, reduces DC signal drift effects.
The polysilicon resistive elements, for example, have temperature sensitivities ranging from about 2.0 to 3.6 mOhms per Ohm/degree C. Because the temperature sensitivities of the resistive elements are not guaranteed to be identical, at least one of the two excitation lines carries an independently adjustable current to facilitate temperature compensation of the pressure sensor as well as, perhaps other characterization-based adjustments applied by the signal conditioning device to provide accurate pressure sensor readings. The separate sensor drive currents facilitate compensating for differences in changes to resistance in the sensor elements over the range of operating temperatures of the sensor
60
. Temperature compensation is achieved by adjusting the excitation current driven on at least one of the two excitation lines to the pressure sensor such that the change in voltage across the sensor elements is substantially the same (i.e., within an acceptable error limit) throughout the entire range of operating temperatures. The temperature compensation of the polysilicon resistive sensor elements is discussed herein below with reference to FIG.
3
.
Having described the composition of the signals carried by the lines connecting the signal conditioning device to the guide wire-mounted pressure sensor
60
, it is noted that the above-described line composition for the cable connector
58
is exemplary. The sensor to which the signal conditioning device
50
is attachable and the composition of the lines between the sensor and signal conditioning device
50
vary in accordance with design considerations and functional requirements associated with alternative embodiments of the invention. For example, other physiologic sensors, such as velocity, flow volume, and temperature sensors, may be used in place of pressure sensor
60
, in accordance with the present invention. The composition of the signals on the 10-line connection differs in various alternative embodiments of the invention.
Turning now to
FIG. 3
, a circuit diagram illustratively depicts the sensor/drive circuit of the signal conditioning device
50
and attached guide wire-mounted polysilicon sensor
60
. The polysilicon sensor
60
comprises a first resistive polysilicon element
61
and a second resistive polysilicon element
62
. The polysilicon elements
61
and
62
share a common reference voltage provided via line
63
from the connector
58
. A first excitation current is provided via line
64
to the first polysilicon element
61
. A second, adjustable excitation current is provided via line
65
to the second polysilicon element
62
. Electrical current passing through each of the two resistive elements
61
and
62
causes a voltage drop across the resistive elements. Since line
63
is connected to both sensor elements
61
and
62
, a voltage difference between lines
64
and
65
attached to terminals of the first and second polysilicon sensor elements
61
and
62
is transferred to the output of amplifiers
66
and
67
, respectively. A differential amplifier
70
then senses a difference between the output voltages of amplifiers
66
and
67
on lines
68
and
69
, respectively.
When a pressure change is applied to the polysilicon sensor
60
, the resistance of the first and second polysilicon elements
61
and
62
react in a complimentary manner. In other words, when an applied pressure changes, one of the resistances increases and the other resistance decreases.
The voltage drops across each of the resistive sensor elements according to equation (1):
V=I
(excite)
×R
(sensor)
(1)
Assuming the excitation current is stable, the voltage change across each of the resistive sensor elements as a result of a change in the resistance of the sensor element follows the equation (2):
V=I
(excite)
×R
(sensor)
(2)
The change in differential voltage (the sum of both voltage changes) between the output terminals
68
and
69
(input to differential amplifier
70
) corresponds to the applied pressure.
Ideally, the R value for each sensor is attributed solely to changes in pressure applied to the sensor. However, temperature changes to the sensor elements also change their resistance. Thus, even in the absence of a pressure change, the resistance (and thus voltage drop) across the two resistive elements
61
and
62
changes in response to temperature changes.
However, differences in voltage change across the sensor elements are of interest rather than the voltage changes across the resistive elements themselves. Thus, if the resistance across the elements
61
and
62
changed exactly the same over the temperature range of interest (or differences were negligible), then temperature compensation is not necessary. However, such matching of resistance change is highly impractical.
The signal conditioning device
50
senses a differential voltage from the sensor elements of the sensor
60
. Voltage is the product of resistance times current passing through the resistance. Rather than match resistance changes over a temperature range, in an embodiment of the present invention, temperature-change induced voltage changes across the resistive elements are compensated by adjusting the current through at least one of the resistive elements to compensate for the differences in temperature sensitivity of the two resistive sensor elements. The variation to the current through resistive sensor element
62
is provided by a temperature compensation DAC
71
.
With continued reference to
FIG. 3
, the following equations (3-6) characterize temperature compensation achieved by equalizing the temperature-change-induced voltage changes over a temperature range of interest:
V
a
=V
b
(over a temperature range of interest) (3)
Assuming the above Voltage changes are attributed to temperature-induced changes in resistance, then
(
I
a
ΔR
a
)=(
I
b
ΔR
b
); thus (4)
I
b
=(
I
a
ΔR
a
)/Δ
R
b
; and (5)
I
b
/I
a
=ΔR
a
/ΔR
b
(6)
For purposes of compensating temperature effects, the resistance changes to the resisters
61
and
62
over the operating temperature range of the pressure sensor are estimated as substantially linear. Thus, by modifying the ratio of the current through each of the elements
61
and
62
in inverse proportion to their resistance changes over the operating temperature range, the changes in voltage across each element
61
and
62
remains substantially equal (within acceptable limits) over a specified compensated operating temperature range. Note that in instances where the temperature effects are not linear (or linear approximation is not acceptable), polynomial compensation equations (based upon temperature) and/or segmentation of the compensated range into sub-ranges can be employed in conjunction with a temperature sensor.
Turning briefly to
FIG. 4
, an exemplary physical arrangement/user interface for a signal conditioning device
50
is illustratively depicted. The exemplary user interface includes a 120-segment, 8-character alphanumeric LCD display
80
. The LCD display communicates various states of the device throughout its operation. The user interface also includes three momentary, normally open switches
82
,
84
and
86
. The select button
82
enables waking the unit when it has not been used for a period of time and has entered a sleep mode while attached to the physiology monitor
52
. The select button
82
facilitates selection of a type of signal represented on the output from the signal conditioning device
50
. An exemplary set of output signal modes includes: zero (0 mmHg), 200 mmHg, and Calibration Pulse Sequence (stepping from 0 to 200 Hg in steps of 10 mmHg in half-second time increments). When the signal conditioning device
50
is in an active running mode, the up arrow (+) button
84
allows adjustment of the pressure output in 1 mmHg steps (up to, for example,
30
mmHg). The down arrow (−) button
86
facilitates the complimentary function allowing the output to be adjusted downward.
Attention is now directed to
FIG. 5
that schematically depicts the primary functional blocks of the signal conditioning device
50
embodying the present invention. A power supply circuit
100
receives a differential excitation voltage on lines
102
and
104
from a connector
106
that interfaces (via cable
54
) to the physiology monitor
52
. The power supply circuit
100
converts the differential excitation voltage from a variety of different forms including, by way of example dc, sine wave, and square wave AC signals (discussed herein above) to 3 Volts DC. While the typical input is an AC signal, the power supply circuit
100
is also capable of converting a received DC differential input on lines
102
and
104
into the 3 Volts DC power source. The 3 Volts DC supplies the operating power for all circuits within the signal conditioning unit. The power lines to individual functional circuit blocks have been omitted in the drawings to reduce clutter.
