The inventions described below relate the field of Impedance Cardiography.
Impedance cardiography (ICG) is a technology that calculates changes in blood volume and flow velocity over time based on thoracic impedance measurements. ICG utilizes external electrodes to input a high frequency, low amplitude current and measure electrical impedance changes in the thorax. These external electrodes are typically placed on the neck and thorax of the patient. The impedance measurements are used to track volumetric changes such as those occurring during the cardiac cycle. Impedance (Z) changes are generated by blood volume and flow velocity increases and decreases in the ascending aorta during systole and diastole. Impedance to electrical current decreases during systole due to increased blood volume and flow velocity. The pulsatile impedance changes directly reflect blood flow leaving the heart and left ventricular function. The base thoracic impedance (Zo), pulsatile impedance/time changes (dZ/dt), and ECG are used to calculate stroke volume, cardiac output, and contractility parameters.
Many hemodynamic parameters can be ascertained with the use of ICG. Some of these parameters include: Cardiac Output (CO) which is the volume of blood flow per minute from the left ventricle; Stroke Volume (SV) which is the volume of blood ejected per beat from the left ventricle; System Vascular Resistance (SVR) which is the afterload resistance to left ventricle ejection; Change in Impedance/Time (dZ/dt) which is the magnitude and rate of change of impedance and is a direct reflection of the force of left ventricular contraction; Pre-ejection Period (PEP) which is the period between the start of a heartbeat and the ventricular contraction (measured from the onset of ventricular depolarization to the beginning of mechanical contraction); Ventricular Ejection Time (VET) which is the systolic time interval between the aortic valve opening to aortic valve closing; Acceleration Contractility Index (ACI) which is a direct reflection of myocardial contractility calculated from the rate of change of blood flow and peak acceleration in the ascending aorta; Left Cardiac Work Index (LCWI) which is a reflection of myocardial oxygen demand; and Thoracic Fluid Content (TFC) which is representative of total fluid volume in the chest, comprised of both intra-vascular and extra-vascular fluid. All of these measurements can be gathered continuously and non-invasively with ICG. During an ICG evaluation session, a patient's ICG waveform and hemodymanic parameters are examined.
Though ICG technology has improved since it was first developed by NASA in the 1960's, the user interface and control systems of ICG equipment have not improved at the same pace. Currently, ICG systems show real-time diagnostic information of the patient. A technician typically prints the diagnostic information such as waveform and hemodynamic parameters from the ICG system as it occurs. The printout usually provides only a few seconds of data, selected subjectively and without reference to historical data, during a session. In current ICG systems, entire ICG sessions are not constantly monitored and recorded in real time. The technician must decide when, during an ICG session, to begin printing the ICG report of the patient's parameters. Once printed, the technician then provides this printout to the doctor for evaluation and management of the patient's hemodynamic status. This report printing process can lead to missing diagnostic information that is vital to assessing and managing a patient's hemodynamic status. The technician may miss printing out important data or the patient's anomaly may not occur during the time when the technician is printing the report.
In addition to the deficiencies in recording and recalling of patient hemodynamic parameters, current ICG systems lack a user interface that allows the technician or doctor to record patient demographic information. ICG evaluation data is currently printed out and placed in a patient's medical record or file. There is no method to record patient information directly in an ICG report or view it in an ICG System. Information such as a patient's cardiologist, medications, drug allergies, indicators, or symptoms can be crucial in assessing and managing a patient's hemodynamic status.
Finally, current ICG systems fail to provide technical assistance and support to the technician or doctor. Presently, support information such as definitions for abbreviations used in ICG sessions and diagnostic information for disease symptoms are not provided in ICG systems. Doctors and technicians assess and manage a patient's hemodynamic status by reviewing the data provided in ICG reports. Presently, medical personnel must look over several ICG sessions and to other references in order to obtain information related to interpreting ICG data and data related to patient diagnosis. Quick references for use by the technician or doctor are simply not available in ICG systems.
The systems and method described below provide for improved performance of Impedance Cardiography and improved reporting of the hemodynamic parameters obtained during an Impedance Cardiography (ICG) session. When the ICG control system is used, impedance waveforms, ECG Waveforms, and hemodynamic parameters are recorded continuously for each session. The parameters and/or pictorial representations are stored in a computer memory for recall, and the parameters may be recalled in formats particularly conducive to assessing and managing a patient's hemodynamic status.
The ICG control system is used in conjunction with an Impedance Cardiography Device. The system includes several sets of electrodes for use on the neck and thorax of the patient, a current source, an ECG monitor, and a computer to control the operation of the system and record system parameters and hemodynamic parameters. The system provides ECG waveforms, ICG waveforms, data, hemodynamic parameters, the ability to review ICG sessions, patient demographic information, and technical support to users.
