TEMPERATURE SENSOR ASSEMBLIES FOR ELECTRIC WARMING BLANKETS
An electric warming blanket for warming patients during surgery and other medical procedures includes a flexible heater and a temperature sensor assembly coupled thereto; a first layer of water resistant material coupled to a second layer of water resistant material, about a perimeter of the heater, forms a substantially hermetically sealed space for the heater and the temperature sensor assembly. The blanket may further include a thermal insulation layer disposed between the temperature sensor assembly and the first layer of water resistant material. The temperature sensor assembly may provide input of an average temperature over a portion of a surface area of the heater to a temperature controller, when the heater and sensor assembly are coupled to the controller.
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The present application is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/537,189, which was filed on Sep. 29, 2006 and claims priority to each of the following provisional applications: Ser. No. 60/825,573, entitled HEATING BLANKET SYSTEM filed on Sep. 13, 2006; Ser. No. 60/722,106, entitled ELECTRIC WARMING BLANKET INCLUDING TEMPERATURE ZONES AUTOMATICALLY OPTIMIZED, filed Sep. 29, 2005; and Ser. No. 60/722,246, entitled HEATING BLANKET, filed Sep. 29, 2005. Each of the above-referenced applications are hereby incorporated by reference, in their entireties, herein.
RELATED APPLICATIONSThe present application is related to the following co-pending and commonly assigned utility patent applications, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties: A) ELECTRIC WARMING BLANKET HAVING OPTIMIZED TEMPERATURE ZONES, Ser. No. 11/537,173; B) NOVEL DESIGNS FOR HEATING BLANKETS AND PADS, Ser. No. 11/537,179; C) FLEXIBLE HEATING ELEMENT CONSTRUCTION, Ser. No. 11/537,199; D) BUS BAR ATTACHMENTS FOR FLEXIBLE HEATING ELEMENTS, Ser. No. 11/537,212; and E) BUS BAR INTERFACES FOR FLEXIBLE HEATING ELEMENTS, Ser. No. 11/537,222.
TECHNICAL FIELDThe present invention is related to heating or warming blankets or pads and more particularly to those including electrical heating elements.
BACKGROUNDIt is well established that surgical patients under anesthesia become poikilothermic. This means that the patients lose their ability to control their body temperature and will take on or lose heat depending on the temperature of the environment. Since modern operating rooms are all air conditioned to a relatively low temperature for surgeon comfort, the majority of patients undergoing general anesthesia will lose heat and become clinically hypothermic if not warmed.
Over the past 15 years, forced-air warming (FAW) has become the “standard of care” for preventing and treating the hypothermia caused by anesthesia and surgery. FAW consists of a large heater/blower attached by a hose to an inflatable air blanket. The warm air is distributed over the patient within the chambers of the blanket and then is exhausted onto the patient through holes in the bottom surface of the blanket.
Although FAW is clinically effective, it suffers from several problems including: a relatively high price; air blowing in the operating room, which can be noisy and can potentially contaminate the surgical field; and bulkiness, which, at times, may obscure the view of the surgeon. Moreover, the low specific heat of air and the rapid loss of heat from air require that the temperature of the air, as it leaves the hose, be dangerously high—in some products as high as 45° C. This poses significant dangers for the patient. Second and third degree burns have occurred both because of contact between the hose and the patient's skin, and by blowing hot air directly from the hose onto the skin without connecting a blanket to the hose. This condition is common enough to have its own name—“hosing.” The manufacturers of forced air warming equipment actively warn their users against hosing and the risks it poses to the patient.
To overcome the aforementioned problems with FAW, several companies have developed electric warming blankets. However, there is still a need for electrically heated blankets or pads that can be used safely and effectively warm patients undergoing surgery or other medical treatments. These blankets need to be flexible in order to effectively drape over the patient (making excellent contact for conductive heat transfer and maximizing the area of the patient's skin receiving conductive as well as radiant heat transfer), and should incorporate means for precise temperature control.
Precise temperature control is important because non-uniform heat distribution can occur within an electric warming blanket. Unfortunately, many temperature sensors used to provide feedback to a temperature controller do not dependably report an accurate average temperature of the blanket because they sense temperature from too small of an area. For example, if the temperature of a measured location is cooler than the average blanket temperature, the temperature sensor will cause the controller to deliver more power to the heater and the resulting average temperature of the heater will be higher than desired.
Further, an electric blanket can overheat if the temperature sensor is thermally grounded to a cool object. This condition can occur if a cool object such as a metal pan is placed on top of the heater in the area of the temperature sensor. The sensor “feels” cool and tells the temperature controller to deliver more power to the heater.