Turning briefly to
FIG. 6
that schematically depicts a set of circuits comprising the power supply circuit
100
, if the excitation signal on lines
102
and
104
is AC, then the signal is rectified by full wave bridge rectifiers
110
, into an unfiltered full wave DC voltage, i.e., without any filter capacitor. A large filter capacitor at the rectifiers would cause excessive surges and waveform distortions due to the capacitive loading—especially on power up. If the excitation signal on lines
102
and
104
is DC, the full wave bridge rectifiers
110
route the most negative terminal to ground and the positive terminal to a following current regulator
112
. A differential amplifier
114
monitors the full wave DC current, by the voltage drop across a resister
116
. The differential amplifier
114
controls a p-channel field-effect transistor (“PFET”)
118
that limits the current to less than 25 mA peak.
A filter capacitor
120
connected to the output of the PFET
118
is charged by the controlled current to nearly the peak of the excitation voltage on the differential input lines
102
and
104
. When the filter capacitor
120
's voltage is above 3.5 Volts, Vcc is regulated with a low dropout (“LDO”) regulator
122
to 3.3 Volts. The current drain in this mode is less than 6 mA. When the filter capacitor
120
's voltage is less than the 3 Volts requirement for the LDO regulator
122
, a charge pump
124
is energized by a PFET switch
126
to boost the voltage to 3.3 Volts. The current required by the circuit to maintain the 3.3 Volts output (at the inputs to the steering diodes
128
and
130
) is higher when in this mode, but it is still less than 15 mA since the Vcc output voltage and power remain constant. The increase in current causes a higher voltage drop across the bridge rectifier
110
, slightly lowering the voltage on the filter capacitor
120
. This provides hysteresis for the PFET switch
126
. A pair of steering diodes
128
and
130
routes the highest voltage output (LDO or charge pump) to the powered circuitry of the signal conditioning device
50
. A capacitor
132
, attached in parallel to a load, eliminates ripple and crossover spikes from a 3.0 V output power signal on line
136
.
A smaller power supply (not shown) provides a bias and Vcc power to operate the current regulating differential amplifier
114
. The drop across a full wave rectifier pair supplying power to differential amplifier
114
is much smaller than the pair connected between the input lines
102
and
104
and the current regulator, due to the low current required for the bias circuit. The voltage regulation scheme gives a higher output voltage and will allow proper operation of the power supply circuitry below 2 Volts. A resister limits loading by a filter cap (not shown) that would cause surges and excitation distortion to the bias current to amplifier
114
. Part of the filtered, low power Vcc provided as the bias input to the differential amplifier
114
is sent to a 1.234 V reference integrated circuit. The 1.234 V reference is divided down to 50 mV by resisters and used to set the current limit in a comparator including the amplifier
114
and the PFET
118
. The 1.234 Voltage also sets a trip point for the crossover from a high excitation to a low excitation voltage at a differential amplifier
134
(low voltage switch). When the voltage set by a divider circuit comprising a pair of resisters equals the 1.234 V reference, differential amplifier
134
's output switches and turns PFET
126
either on or off.
The 3.0 V output of the circuit illustratively depicted in
FIG. 6
is utilized to generate two precision voltages. Returning to
FIG. 5
a precision voltage reference
138
receives the 3.0 V reference from the power supply
100
via line
139
and establishes two precision voltage output signals. First, a 2.5 V precision reference output signal is generated by an integrated circuit from the 3.0 Volt output. The 2.5 V precision reference is used wherever high accuracy is required. Second, a 1.5 V reference output signal is derived from the 2.5 V reference via a precision voltage divider. The 1.5 V reference is used to center amplifiers' operating voltage range throughout the signal conditioning device
50
and as the return path (Vref) for the pressure sensor resistors.
With continued reference to
FIG. 5
, a microcontroller
140
, such as microcontroller MSP430P337A, marketed by Texas Instruments of Dallas, Tex., is powered by the 3.0 V power signal output on line
136
of the power supply
100
. The microcontroller
140
operates off a 32,768 Hz watch crystal that is multiplied up internally to over 1 MHz. The microcontroller
140
supplies timing and data signals driving the circuitry depicted in FIG.
5
. The microcontroller
140
also receives filtered digital signals corresponding to a sensed pressure and processes the received pressure values (e.g., performs FIR filtering). The microcontroller
140
's output and input signals are discussed with reference to the functional blocks depicted in FIG.
5
.
Square wave signals, supplied via line
152
to a sensor current source
160
and via line
154
to a temperature compensation DAC
162
, are accurately regulated. Such precision is desired because the current across the sensors that measure pressure is proportional to the supplied signal, and any inaccuracies in the excitation signal on line
152
to the sensor current source
160
, or on line
154
to a temperature compensation DAC
162
, will affect the accuracy of the signal conditioning device. Thus, in an embodiment of the invention, a pair of precision square wave generators
150
are driven by a timing signal on line
142
from the microcontroller
140
. The 2.5 V output of precision voltage reference
138
provides a precision power signal to the square wave generators
15
, enabling the square wave generators
150
to supply precision 627 Hz square wave signals to the sensor current source
160
and the temperature compensation DAC
162
.
The 627 Hz square wave received by the square wave generators
150
from the microcontroller
140
is approximately 3 V. The desired voltage level to the sensor current source
160
is 0.600 Volts peak (1.200 Vp-p), and centered with a DC offset of 1.5 Volts to keep operational amplifiers within the sensor current source
160
within a linear operating range. VMOS FETs within the square wave generators
150
precisely regulate the square wave signals having the above-described characteristics provided to the sensor current source
160
and the temperature compensation DAC
162
. The VMOS FETs saturate when the gates are driven high by the 3 V signal from the microcontroller
140
. This essentially places the drains at 0 Volts, due to the low ‘on’ resistance of the FETs and the high value of a pull-up resister attached to each FET's drain. As mentioned above, the 2.500 V precision reference signal from precision voltage reference
138
supplies power to the FETs. With regard to the FET driving the square wave input signal to the sensor current source
160
, when the FET is off, a precision resistor divider sets the “high” level of the square wave input. The output voltage on line
152
is 2.106 V. When the FET is on, the output voltage on line
152
drops to 0.904 V. Thus, the peak-to-peak voltage of the square wave on line
152
is 1.202 V, and the square wave signal on line
152
is centered at 1.5 V.
