1. Field of Invention
The present invention relates to the diagnosis of airways obstruction and, more specifically, to a system and method for determining the severity and cause of breathing difficulties in respiratory patients.
2. Description of Prior Art
Obstruction of the breathing passages within the lungs represents a common medical condition. Approximately 20 million Americans have the condition of bronchial asthma, and another 7 million have the condition of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Several million other Americans have intermittent spells of difficulty breathing caused by reversible airways hyperreactivity. While the underlying causes of all of these conditions differ, they all produce restriction to airflow during exhalation.
In human and veterinary medicine, clinicians measure the severity of airways restriction to guide treatment decisions. In human medicine, the severity of restriction is quantified by currently measuring the maximal rate of airflow during a forced exhalation. The most common embodiments of this method include the forced exhalation volume during one second (FEV1) and the peak flow measurement. The measurement of peak exhaled airflow requires the patient to hold a mouthpiece with an airtight seal, and to exhale rapidly and forcefully as possible. This process inherently incorporates an unquantifiable variable of patient cooperation. Accordingly, abnormally low readings are often unreliable, especially in acutely ill patients.
It is a principal object and advantage of the present invention to provide a system and method for determining the presence and severity of airways obstruction.
It is a further object and advantage of the present invention to provide a system and method for measuring the presence and severity of airways obstruction that is less effort-dependent.
It is an additional object and advantage of the present invention to provide a system and method for measuring the presence and severity of airways obstruction that is more reliable.
It is also an object and advantage of the present invention to provide a system and method for measuring the presence and severity of airways obstruction that is easier to reproduce in home and clinical settings.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will in part be obvious, and in part appear hereinafter.
The present invention comprises a system and method for simultaneously measuring the pCO2 and pO2 of a patients and plotting of the ratio of CO2/O2 instantaneously (hereinafter referred to as the “carboxygram”) to determine whether the shape of the carboxygram has been deformed in manner indicative of airways obstruction. The effect of an airways obstruction on the expired oxygram and carboxygrams, i.e., the tracing of the partial pressure of expired oxygen (pO2) and the partial pressure of expired carbon dioxide (pCO2), will deform in a predictable manner. The system and method of the present invention measures partial pressures of expired oxygen and carbon dioxide and then determines the effect of airways obstruction on both the capnogram and the oxygram to diagnose and/or predict the presence an airways obstruction in a patient. The system and method of the present invention also uses the delay in the time period required for expiration (Te) compared with inspiration (Ti) to diagnose airways obstruction. Based on the results of the measurements taken according to the present invention, a preliminary diagnosis may be reached by comparing the measured results to normal and afflicted populations.
The present invention will be more fully understood and appreciated by reading the following Detailed Description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring now to the drawings, wherein like numerals refer to like parts throughout, there is seen in
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Microprocessor 24 should be programmed to provide a Ti/Te ratio and calculate the slope of graph of the CO2/O2 ratios during Phase II and Phase III of the running carboxygram plot. Microprocessor 24 may comprise a MP100 system available from Biopac Systems, Inc, of Santa Barbara, Calif. Microprocessor 24 must determine the running average of Ti and Te and compute the average Ti/Te based upon the mean value obtained from breaths obtained during approximately a 30 second period of breathing. This value can be displayed as “summary data” on screen 28. Screen 28 can also provide reference intervals for Ti/Te, as measured in healthy subjects and patients with various disease states, including diseases that cause airway obstruction, and pulmonary embolism to assist in clinical diagnosis. For example, patients diagnosed with pulmonary embolism have a mean Ti/Te of 0.72±0.13, patients having had pulmonary embolism ruled out have a mean Ti/Te of 0.71±0.26, healthy patients have a Ti/Te of 0.75±0.15, and patient with acute exacerbation of bronchial asthma have a Ti/Te of 0.45±0.35.
Microprocessor 24 should also be programmed to normalize the signals obtained for all sensors to correct for differential sensor speed. For example, in general, oxygen sensing devices require more time to respond to a change in oxygen partial pressure, compared with the ability of an infrared absorption detection system to respond to a change in partial pressure of carbon dioxide. If at a given flow rate, an oxygen sensor has a delay of 250 ms, and a carbon dioxide sensor which has a delay of 50 ms (both sensors operating at the same frequency), then microprocessor 24 must match any given CO2 data point with an O2 data point that arrives 200 ms later. Microprocessor 24 must execute this delay correction according to differential sensor delays as a function of flow rate.
Microprocessor 24 should also be programmed to determine the slopes of Phase II and III of the carboxygrams obtained from the two deep exhalations and the average slopes obtained during 30 seconds of tidal breathing. These slopes can be computed with two X-axes; time and volume. To facilitate clinician understanding, microprocessor 24 should be programmed to report the overlay of several breaths obtained during a 30 second period of tidal breathing, plotting the CO2/O2 ratio as a function of either time or volume.
Carbon dioxide and oxygen partial pressures may be quantified in real-time by sensors 20 and 22 that are capable of performing infrared absorptiometry and paramagnetic deviation, respectively. An acceptable absorptiometer sensor 20 is Model No. C02100C Carbon Dioxide Measurement Model available from Biopac Systems, and an acceptable paramagnetic sensor 22 is Model No. 02100C Oxygen Measurement Module, also available from Biopac Systems. Sensors 20 and 22 should be calibrated against two dry reference gases (0% CO2/21% O2 and 7.5% CO2/12% O2) before sampling from a patient, and the readings of the reference gases should be repeated immediately after data is collected from each patient to evaluate for calibration stability.
Airflow transducer 18 should be tested against a volumetric calibration syringe, such as Model No. AFT 26 2L, available from Biopac Systems, immediately before and after each patient. Airflow, expired volume, continuous tracings of expired CO2 and O2 are recorded at body temperature and saturated with water and at ambient pressure (BTSP). The data may be archived digitally after analog-to-digital conversion by using commercially available software, such as the ACK100W AcqKnowledge software available from Biopac Systems.