Accordingly, there is a need for a blanket that utilizes a temperature sensor that takes temperature measurements that are representative of the average temperature of the blanket. Further, there is a need for a blanket with a temperature sensor that will not cause the blanket to overheat if a cool object is placed in proximity to it. Various embodiments of the invention described herein solve one or more of the problems discussed above.
The following drawings are illustrative of particular embodiments of the present invention and therefore do not limit the scope of the invention. The drawings are not to scale (unless so stated) and are intended for use in conjunction with the explanations in the following detailed description. Embodiments of the present invention will hereinafter be described in conjunction with the appended drawings, wherein like numerals denote like elements.
The following detailed description is exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the scope, applicability, or configuration of the invention in any way. Rather, the following description provides practical illustrations for implementing exemplary embodiments of the present invention. Examples of constructions, materials, dimensions, and manufacturing processes are provided for selected elements, and all other elements employ that which is known to those of skill in the field of the invention. Those skilled in the art will recognize that many of the examples provided have suitable alternatives that can be utilized. The term ‘blanket’, used to describe embodiments of the present invention, may be considered to encompass heating blankets and pads.
According to an exemplary embodiment, a conductive fabric comprising heating element 10 comprises a non-woven polyester having a basis weight of approximately 130 g/m2 and being 100% coated with polypyrrole (available from Eeonyx Inc., Pinole, Calif.); the coated fabric has an average resistance, for example, determined with a four point probe measurement, of approximately 15-20 ohms per square inch at about 48 volts, which is suitable to produce the preferred watt density of 0.2 to 0.4 watts/sq. in. for surface areas of heating element 10 having a width, between bus bars 15, in the neighborhood of about 20 inches. Such a width is suitable for a lower body heating blanket, some embodiments of which will be described below. A resistance of such a conductive fabric may be tailored for different widths between bus bars (wider requiring a lower resistance and narrower requiring a higher resistance) by increasing or decreasing a surface area of the fabric that can receive the conductive coating, for example by increasing or decreasing the basis weight of the fabric. Resistance over the surface area of the conductive fabrics is generally uniform in many embodiments of the present invention. However, the resistance over different portions of the surface area of conductive fabrics such as these may vary, for example, due to variation in a thickness of a conductive coating, variation within the conductive coating itself, variation in effective surface area of the substrate which is available to receive the conductive coating, or variation in the density of the substrate itself. Local surface resistance across a heating element, for example heater 10, is directly related to heat generation according to the following relationship:
Q(Joules)=I2(Amps)×R(Ohms)
Variability in resistance thus translates into variability in heat generation, which is measured as a temperature. According to preferred embodiments of the present invention, which are employed to warm patients undergoing surgery, precise temperature control is desirable. Means for determining heating element temperatures, which average out temperature variability caused by resistance variability across a surface of the heating element, are described below in conjunction with
A flexibility of blanket subassembly 100, provided primarily by flexible heating element 10, and optionally enhanced by the incorporation of flexible bus bars, allows blanket subassembly 100 to conform to the contours of a body, for example, all or a portion of a patient undergoing surgery, rather than simply bridging across high spots of the body; such conformance may optimize a conductive heat transfer from element 10 to a surface of the body. However, as illustrated in
The uniform watt-density output across the surface areas of preferred embodiments of heating element 10 translates into generally uniform heating of the surface areas, but not necessarily a uniform temperature. At locations of heating element 10 which are in conductive contact with a body acting as a heat sink, for example, body 16, the heat is efficiently drawn away from heating element 10 and into the body, for example by blood flow, while at those locations where element 10 does not come into conductive contact with the body, for example lateral portions 11, 12 as illustrated in
According to embodiments of the present invention, zones of heating element 10 may be differentiated according to whether or not portions of element 10 are in conductive contact with a body, for example, a patient undergoing surgery. In the case of conductive heating, gentle external pressure may be applied to a heating blanket including heating element 10, which pressure forces heating element 10 into better conductive contact with the patient to improve heat transfer. However, if excessive pressure is applied the blood flow to that skin may be reduced at the same time that the heat transfer is improved and this combination of heat and pressure to the skin can be dangerous. It is well known that patients with poor perfusion should not have prolonged contact with conductive heat in excess of approximately 42° C. 42° C. has been shown in several studies to be the highest skin temperature, which cannot cause thermal damage to normally perfused skin, even with prolonged exposure. (Stoll & Greene, Relationship between pain and tissue damage due to thermal radiation. J. Applied Physiology 14(3):373-382, 1959. and Moritz and Henriques, Studies of thermal injury: The relative importance of time and surface temperature in the causation of cutaneous burns. Am. J. Pathology 23:695-720, 1947) Thus, according to certain embodiments of the present invention, the portion of heating element 10 that is in conductive contact with the patient is controlled to approximately 43° C. in order to achieve a temperature of about 41-42° C. on a surface a heating blanket cover that surrounds element 10, for example, a cover or shell 20, 40 which will be described below in conjunction with
Referring now to the end view of
Returning now to
According to the illustrated embodiment, heat spreader 212 is sized to contact an enlarged surface area so that a temperature sensed by sensor 21 is more representative of an average temperature over a region of heater 10 surrounding sensor 21, which is positioned such that, when a heating blanket including heater 10 is placed over a body, the regions surrounding sensor 21 will be in conductive contact with the body. As previously described, it is desirable that a temperature of approximately 43° C. be maintained over a surface of heater 10 which is in conductive contact with a body of a patient undergoing surgery. Other types of heat spreaders, in addition to metallic foils, include metallic meshes or screens, or an adhesive/epoxy filled with a thermally conductive material.