A similar square wave generator, for line
154
to the temperature compensation (“TC”) DAC
162
, develops a square wave with a 1.200 V peak to peak magnitude. All the DACs within the exemplary circuit (e.g., Texas Instruments's TI5616 12-bit DACs), including the TC DAC
162
, have an internal gain of two. Therefore the DC offset of the signal driven on line
154
is half of the desired output DC offset of 1.5 Volts, or 0.750 V. The square wave high and low voltages (high/low) are therefore 1.350 Volts and 0.150 Volts, respectively.
The sensor current source
160
receives the square wave input signal on line
152
, and a temperature compensation square wave input on line
164
from the temperature compensation DAC
162
. The sensor current source
160
provides a first and second excitation current on lines
166
and
168
to a sensor interface
170
. The sensor interface
170
passes the signals received on lines
166
and
168
to the resistive sensor elements
61
and
62
on the sensor
60
(see FIG.
3
). The sensor interface
170
also provides a 1.5 V precision voltage reference to the sensor
60
to complete the sensor circuit paths through the resistive sensor elements
61
and
62
. Sensor output signals on lines
172
and
174
provide a differential voltage signal corresponding to changes in pressure applied to the pressure sensor
60
. As discussed previously herein above, the change in differential voltage arises from changes in resistance of the resistive sensor elements
61
and
62
due to applied pressure changes.
Line
166
(corresponding to line
64
in
FIG. 3
) comprises a fixed current source providing a
60
microamp (peak) current to the resistive sensor element
61
. The current on line
166
is proportional to the input voltage (as shown above, 0.600 Vpeak). The peak 0.600 input voltage is developed across the 10K current setting resistor. This sets the current to (0.600/10K)=60 uA peak.
Line
168
(corresponding to line
65
in
FIG. 3
) comprises a variable current source providing between 30 and 90 microAmps current to the resistive sensor element
62
. The variable current source sums a fixed 1.2 Vp-p square wave arising from the square wave signal on line
152
with a variable square wave from the TC DAC
162
based upon a programmable digital input value transmitted on data lines (not shown) in conjunction with a load signal on line
176
from the microcontroller
140
. This summation is developed across a 10K current setting resistor. The current is varied by the TC DAC
162
between 30 uA (peak) with the DAC
162
programmed by the microcontroller with a value of zero and 90 uA (peak) when the DAC
162
is loaded with a full output digital input value (e.g., OFFF).
Amplifiers (see amplifiers
66
and
67
in
FIG. 3
) buffer the sensed voltages on lines
166
and
168
(lines
68
and
69
in FIG.
3
). Pull-up resistors are also attached to lines
166
and
168
to ensure proper detection when the sensor
60
is removed. The pull-up resisters are very large resistances to reduce accuracy errors when the wire is present (e.g., 10 M ohm in parallel with the ˜3.5K sensor is 0.04% error).
The buffered sensed voltages on lines
166
and
168
are transmitted as a differential voltage pair on lines
172
and
174
to the input terminals of a differential amplifier circuit
180
. The differential amplifier circuit
180
is, by way of example, a small signal amplifier with a gain of 25 and provides good common mode rejection. Feedback resisters and capacitors are included in a known manner to provide stability and reduce the response of the differential amplifier
180
output on line
182
to small phase delays of the wire.
The differential sensor output voltage of the sensor current source
160
on lines
172
and
174
is also passed to a fault detection circuit
184
. Each sensor circuit resistance range is 2500 to 5000 ohms. With a 60 uA current through the sensor element
61
and a 30 to 90 uA current applied to sensor element
62
, the minimum and maximum voltages across the resistive elements are as follows:
For resistive sensor element
61
:
V(min)=60 uA*Rmin=150 mV
V(max)=60 uA*Rmax=300 mV
For resistive sensor element
62
:
Vb (min)=30 uA*Rmin=75 mV
Vb (max)=90 uA*Rmax=450 mV
A window detector circuit within the fault detection circuit
184
monitors the minimum and maximum sensor square wave voltage. The voltage is compared to set limits defined by a resistor divider network. For a fault condition, Rmin and Rmax limits were set to values that are guaranteed to be abnormal (e.g., 8.7 K ohms and 1.5 K ohms) and corresponding maximum and minimum voltages (e.g., 2.02 V and 1.55 V). The voltage limits set the range of the window comparator. When the input voltage is beyond the range of the window, the output of the comparators switch. The four comparators are fed to the microprocessor and indicate a fault. The outputs of the comparators have long time delays to prevent momentary glitches from causing nuisance faults. The fault detection circuit provides three fault status signals on lines
186
to the microcontroller
140
. Two lines identify a short for each of the two resistive sensor elements
61
and
62
on the sensor
60
. A third line identifies an instance where the guide wire
56
is not attached to the signal conditioning device
50
.
A next stage of the signal conditioning device
50
, a variable offset stage
190
, receives an amplified differential output signal on line
182
from the differential amplifier
180
. The variable offset stage
190
also receives an offset voltage signal via line
192
from an offset DAC
194
(programmed by a value transmitted on data lines in conjunction with load select line
196
from the microcontroller
140
). The variable offset stage
190
facilitates nulling an offset due to an imbalance arising from temperature compensation performed by the TC DAC
162
. After compensating the resistive sensor elements
61
and
62
for temperature, the current passing through each of the elements
61
and
62
in most instances are not equal. As a consequence, a differential voltage is present between the signals transmitted on lines
172
and
174
when there is there is no applied pressure. An offset voltage supplied by the offset DAC
194
via line
192
nulls the voltage difference so that an input to an analog to digital converter
220
is set to a voltage representing 0 mmHg (approx. 729 mV). The acceptable window for 0 mmHg that the microcontroller
140
can accommodate is 0.5 to 1.0 Volts. The microcontroller
140
internally corrects voltages within this window. The offset value is affected by the gain of a variable gain stage
200
. The microcontroller
140
takes the gain stage into account when setting the offset DAC
194
. In an embodiment of the signal conditioning device, the offset stage
190
also has a fixed gain of five to reduce the gain that would otherwise be required by the differential amplifier
180
—which would reduce the differential amplifier
180
's bandwidth.
The offset required is dependent on the sensor specification's worst case study. In an embodiment of the signal conditioning device, a maximum offset from the sensor is 33 mV. After the differential amplifier gain of 25, the offset has increased to 825 mV. Taking variations in atmospheric pressure and pressure measurements into account, the offset range is, for example, increased to 1.0 Volts for margin.
An output signal on line
202
from the variable offset stage
190
is received by the variable gain stage
200
. The variable gain stage
200
applies a variable gain, determined by input from a gain DAC
204
via line
206
. The gain DAC
204
receives a programmed gain value (a calibration value supplied by the sensor
60
's EEPROM) in conjunction with a selection signal transmitted on line
208
from the microcontroller
140
.
In an exemplary embodiment of the signal conditioning device
50
, the total system gain (based on the sensor specifications) is 125 to 2500. Therefore, taking into consideration the gain of the previous two amplifier stages (i.e., 25 and 5) the last stage must have a gain between 1 and 20. The microcontroller
140
obtains the gain for a connected sensor by reading the sensor
60
's EEPROM and transmits a corresponding value via data lines (not shown) to the selectable gain DAC
204
's data input. The output of the variable gain stage
200
is transmitted on line
210
.