Mouthpiece 12 into which the patient breathes can comprise a standard plastic duckbill mouthpiece where the patient forms a seal against the device, a rubber bit-block device that the patient puts into his or her mouth, or a face mask as described next. Examples of such devices may be commonly found in conventional respiratory therapy supply carts, such as a Hudson RCI plastic duckbill, a rubber Kraton ⅞″ internal diameter, reusable mouthpiece (Catalog No. 1645 of AM Systems, Inc. of Carlsborg, Wash.), or a Hans Rudolph series 7600 full face mask with three-way valve to allow measurement of the partial pressure of therapeutic oxygen and the partial pressure of oxygen in expired breath. The latter configuration is especially desirable in a patient with severe respiratory distress to allow delivery of exogenous oxygen and to measure the inspired pO2 and expired pO2. Other full face masks are equally adaptable for use in connection with the present invention, including the disposable Mirage mask available from ResMed Ltd. of Sydney NSW, Australia.
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Oxygen sensor 22 can operate using known principles of detection such as galvanic, paramagnetic, mass- or laser-spectrometry, calorimetry, or fluorescent detection. Commercially available oxygen sensors include the electrochemical sensor manufactured by Sensors for Medicine and Science, Inc. of Germantown, Md. (http://www.s4ms.com) or the fluorescent sensor known as the SentrOxy OEM-PFT available through Sentronic GmbH (http://www.sentronic.net).
Carbon dioxide sensor 20 can operate using either non-dispersive infrared absorption, mass- or laser-spectrometric detection. A commercially available CO2 sensor suitable to this purpose is the Capnostat mainstream etCO2 infrared sensor available from Respironics, Wallingford, Conn. Multiple methods can be used to detect mainstream flow, including those that employ Bernoulli's equation based upon pressure differential across an orifice, those that use thermal differential methods, and those that use piezieolectric principles.
Flow sensor 18 should have a detection range from zero to a minimum of 15 L/Sec with an accuracy of approximately ±3%. A commercially available device that meets these tolerances is the Vmax mass flow sensor available from SensorMedics, Yorba Linda, Calif. Flow data can then be integrated to yield volume. Although these particular measuring technologies represent an acceptable means for detecting O2, CO2 and flow, it should be recognized by one of skill in the art that other technologies could be employed to achieve the same objective.
Each sensor 18, 20, and 22 produces an electrical current that is digitized by microprocessor 24 prior to analysis by using an analog-to-digital converter with sufficient bandwidth and a sampling rate of aproximately 75 Hz to 300 kHz. Microprocessor 24 must perform basic functions for measuring Ti and Te and computing the average Ti/Te for a present period of breath collection (e.g., one minute).
The configuration of sensors 18, 20, and 22 can affect the device performance. In the preferred embodiment, the flow sensor 12, CO2 sensor 20, and O2 sensor 22 are positioned in a mainstream fashion to measure each parameter directly within the path of exhaled breath, as seen in
According to the method of the present invention, device 10 is provided to a patient for measurement of the various gases. The patient should breathe ambient air for at least two minutes prior to taking measurements with device 10. Breaths are collected from a patient seated in semi-Fowler's position and wearing nose clips. Patients should deliver a sharp, rapid, deep exhalation to a maximum endpoint, starting from a midpoint of tidal breathing (i.e., not delivered after a sigh inspiration), followed by a few normal breaths, and then a thirty second period of tidal breathing. All measurements may be taken during this breath collection interval. This sequence should be repeated twice more, yielding three deep exhalations and three 30-second samples of tidal breathing.
Cooperative patients can hold device 10 in their hands, and breathe into mouthpiece 12. The patient should first provide a deep exhalation, and then breathe for 30 seconds, followed by a second deep exhalation. All measurements may be taken during this breath collection interval. For obtunded patients or those with severe distress, breaths can be collected using a face mask connected in fluid series to a T-piece with valves oriented to allow oxygen to be delivered such that both the inspiratory and expiratory pO2 can be measured.
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Inspiratory time, Ti can be defined by the resulting capnogram, the oxygram, or the flow data. Using flow curves to define the start and stop of Ti and Te provides a theoretical advantage of estimating the start of exhalation during the initial emptying phase of the airways and before CO2 increases and O2 decreases. On the other hand, CO2 increases and O2 decreases during exhalation only after the airway deadspace (100-300 mL) has mostly evacuated and the subject begins to empty the alveoli. Typically, dual thresholds in flow are used to mark the start of exhalation and inhalation, including a >±10 L/min rate of flow change, and greater than 25 mL total volume change in an adult. Similarly, the Ti and Te can be marked by the true upslope of the CO2 curve (based upon a trigger consisting of an absolute CO2 value >2.0 mm Hg and a +10 mm Hg CO2/sec rate of rise) and return to the baseline, using similar values. Likewise, thresholds can be set on the oxygram upslope and downslope to mark the start of exhalation and inhalation, respectively.
In an alternative embodiment, microprocessor 24 is programmed to instantly differentiate the change in the ratio of CO2/O2 as a function of time or volume according to the equations, where t=time and V=expired breath volume:
F(x)=d(CO2/O2)/dt
F(x)=d(CO2/O2)/dV
Although the present invention focuses on the analysis of a carboxygram, it should be obvious to those skilled in the art that other gases could be used to measure the severity of airway restriction, including a plot of pN2 or plots of ratios containing pN2 as a numerator or denominator. Likewise, the device could be configured to detect similar changes in slope of the partial pressure of exogenously inhaled and poorly absorbed gases, including inert gases such as helium.