Heat spreader 212 is a desirable component of a temperature sensor assembly, according to some embodiments of the present invention, since conductive fabrics employed by heating element 10, such as those previously described, may not exhibit uniform resistance across surface areas thereof. Heat spreader 212, having a surface area that does not exceed approximately four square inches, according to a preferred embodiment, may be effective in averaging out relatively small scale spatial resistance variation, for example, about 3% to 10% variability over less than about one or two inches. Such a limitation on heat spreader 212 surface area may be necessary so that heat spreader 212 does not become too bulky, since the larger the surface area, the greater the thickness of spreader 212 needed in order to maintain effective heat transfer across spreader 212 and to sensor 21. In addition, if spreader 212 is too thick, a thermal mass of spreader 212 will cause spreader 212 to respond too slowly to changes in heat loss or gain by heating element. According to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, spreader 212 has a surface area of no greater than approximately four square inches and a thickness of no greater than approximately 0.001 inch. Some alternate embodiments of the present invention address a non-uniform resistance across a surface area of element 10 by employing a distributed temperature sensor, for example, a resistance temperature detector (RTD) laid out in flat plane across a surface of heater 10, or by employing an infrared temperature measurement device positioned to receive thermal radiation from a given area of heater 10. An additional alternate embodiment is contemplated in which an array of temperature sensors are positioned over the surface of heater 10, being spaced apart so as to collect temperature readings which may be averaged to account for resistance variance.
According to a preferred embodiment, assembly 421 includes a second, redundant, temperature sensor mounted to substrate 211, close enough to sensor 21 to detect approximately the same temperature; while sensor 21 may be coupled to a microprocessor temperature control, the second sensor, for example, a chip thermistor similar to sensor 21, may be coupled to an analog over-temperature cutout that cuts power to element 10, and/or sends a signal triggering an audible or visible alarm. The design of the second sensor may be the same as the first sensor and need not be described again. Another safety check may be provided by mounting an identification resistor to substrate 211 in order to detect an increase in resistance of element 10, due, for example, to degradation of the material of element 10, or a fractured bus bar; the optional identification resistor monitors a resistance of heating element 10 and compares the measured resistance to an original resistance of element 10.
According to some embodiments of the present invention, for example as illustrated in
According to some embodiments of the present invention, shell 20 includes top and bottom sheets extending over either side of assembly 250; the two sheets of shell 20 are coupled together along a seal zone 22 (shown with cross-hatching in the cut-away portion of
Returning now to
With reference to
With further reference to
In the foregoing detailed description, the invention has been described with reference to specific embodiments. However, it may be appreciated that various modifications and changes can be made without departing from the scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims. Although embodiments of the invention are described in the context of a hospital operating room, it is contemplated that some embodiments of the invention may be used in other environments. Those embodiments of the present invention, which are not intended for use in an operating environment and need not meet stringent FDA requirements for repeated used in an operating environment, need not including particular features described herein, for example, related to precise temperature control. Thus, some of the features of preferred embodiments described herein are not necessarily included in preferred embodiments of the invention which are intended for alternative uses.