A synchronous demodulator circuit
212
extracts voltage peaks from a square wave signal arising from the square wave input to the sensor and signal conditioning circuits that act upon the sensed pressure signal. In an embodiment of the invention, rather than operating a DC coupled system that is prone to drift and high cumulative offsets, an AC system was created to block DC signal components. Square waves were adopted in the illustrative embodiment since the levels are more easily measured on an oscilloscope and aren't prone to phase errors associated with sine waves when voltages are summed. In an illustrative embodiment of the present invention, the peak level of the square wave input via line
210
, an AC coupled waveform, is demodulated by the synchronous demodulator circuit
212
to render a DC level signal.
Demodulation is achieved by synchronously sampling the last 50% of each peak (positive and negative) of the square wave (see FIG.
7
). Under the control of a timing signal from the microcontroller
140
, the synchronous demodulator circuit
212
samples both the halves of a full square wave cycle by inverting the square wave and sampling, in addition to the non-inverted half peak (depicted as signal waveforms
270
,
272
and
274
on the left side of
FIG. 7
) a half peak of the inverted signal (depicted in waveforms
276
,
278
and
280
the right side of FIG.
7
). The sample pulses (active high) are depicted in as waveforms
282
and
284
for the non-inverted and inverted waveforms, respectively.
The positive and negative peak voltages are stored on a sample-and-hold capacitor in the synchronous demodulator circuit
212
. The charge stored upon the capacitor renders a DC voltage corresponding to the peak value of the square wave. The capacitor stores the acquired charge between samples (by the ADC
220
), though a small discharge of the capacitor during the non-sample period causes ripple. With reference to
FIG. 8
, the inverted sampling scheme allows two samples to be taken from input waveform
286
each period, in accordance with the sample waveform
288
(inverted sample is shown as a ghost outline)—thereby providing better accuracy and less ripple in the output signal (depicted as waveform
290
and actual sample input
292
—in ghost outline) from the synchronous demodulator circuit
212
on line
214
.
A demodulator filter stage
216
is a low pass filter that eliminates the 627 Hz ripple of the sample-and-hold circuit and provides some reduction of 50 and 60 Hz noise. The corner frequency is set in conjunction with the controller
140
firmware's FIR filter to give a system bandwidth of 25 Hz.
A low-pass filtered output on line
218
is received by an analog-to-digital converter
220
. The output of the ADC
220
is sampled at a rate of 256 Hz (interrupt driven by the microcontroller
140
) through clock, control and data lines
222
linking from the ADC
220
to the microcontroller
140
. After receiving the filtered, digitized signal from the ADC
220
via lines
222
, the microcontroller
140
performs additional operations (e.g., FIR filtering) on the received data, then outputs the value via lines
224
to an output stage
230
. The output stage
230
, comprising two digital-to-analog converters, receives power from the differential excitation signal on lines
102
and
104
of the cable connector
106
and digital control data (for the DACs) on lines
224
. The output stage generates a differential output voltage on lines
232
and
234
to the cable connector
106
.
Turning briefly to
FIG. 9
, the output stage
230
modulates the excitation signal received from the physiology monitor
52
via cable
54
, which can be either DC or AC, with a pressure waveform to develop a signal proportional to the excitation signal magnitude and a sensed pressure. The microcontroller
140
receives a digitized pressure waveform input from the ADC
220
via lines
222
, applies an FIR filter, applies offset and gain adjustments for the output stage, and sends the digital information via lines
224
to a pair of DACs
236
,
238
within the output stage
230
.
The digitized pressure waveform values transmitted by the microcontroller
140
to the DACs
236
and
238
modulate the excitation signal (buffered and inverted buffered by buffer stage
240
) transmitted via lines
242
and
244
to the output stage
230
's DACs
236
and
238
reference inputs. The two DACs
236
,
238
generate a differential output that replicates the excitation voltage but are of opposite polarity. The differential signal output from the two DACs
236
,
238
subtracts from the differential excitation signal transmitted on lines
242
and
244
. Since the signals are differential, DC offsets introduced by the DACs
236
,
238
or the excitation signal do not create issues for biasing the output amplifiers into their linear range. Thus, the output stage
230
is DC coupled—a general requirement for instances wherein a DC excitation signal source is utilized.
Additional signal conditioning is applied to the modulated excitation signal on lines
242
and
244
before the differential pressure signal is output on the cable
54
. First, the differential signal passes through a buffer/inverted-buffer stage
246
. Second, the buffered output of the buffer stage
246
is attenuated by a resister network
248
. When the sensed pressure is at 0 mmHg, the DACs
236
,
238
null the excitation voltage so the differential output is zero volts across the output attenuator stage
248
. The attenuator stage
248
resistance is selected to enable the circuit to satisfy the AAMI requirements for a low output impedance and a differential voltage equal to 5 uV/V/mmHg. The amplifier circuits in the buffer stages
240
and
246
have a bandwidth greater than the maximum excitation frequency. Feedback capacitors on the buffer amplifiers in stages
240
and
246
limit maximum bandwidth (frequency response), while ensuring stability of the output.
The microcontroller
140
interfaces with a number of peripheral components. A set of data/clock lines
250
interface to calibration information. The signal conditioning device
50
includes a calibration EPROM
252
, including a set of values entered during manufacturing characterizing the operation of the circuits. The set of values stored in the EPROM
252
during calibration of the signal conditioning device
50
include: calibration data for the input stage (e.g., gain DAC), calibration data for adjusting the gain of the output stage (e.g., output DACs), and data checking (e.g., checksum). The set of data/clock lines
250
are also connected to an external sensor interface
254
that facilitates extracting a set of calibration/characterization data for the resistive sensor elements
61
and
62
on the guide wire-mounted pressure sensor
60
. The information stored within the EEPROM includes temperature compensation offset, gain and offset values. The microcontroller
140
reads the EEPROM values once during set up of the TC DAC
162
, offset DAC
194
and gain DAC
204
. The calibration/characterization data is, for example, stored within an EEPROM attached to a guide wire that carries the sensor
60
.
Additional data/control lines support the user interface elements of the signal conditioning device described with reference to
FIG. 4. A
set of lines
260
supply data/control to an LCD output circuit
262
. A second set of lines
264
interface the microcontroller
140
to touch pads
266
.
Having described the components and functional blocks of the signal conditioning device
50
, attention is now directed to the calibration, setup and operation of a system including the signal conditioning device
50
.