As shown in
Conventionally, measurements from an ICG session have been monitored by reviewing selectively-generated strip charts, taken from a very small period within the ICG session.
The disclosed ICG control system captures ECG and ICG waveforms for an entire ICG session as well as multiple sessions and stores it in real-time in a computer. An ICG session is the time the patient is monitored by the ICG control system and the ECG and ICG data is recorded. Sessions may be of variable time frames ranging between seconds to days. Typically, an ICG session will last 5-7 minutes. The computer can have any memory device such as magnetic data storage, holographic data storage, optical data storage, or flash memory. The control system records the data for the entire ICG session, and, if desired, for multiple ICG sessions, for review and analysis by medical personnel. This data may also be transferred from the ICG control system to other computers, data bases, and servers.
A portion of the new report with a user interface for the ICG control system is illustrated in
The narrative report 125 is presented in tabular format. The patient demographic field 125 can record and display various types of patient information. Information such as patient name, patient identification number, the patient's physician, the treatment time, and the ICG technician performing the ICG can all be recorded and presented in this tabular field. Information recorded in the ICG report in
An ECG ectopic narrative field 126 displays ECG data being evaluated by the narrative report 125 in an easy-to-read format for the user. This tabular field displays ECG information recorded during an ICG session such as total number of Heart Beats, Average Rate, Maximum Beats per Minute (BPM), number of Wide Beats, the percentage of Wide Beats when compared to the Total Beats studied in the ICG session, the number of Wide Couplets, the number of Wide Runs, the number of Pauses, the number of Narrow Runs, the total number of Early Narrow Beats and its percentage of total beats. The ectopic narrative field also displays the total beats not analyzed by the report and what percentage the report covers of the entire ICG session.
The narrative report 125 contains a hemodynamic narrative field 127. The hemodynamic narrative field 127 displays ICG parameters being evaluated by the narrative report 125 in an easy-to-read format for the user. Information found in the hemodynamic narrative field may include the total recording time of the ICG session, the percentage of the total ICG session time being evaluated by the report, and hemodynamic parameters such as Stroke Volume (SV), System Vascular Resistance (SVR), Change in Impedance/Time (dZ/dt), Pre-ejection Period (PEP), Ventricular Ejection Time (VET), Acceleration Contractility Index (ACI), Left Cardiac Work Index (LCWI), and Thoracic Fluid Content (TFC).
The ECG data and ICG data are presented in trace format in numerous trace display fields 130. The session time (in minutes) and heart rate (in BMP) are reported in tabular form in tabular data display fields 131. One trace display field and one tabular data display field is provided for each minute of an ICG session. Each trace field contains an ECG trace and an ICG trace. These graphical elements are presented in synchronized relationship
An operator reviewing the report of
Since a complete ICG session or multiple ICG sessions is recorded for the patient or multiple patients in a database, the ICG control system can evaluate trends found in the ECG and ICG parameters of the patient occurring over time using a trend analysis feature. The trend analysis feature can assist medical personnel by analyzing ECG and ICG parameters of the patient and provide possible diagnosis corresponding to the hemodynamic parameter trends occurring in the patient. The trend analysis tool may also be used determine treatment options respective to the diagnosis. The ICG system creates a report enabling the physician to review patient progress on a minute, hour, daily, or monthly basis. The control system allows the user to select individual ICG sessions, multiple ICG session, or several discrete time frames of an ICG session or multiple session for analysis. The trends provided by the report can show progress of patients being treated with medical or other therapy. The ICG control system is able to report data outside of the normal range. The system generates the trends that will assist the physician with treatment strategy, assessment of heart failure treatment, ruling out cause of dyspnea, determination of therapy direction, determination of causes of hypertension, and optimization and validation of medication prescription. Storage of ECG and ICG data over time for a patient or multiple patients allows for serial comparison of the data for patient diagnosis and medical research.
On screen review of all calculations show low, average and high standings unique to each patient over time. This can be used to monitor immediate effect of medical or other therapy as well as long-term response of cardiac therapy. The analysis feature can assist in the delivery of ECP therapy on high-risk patients as well. The ICG control system annotates measurements that are low, within normal limits and high.
Thus, while the preferred embodiments of the devices and methods have been described in reference to the environment in which they were developed, they are merely illustrative of the principles of the inventions. Other embodiments and configurations may be devised without departing from the spirit of the inventions and the scope of the appended claims.