Claims
1.-16. (canceled)
17. An electric warming blanket for warming patients during surgery and other medical procedures, comprising:
- a flexible heater including a first side, a second side, opposite the first side, and a first edge and a second edge, opposite the first edge, the heater having a substantially uniform watt density output across a surface area of the first and second sides, when the heater is electrically powered;
- a pair of bus bars for powering the heater, a first of the pair of bus bars being coupled to the one of the first side and the second side of the heater, along the first edge thereof, and a second of the pair of bus bars being coupled to one of the first side and the second side of the heater, along the second edge thereof;
- a temperature sensor assembly coupled to the first side of the heater at a first location on the first side between the first and second bus bars, the temperature sensor assembly including a first temperature sensor, a second temperature sensor and a heat spreader, the heat spreader extending over the first location between the first side of the heater and the first and second temperature sensors, and the first and second temperature sensors detecting approximately the same temperature; and
- a first layer of water resistant material extending completely over the first side of the heater and the temperature sensor assembly, and a second layer of water resistant material extending completely over the second side of the heater, the first and second layers being coupled together along a seal zone that extends about a perimeter edge of the blanket to form a substantially hermetically sealed space for the heater and the temperature sensor assembly.
18. The blanket of claim 17, wherein:
- the temperature sensor assembly provides input of the detected temperature to a means for controlling a supply of power to the bus bars based on the detected temperature; and
- the second temperature sensor of the assembly provides input to a means for cutting the supply of power based on the detected temperature.
19. The blanket of claim 17, wherein:
- the temperature sensor assembly provides input of the detected temperature to a means for controlling a supply of power to the bus bars based on the detected temperature; and
- the second temperature sensor of the assembly provides input to trigger an alarm.
20. The blanket of claim 17, wherein the heat spreader has a surface area that is no greater than approximately four square inches.
21. The blanket of claim of claim 17, wherein the heat spreader comprises a metal foil.
22. The blanket of claim 21, wherein the metal is copper.
23. The blanket of claim 17, wherein the heat spreader has a thickness of approximately 0.001 inch.
24. The blanket of claim 17, further comprising:
- at least one super over-temperature sensor coupled to the heater between the first and second bus bars at another location spaced apart from the first location;
- wherein the at least one super over-temperature sensor is adapted to interrupt a supply of power to the first and second bus bars and/or to activate an alarm at a prescribed temperature that exceeds a normal operating range.
25. The blanket of claim 24, wherein the at least one super over-temperature sensor comprises a plurality of super over-temperature sensors wired in series with one another.
26. The blanket of claim 25, wherein one of the plurality of super over-temperature sensors is located in proximity to one of the first and second bus bars.
27. The blanket of claim 24, wherein the at least one super over-temperature sensor is adapted to activate an alarm at the prescribed temperature.
28. The blanket of claim 24, wherein the prescribed temperature is between approximately 45° C. and approximately 60° C.
29. The blanket of claim 17, further comprising a first layer of flexible electrically insulating material extending between the temperature sensor assembly and the first side of the heater.
30. The blanket of claim 29, wherein:
- the first layer of flexible electrically insulating material is laminated to the first side of the heater; and
- the temperature sensor assembly is bonded to the first layer of flexible electrically insulating material.
31. The blanket of claim 29, further comprising a layer of thermal insulation extending over the entire first side of heater, between the first and second bus bars, and over the temperature sensor assembly, the first layer of water resistant material also extending over the layer of thermal insulation.
32. The blanket of claim 17, further comprising a layer of thermal insulation extending over the entire first side of heater and over the temperature sensor assembly, the first layer of water resistant material also extending over the layer of thermal insulation.
33. The blanket of claim 17, wherein:
- the first location on the first side of the heater is located within a first temperature zone of the surface area of the heater, the first temperature zone being defined by a contacting portion of the second side of the heater, the contacting portion being in conductive contact with a patient when the blanket is placed over the patient; and
- the surface area of the heater further includes a second temperature zone, the second temperature zone being defined by a non-contacting portion of the second side of the heater, the non-contacting portion not being in conductive contact with the patient when the blanket is placed over the patient.
34. The blanket of claim 33, further comprising a temperature controller, the temperature controller being adapted to control a supply of power to the first and second bus bars, according to the detected temperature, in order to maintain a temperature of first temperature zone lower than a higher temperature of the second temperature zone.
35. The blanket of claim 33, further comprising:
- at least one super over-temperature sensor coupled to the heater between the first and second bus bars at another location spaced apart from the first location;
- wherein the at least one super over-temperature sensor is adapted to interrupt a supply of power to the first and second bus bars at a prescribed temperature that exceeds a normal operating range.
36. The blanket of claim 35, wherein the prescribed temperature is between approximately 45° C. and approximately 60° C.
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 21, 2010
Publication Date: Aug 12, 2010
Applicant: HOT DOG INTERNATIONAL LLC (Eden Prairie, MN)
Inventors: Scott D. Augustine (Bloomington, MN), Scott A. Entenman (St. Paul, MN), Keith J. Leland (Medina, MN), Gordon D. Lawrence (Minneapolis, MN)
Application Number: 12/764,278
International Classification: A61F 7/00 (20060101); H05B 3/34 (20060101);