Manufacturer Signal Conditioning Device Calibration
The conditioning device
50
includes both an input patient side) and output (physiology monitor side) that are calibrated during manufacturing. The signal conditioning device
50
's sensor input is calibrated during manufacturing test to facilitate greater precision in the display and calibration transfer functions. In particular, after connecting a calibration standard (e.g., a mock sensor providing a differential resistance) to the signal conditioning device
50
and entering an input calibration mode, the signal conditioning device
50
polls the analog differential voltage input. Calibration input voltages are read and checked. Thereafter, the signal conditioning device
50
performs an auto zero function on a differential voltage input corresponding to 0 mmHg. Next, the sensor input of the signal conditioning device
50
is calibrated for a signal input intended to represent 200 mmHg. If the difference between the 200 mmHg reading and the zero reading is greater than 3 percent of the reading (i.e., +/−6 mmHg at 200 mmHg), then a fatal error is registered. If the difference is within 3 percent (i.e., +/−6 mmHg), then the difference between the actual value at 200 mmHG and the theoretical value (based upon the zero point) is stored and used to modify the gain DAC code for each wire attached to the signal conditioning device.
Output calibration has two modes of operation: manufacturing test and field adjustment. During manufacturing, the signal conditioning device
50
output to a physiology monitor is calibrated to provide a standard 5 μV per Volt/mmHg output signal. In the manufacturing test mode, a technician adjusts a scale factor up/down to achieve a desired output. The adjustment coefficients established during testing are saved within the signal conditioning device
50
's EEPROM. In the field, the output is adjusted to meet the signal input requirements for a particular physiology monitor. After connecting the signal conditioning device
50
to the physiology monitor
52
, a user is prompted to press the up/down arrows until the output on the physiology monitor reads 0 mmHg. Once the 0 mmHg output is established, the user is prompted to press the up/down arrows until the output signal is properly scaled such that the physiology monitor reads 200 mmHg.
Guide wire EEPROM-based Signal Conditioning Device Calibration
With regard to the guide wire
56
“input” calibration, a guide wire
56
supplies sensor characterization data from its EEPROM upon connection to the signal conditioning device
50
. The EEPROM read/write functions are performed via a standard two-wire serial interface (data, or “SDA”, and clock, or “SCL”) well known to those skilled in the art. Each attached guide wire-mounted sensor contains a piezoresistive pressure sensing element having a particular pressure/temperature response. During manufacturing, the pressure/temperature response is determined and signal conditioning values for yielding consistent output are stored within the EEPROM mounted upon a housing of the guide wire. These values include: a temperature coefficient offset current, signal conditioning gain, position offset default, and checksum. These values are applied to the above-described signal conditioning DACs to modify a sensor current and a differential voltage representing a sensed pressure.
After reading the characterization data from the EEPROM, the signal conditioning device
50
applies the provided calibration information to its conditioning circuitry. The calibration information includes a temperature compensation value applied to the temperature compensation DAC
69
that modifies input current to the compensated resistive sensor element
62
. As discussed herein above with reference to
FIG. 3
, modifications to the current through resistive sensor “R
b
”
62
substantially reduce, if not effectively eliminate, the effect of temperature upon the differential signal read from lines
68
and
69
over a specified operating temperature range. The calibration information also includes gain and offset values applied to gain and offset DACs that modify an analog differential voltage derived from lines
68
and
69
. The temperature compensation and gain coefficients are fixed at the time of manufacturer testing. The offset coefficient is a default value that is modifiable once loaded during start up.
After applying the calibration information to the conditioning circuitry, based upon the guide wire sensor EEPROM-supplied calibration data, the signal conditioning device
50
transmits a square wave excitation pulse to the AC coupled sensor
60
and reads differential voltage signals via the sensor interface. The excitation pulse is a square wave driven by a timer output of the microcontroller at approximately 630 Hz. Demodulation pulses are driven at the same frequency as the excitation pulse, but have differing duty cycles. The sensor voltage is measured to ensure a signal within an expected range. Detected errors include “no wire” and “shorted wire” present.
User Calibration of the Signal Conditioning Device
After the signal conditioning device
50
applies the contents of the guide wire-mounted EEPROM to its DACs and confirms that the sensor
60
is properly connected, the signal conditioning device
50
tests its output via cable
54
to the physiology monitor
52
. The output from the signal conditioning device
50
to the physiology monitor
52
pulses from 0 to 200 mmHg in 10 mmHg increments every half second to enable an operator to verify the offset and gain via the output of the physiology monitor
52
.
With regard to the connected guide wire
56
and connector cable
54
, the signal conditioning device
50
performs an auto zero operation. Auto zeroing establishes the currently sensed pressure as the zero, or reference, pressure. The output of the signal conditioning device on the cable
54
to the physiology monitor
52
is a voltage corresponding to the 0 mmHg level. Thereafter, in response to disconnecting and reconnecting the guide wire
56
, the signal conditioning device will initiate re-zeroing the output.
The auto zero routine, executed in response to initially sensing a guide wire attached to the signal conditioning device
50
, comprises two main stages. During a first stage of the auto zero routine, the microcontroller determines whether an amplifier stage has “railed”. The analog-to-digital mapping in the signal conditioning device is from −210 mmHg (zero counts) to 510 mmHg ($FFF counts). The full scale range is only a portion of this region (e.g., −30 to 330 mmHg). One potential cause for “railing” is utilizing the sensor apparatus at an altitude that significantly differs from the altitude of the initial sensor calibration location. If the amplifier has railed, then the microcontroller attempts to bring it back into its linear gain region. Therefore, during the first stage, the amplifier is de-railed by sampling the sensor over a half-second period, averaging the samples, and then calculating steps (“counts”) in the offset DAC needed to place the “zero” reading within 50 mmHg of a preferred zero point (e.g., $4AA). The count value is repeatedly adjusted until the target region is reached.
After the amplifier is derailed, during the second phase final adjustments are made to establish a zero input reading. The microcontroller also checks for a varying input signal symptomatic of a guide wire sensor being placed prematurely within a body. During the second phase, sampling takes place over a four-second period. During zeroing, the gain DAC
204
code is read and the microcontroller computes an adjustment transfer function according to the equation (7):
Steps=ΔADC counts*(Volts/ADC counts)*(Steps/Volt)*1/Config.Gain (7)
Where
Config.Gain=Base of Variable Gain+(Gain DAC code*Gain/DAC code
For example, if the gain span is 5 to 100 using a 12 bit DAC the Gain/DAC code=95/4096, and a DAC Code of $1A5 (421) yields:
Config.Gain=5+(421*95/4096)=15 (approximately).
1/Gain=$8000/(Configured Gain in Hex)*Note: this is a Q15 (i.e., a binary fractional value with a sign bit and 15 bits of resolution) number.
Steps/volt=1/(2*Ref_Volt*(offset circuit gain)*1/4096
Volts/ADC count=Ref Volt/4096
Where: Volts/(ADC counts)=2.5/4096
Converting to Q15 renders a value of $0014
Zero Point−Zero Measured=Δ ADC counts, and
Number of Steps (+/−)=Δ ADC counts/ADC counts per step.
The calculated number of steps is compared to a current offset to determine whether the adjustment is possible (i.e., a value of minus 10 if the DAC is current at 8 would render a negative (erroneous) value for the DAC).
After auto zeroing, the signal conditioning device
50
output to the physiology monitor via cable
54
is adjusted using the up/down (+/−) arrow buttons
84
and
86
. The adjustment, referred to as “normalization”, modifies an internal offset (normalization) variable within the microcontroller. The internal offset variable is added to the computed output pressure sample prior to sending an output sample value to the output DAC. The up/down adjustment is typically performed after the pressure sensing guide wire
56
is inserted within the body (e.g., near an aortic pressure sensor).
Running Mode
In a run mode, the signal conditioning device
50
receives a differential analog voltage signal indicative of applied pressure changes to the sensor
60
and computes and outputs a corresponding pressure signal on the cable
54
to the physiology monitor
52
. The LCD
80
reads “RUNNING”. The sample and update rates for the signal conditioning device
50
are sufficiently high to accommodate blood pressure change rates and sufficiently low to ensure that sufficient power exists for the microcontroller to operate. An exemplary sampling rate is approximately every 4 milliseconds. However, a wide range of sampling rates will be deemed satisfactory to those skilled in the art when taking into consideration the above-cited factors.
The microcontroller applies FIR filtering to the sampled data to improve signal quality. In the exemplary embodiment, the Texas Instruments MSP430P337A microcontroller includes a built-in signed multiply, accumulate peripheral allowing fast multiplication. FIR coefficients are stored in on-device read-only memory (“ROM”). The number of coefficients is determined by the factors of the response requirements and the time for executing the filter function on a microcontroller running at a relatively slow clock cycle to reduce power consumption.
The microcontroller
140
scales the output prior to sending values to the output DACs
236
,
238
. The mapping of input values from the ADC converter
220
applies to the output DACs
236
,
238
. The output zero is absolute while the input zero from the ADC converter
220
is allowed to float between +/−100 mmHg around an ideal zero point. During zeroing the signal conditioning device establishes the amplifier operating range (via the offset DAC) and performs an average on the received zero input signal. The averaged value is used as a reference for subsequent measurements (the reference is subtracted from the readings during the running mode). This value is then multiplied by the output attenuation coefficients prior to transmission to the DACs
236
,
238
.
The LCD
80
of the signal conditioning device
50
is capable of displaying the maximum and minimum pressure over a most recently completed sample interval (e.g., 4 seconds). The microcontroller converts the digital output value (counts) to mmHg (binary) and then converts the binary mmHg value in a known manner to binary coded decimal digits (hundreds, tens and ones). The digits are converted to segments in the LCD display and then latched to turn on appropriate LCD
80
segments.
With reference now to
FIG. 10
, a flowchart summarizes a set of functional operations performed by the signal conditioning device
50
. Initially, during step
300
the signal conditioning device
50
is connected to the physiology monitor
52
via the cable
54
. In response to power supplied by the physiology monitor
52
via the excitation signals carried by the cable
54
, during step
302
the signal conditioning device
50
performs power-on self testing and output a value of 0 mmHg to the physiology monitor. If during step
304
, the device
50
detects an operation error, then control passes to step
306
wherein an error message is displayed on the LCD output of the signal conditioning device
50
. Control passes back to the self-test step
302
.
If however, the self-test is successful, then control passes to a state wherein the signal conditioning device
50
checks for connection of a guide wire cable connector
58
(indicating that a guide wire has been attached), and enters a mode wherein it responds to selection of the interface buttons
82
,
84
and
86
. During step
310
, if a calibration sequence is selected using the interface buttons, then control passes to step
312
where the user is prompted to adjust the output signal. Modes of output calibration include 0 mmHg, 200 mmHg and pulse calibration mode wherein the output to the physiology monitor alternates between 0 mmHg and 200 mmHg for a period of time. A user enters a button selection input to exit the calibration mode and pass to step
314
.
At step
314
the signal conditioning device determines whether the sensor static cable (containing the characterization EEPROM) is attached to the signal conditioning device
50
(step
314
is also entered from step
310
if the calibration button selection was not sensed). If the signal conditioning device
50
does not sense an attached static cable
59
, then the LCD display reads “no cable” and control passes back to step
310
.
If the signal conditioning device
50
does sense an attached cable, then control passes to a step
316
wherein the signal conditioning device reads the content of the characterization EEPROM describing the operating characteristics of the sensor carried by the attached guide wire. During step
318
, if the EEPROM values are invalid (e.g., a checksum error), then an error message is displayed during step
320
and control returns to step
316
. However, if the values are valid, then the values are used to configure the circuitry of the signal conditioning device
50
during step
322
. Thereafter, during step
324
if the signal conditioning device determines that the user has entered a calibration mode button selection sequence, then control passes to step
326
, wherein steps are performed for calibrating the endpoints and intermediate steps within the range out output for the signal conditioning device. This mode is exited by a pre-determined button selection sequence entered by the user, and control passes to step
328
(also entered when the calibration button sequence is not sensed during step
324
).
It is possible for the static cable
59
to be attached, while the guide wire
56
is detached. Thus, during step
328
if the guide wire
56
is not attached, then control returns to step
324
(and “no wire”) is displayed upon the signal conditioning device LCD output. Otherwise, if the wire is attached, then control passes to step
330
wherein the signal conditioning device enters a run mode wherein it checks the sensor wire, pulses an output between zero and 200 mmHG for 10 seconds, performs autozero on the sensor input, and senses input values and generates output values to the physiology monitor.
The signal conditioning device also responds to inputs from the select, “+” and “−” buttons and responds accordingly. The select button causes the signal conditioning device
50
to output a currently calculated sensed pressure (the calculated maximum and minimum pressures over the last two seconds) on the LCD screen. Otherwise the LCD merely outputs “running” and provides a differential output signal to the physiology monitor via cable
54
.
During step
332
if either of the up/down buttons have been pressed, then control passes to step
334
wherein the output is adjusted either up or down according to the pressed button. If, during step
332
, the up/down buttons have not been pressed, then control passes to step
336
. During step
336
if a sensor wire disconnect is sensed, then control passes to step
338
wherein the signal conditioning device
50
outputs an output on cable
54
representing zero output and the LCD displays “no wire.” Control then passes to step
340
.
At step
340
, if a wire re-connect is not sensed, then control passes to step
342
. If during step
342
, the static cable is not disconnected, then control returns to step
338
. Otherwise, if a cable disconnect is detected, then control returns to step
310
. If, at step
340
a wire reconnect is sensed, then control passes to step
344
. During step
344
if a cable disconnect is sensed, then control passes to step
310
. Otherwise, if the static cable is still connected, then control returns to step
332
.
Having described an exemplary set of steps (stages or states) associated with the operation of a signal conditioning device
50
embodying the present invention, it is noted that in alternative embodiments, the steps are modified to include additional functions, remove functions, and re-arrange the sequence of operations performed by the device. Such modifications are contemplated in view of the flexibility of programming such a device in a manner well known to those skilled in the art.
Another aspect to the exemplary system incorporating the present invention is its use to treat patients in a medical establishment. Part of such treatment involves the determination of the severity of a vessel blockage and determination of a course of treatment. With reference to
FIGS. 11 and 12
, a front and back side, and sliding insert of a slide-rule type device
400
are depicted. The slide-rule type device is utilized in conjunction with pressure readings provided by the signal conditioned guide wire-mounted pressure sensing system to render a fractional flow reserve value. The fractional flow reserve value calculated on the front side of the slide-rule type device
400
depicted in
FIG. 10
is then utilized to render treatment guidance in accordance with the charts depicted on the back side of the device
400
that is depicted in FIG.
12
.
Referring first to
FIG. 11
, fractional flow reserve (“FFR”) represents a degree of occlusion in a blood vessel arising from a stenosis as represented by pressure measurements from within a blood vessel. FFR is calculated as a ratio of two pressure sensor readings within an artery. The first value represents a sensed pressure taken at a side of a blood vessel from which blood flows toward a stenosis. This is the higher of the two pressure readings. The second pressure value, by which the first value is divided, is taken at the opposing side of the stenosis. The slide-rule device performs the division by matching the first and second values at the designated portions of the slide rule scales. The FFR value is then read from the corresponding result scale. The slide-rule device depicted in
FIGS. 11 and 12
is constructed in three parts: a front face plate
402
, a back face plate
404
, and a sliding insert
406
(viewable through a pull tab
405
cut in the front face plate
402
). The front and back face plates
402
and
406
are bound together, for example, by rivets
408
,
410
,
412
and
414
placed at the four corners of the front and back face plates
402
and
404
. Alternative means for affixing the front and back plates together are well known. Thereafter, the sliding insert
406
is placed between the front and back face plates
402
and
404
. Though not depicted in the figures, internal grooves guide the sliding insert
406
within the device
400
.
With reference to
FIG. 11
, in an embodiment of the present invention, the ratio represents a mean aortic pressure (Pa) divided by a mean distal pressure (Pd) measured within a blood vessel. An upper slide-rule
420
includes a numerator scale
422
, representing the Pa measurement, printed upon a face plate ranging from 1 to 40 mmHg. The upper slide-rule
420
also includes a denominator scale
424
(representing the Pd value) and calculated FFR scale
426
(Pa/Pd) printed upon the sliding insert
406
visible through a window
428
in the front face plate
402
. The printed values upon the scales
422
,
424
and
426
are logarithmic which facilitate the division through subtraction a value on the denominator scale
424
from a value on the numerator scale
422
and reading the result on the logarithmic calculated FFR scale
426
.
An extended slide-rule
430
is provided to handle higher pressures in a range from 40 to 330 mmHg. In order to accommodate a greater range of aortic pressure readings, the lower scale is split into two portions. The arrangement of the extended slide-rule
430
scales corresponds to the arrangement described with reference to the upper slide-rule
420
scales. The Pa pressure values are printed on the front face plate
402
. The Pd and calculated FFR values are printed upon the sliding insert
406
. It is noted that this arrangement is modified so that the sheets upon which the scales are placed differs from those depicted, by way of example, in FIG.
11
. Space permitting, instructions
440
for using the slide-rule device
400
are printed upon the front face plate
402
. It should be noted that FFR may alternatively be digitally calculated and/or displayed.
Turning to
FIG. 12
, a set of charts is provided to assist decision-making after determining a patient's FFR for a particular vessel. A first section
460
provides a stent grading system based upon FFR values determined after performing balloon angioplasty and/or stent deployment. Values between 1.0 and 0.9 represent optimal results. FFR values between 0.9 and 0.75 characterize satisfactory results, but also carry a risk of restenosis. A value lower than 0.75 is characterized as unsatisfactory results (e.g., a significant lesion is still present).
A second section
470
provides guidance with regard to reading the results of FFR calculations. A first graph
472
, labeled “Normal FFR Results” displays an example of an angiographically intermediate lesion. The pressure tracing displays that the lesion was assessed using a pressure guide wire, and the FFR was found to be above 0.75 (i.e., FFR=0.98). Thus, the lesion was not hemodynamically significant. The second graph labeled “Abnormal FFR Result” shows an example of an angiographically intermediate lesion that was assessed by a pressure wire, and the FFR pressure tracing result displayed was found to be less than 0.75. Therefore this lesion is hemodynamically significant and flow-limiting. A third section
480
provides set of study results relating FFR values, treatment, and event and survival rates of patients. It is noted that the following has been an example of the type of information that can be provided on the back face plate
404
. In alternative embodiments of the invention, other information is provided.
A method of using apparatus of the present invention is now provided. With sensor
60
and physiology monitor
52
attached to signal conditioning device
50
, sensor
60
is advanced to a target site within a patient's vasculature (not shown). A physiological parameter, for example, pressure, temperature, velocity, or flow volume, of blood flowing within the patient's blood vessel is measured with sensor
60
and sent to signal conditioning device
50
. Device
50
conditions the signal and sends it to physiology monitor
52
, which displays the signal as a measure of the physiological parameter at the target site. Measurements may be made at various locations within the patient's vessel to facilitate determination of medical treatment modalities appropriate for use at the target site. For example, if the treatment site comprises a stenosed region of the patient's vessel, sensor
60
may take pressure measurements across the stenosis for determination of fractional flow reserve, as described herein above with respect to
FIGS. 11 and 12
. Additional techniques will be apparent to those of skill in the art.
Illustrative embodiments of the present invention and certain variations thereof have been provided in the Figures and accompanying written description. Those skilled in the art will readily appreciate from the above disclosure that many variations to the disclosed embodiment are possible in alternative embodiments of the invention. Such modifications include, by way of example, modifications to the form and/or content of the disclosed circuitry and functional blocks. The present invention is not intended to be limited to the disclosed embodiments. Rather the present invention is intended to cover the disclosed embodiments as well as others falling within the scope and spirit of the invention to the fullest extent permitted in view of this disclosure and the inventions defined by the claims appended herein below.
Claims
- 1. A signal conditioning device interposable between a physiology monitor and various intravascular measurement devices, the signal conditioning device facilitating establishing compatibility between the physiology monitor and the various intravascular measurement devices, the signal conditioning device comprising:a sensor interface circuit supplying a sensor drive signal for energizing a sensor carried by an attachable intravascular measurement device and providing a sensor measurement signal; a processing unit for performing programmed tasks; a physiology monitor interface including: an input for receiving an excitation signal from the physiology monitor, and an output for transmitting an output measurement signal to the physiology monitor generated in accordance with the sensor measurement signal; and a power supply circuit including a signal converter that energizes at least the processing unit with power supplied by the excitation signal.
- 2. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 wherein the excitation signal is an alternating current signal.
- 3. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 wherein the sensor interface circuit is configured to receive a cable for supplying the sensor drive signal for a pressure sensor mounted upon a flexible elongate member.
- 4. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 wherein a portion of power supplied by the excitation signal is received by an output stage that renders an analog signal.
- 5. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 further comprising a visual display powered by the excitation signal.
- 6. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 further comprising a temperature compensation circuit powered by the excitation signal.
- 7. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 wherein the excitation signal powers the sensor drive signal.
- 8. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 wherein the sensor interface circuit further comprises a connection for a cable that transmits the sensor drive signal to a solid-state intravascular pressure sensor.
- 9. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 wherein the power supply circuit is adapted to provide a non-distorting load to the excitation signal while receiving power.
- 10. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 wherein the excitation signal has a current of less than about 20 mA rms.
- 11. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 wherein the processing unit comprises a microcontroller.
- 12. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 wherein the programmed tasks performed by the processing unit include controlling generation of the sensor drive signal.
- 13. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 wherein the programmed tasks performed by the processing unit include configuring analog signal compensation circuitry.
- 14. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 wherein the programmed tasks performed by the processing unit include processing a digitized signal derived from the sensor measurement signal.
- 15. The signal conditioning device of claim 14 wherein the programmed tasks performed by the processing unit include rendering a digitally processed signal from the digitized signal, wherein the digitally processed signal drives the output measurement signal.
- 16. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 wherein the power supply circuit signal converter provides a current-regulated output.
- 17. The signal conditioning device of claim 1 wherein the power supply circuit receives non-filtered power input.
- 18. A system for taking a measurement from within a blood vessel to determine a flow characteristic within the blood vessel, the system comprising:a flexible elongate member having a sensor mounted thereon; a cable electrically connecting the sensor to a signal conditioning device wherein the signal conditioning device comprises: a sensor interface circuit supplying a sensor drive signal for energizing a sensor carried by an attachable intravascular measurement device and providing a sensor measurement signal; a processing unit for performing programmed tasks; a physiology monitor interface including: an input for receiving an excitation signal from the physiology monitor, and an output for transmitting an output measurement signal to the physiology monitor generated in accordance with the sensor measurement signal; and a power supply circuit including a signal converter that energizes at least the processing unit with power supplied by the excitation signal.
- 19. The system of claim 18 wherein the excitation signal is a square wave signal.
- 20. The system of claim 18 further comprising a handheld fractional flow reserve calculator.
- 21. The system of claim 20 wherein the handheld fractional flow reserve calculator comprises a slide-rule mechanism including at least a numerator scale corresponding to a first measured pressure and a denominator scale corresponding to a second measured pressure.
- 22. The system of claim 21 wherein the first measured pressure is a mean distal pressure, and wherein the second measured pressure is a mean aortic pressure.
- 23. The system of claim 22 wherein the slide-rule mechanism includes a set of directions for interpreting a calculated fractional flow reserve.
- 24. The signal conditioning device of claim 18 wherein the power supply circuit is adapted to provide an non-distorting load to the excitation signal while receiving power.
- 25. The signal conditioning device of claim 18 wherein the excitation signal has a current of less than about 20 mA rms.
- 26. The signal conditioning device of claim 18 wherein the processing unit comprises a microcontroller.
- 27. A method for assessing blood flow characteristics within a blood vessel by means of a signal conditioning device interposed between a physiology monitor and an intravascular sensor, the method comprising the steps of:advancing the intravascular sensor to a target site within a patient's vasculature; providing an excitation signal with the physiology monitor that is used to power both the intravascular sensor and the signal conditioning device, the excitation signal having a current of less than about 20 mA rms; measuring a physiological parameter with the intravascular sensor; processing, by the signal conditioning device, physiological parameter measurements to render a conditioned measurement signal; and transmitting a signal to the physiology monitor that corresponds to the conditioned measurement signal.
- 28. The method of claim 27 wherein measuring a physiological parameter further comprises measuring a mean distal pressure and measuring a mean aortic pressure across a stenosis, the method further comprising:determining a fractional flow reserve with a slide-rule mechanism having a first scale representing mean distal pressure and a second scale representing mean aortic pressure.
- 29. The method of claim 27 wherein processing the physiological parameter measurements with the signal conditioning device comprises processing at least a portion of the measurements with a microcontroller.
- 30. The method of claim 27 further comprising:calibrating the intravascular sensor to the signal conditioning device; and calibrating the signal conditioning device to the physiology monitor.
- 31. A signal conditioning device interposable between an intravascular measurement device having a pair of resistive sensing elements, and a physiology monitor, the signal conditioning device facilitating establishing compatibility between the physiology monitor and the intravascular measurement device, the signal conditioning device comprising:a sensor current source providing two separate excitation signals for independently driving the pair of resistive sensing elements of the intravascular measurement device; a data input for receiving a temperature compensation calibration value for the intravascular measurement device; and a variable current source providing an adjustment current to at least one of the pair of resistive sensing elements to compensate for temperature variations, wherein the adjustment current is derived from the temperature compensation calibration value.
- 32. The signal conditioning device of claim 31 wherein the variable current source is powered by an excitation signal provided by the physiology monitor.
- 33. The signal conditioning device of claim 31 wherein the variable current source comprises a digital-to-analog converter.
- 34. The signal conditioning device of claim 31 wherein the intravascular measurement device comprises a pressure sensor of suitable dimensions to sense pressure from within a blood vessel.
- 35. A signal conditioning device interposable between a physiology monitor and various intravascular measurement devices, the signal conditioning device comprising:a physiology monitor interface circuit having an input adapted to receive an excitation signal from the physiology monitor, and having an output adapted to transmit an output measurement signal to the physiology monitor; a power supply circuit comprising a signal converter adapted to receive a portion of power supplied by the excitation signal; a sensor interface circuit adapted to supply a sensor drive signal to a sensor carried by an attachable intravascular measurement device, the sensor interface circuit further adapted to provide a sensor measurement signal derived from the intravascular measurement device; and a processing unit comprising a microcontroller, the processing unit adapted to render a digital sensor value, based upon the sensor measurement signal, and from which the output measurement signal is derived, wherein the power supply circuit is adapted to power at least the processing unit with the portion of power supplied by the excitation signal.
- 36. The signal conditioning device of claim 35 wherein the excitation signal is less than about 20 mA rms.
- 37. The signal conditioning device of claim 35 wherein the signal converter receives an unfiltered input signal and renders a current-regulated output signal.
- 38. The signal conditioning device of claim 35 wherein the power supply circuit is adapted to provide a non-distorting load to the excitation signal while receiving the portion of power.
US Referenced Citations (46)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
WO 9926531 |
Jun 1999 |
WO |