SENSOR WIRE ASSEMBLY
Sensor wire assembly for measuring a physiological variable in a body, said assembly comprises a sensor element for measuring the physiological variable and to generate a sensor signal in response of said variable, and a guide wire having said sensor element at its distal end, and adapted to be inserted into the body in order to position the sensor element within the body. The assembly further comprises a sensor signal adapting circuitry, being an integrated part of said assembly, wherein the sensor signal is applied to the adapting circuitry that is adapted to automatically generate an output signal, related to the sensor signal, in a standardized format such that the measured physiological variable is retrievable by an external physiology monitor.
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The present application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/247,598, filed Oct. 12, 2005, the entire contents of which is incorporated herein by reference.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention relates to a sensor wire assembly for measuring a physiological variable in a body.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONIn many medical procedures, medical personnel need to monitor various physiological conditions that are present within a body cavity of a patient. These physiological conditions are typically physical in nature—such as pressure, temperature, rate-of-fluid flow—and provide the physician or medical technician with critical information as to the status of a patient's condition. Obviously, the manner by which these types of parameters are measured and monitored must be safe, accurate and reliable.
One device that is widely used to monitor such conditions is the blood pressure transducer. A blood pressure transducer senses the magnitude of a patient's blood pressure, and converts it into a representative electrical signal. This electrical signal is then supplied to a vital signs monitor that displays, records or otherwise monitors the magnitude of the patient's blood pressure.
Traditionally, a blood pressure transducer has consisted of a pressure responsive diaphragm that is mechanically coupled to piezoresistive elements connected in a Wheatstone Bridge-type circuit arrangement. When the diaphragm is placed in fluid communication with a body cavity (such as within the arterial or venous system), pressure induced deflections of the diaphragm cause the resistive elements to be stretched (or compressed, depending on their orientation). According to well-known principles, this alters the resistance of the elements in a manner that is proportional to the applied pressure. The magnitude of the applied pressure can thus be detected by applying an excitation power signal (usually in the form of a voltage) to the inputs of the Wheatstone bridge circuit, and by simultaneously monitoring the bridge output signal. The magnitude of that signal reflects the amount by which the bridge resistance has changed, according to Ohm's law.
Typically, an electrical cable connects the Wheatstone bridge portion of the transducer sensor to a transducer amplifier circuit contained within the vital signs monitor. This amplifier circuit supplies the excitation power signal to the Wheatstone bridge, and simultaneously monitors the bridge output signal. The excitation power signal is typically in the form of a voltage and, depending on the monitor type and manufacturer, can have varying magnitudes and formats, both time-varying (sinusoidal, square-waved and pulsed) and time independent (DC).
According to the principles under which conventional Wheatstone bridge transducers operate, transducer amplifier circuits in most patient monitors have been designed to expect a sensor output signal having a magnitude that is proportional to the magnitude of the excitation power signal and also proportional to the magnitude of the sensed pressure. Because different monitors supply excitation power signals having different magnitudes and/or frequencies, standard proportionality constants have been developed. These proportionality standards allow any sensor to be readily adapted for use with any patient monitor also calibrated to adhere to the proportionality standard.
Several benefits are provided by this compatibility. Blood pressure transducers could be used interchangeably with patient monitors from different manufacturers. As such, medical personnel were not required to select a specific transducer for use with a specific monitor. Further, hospital investments in pre-existing patient monitors were preserved, thereby reducing costs. As a consequence, vital signs monitors adhering to these proportionality standards have achieved almost universal acceptance in medical environments.
However, the blood pressure transducers and monitors that have been previously used, and the resulting standards that have evolved, are not without drawbacks. For instance, the sensors used in these systems were typically positioned external to the patient's body and placed in fluid communication with the body cavity via a fluid-filled catheter line. Pressure variations within the body cavity are then indirectly communicated to the diaphragm by way of fluid contained with the catheter line. As such, the accuracy of such systems has suffered due to variations in hydrostatic pressure and other inconsistencies associated with the fluid column.
In response to this problem, miniaturized sensors using advanced semiconductor technologies have been developed. These types of transducer sensors are extremely accurate, inexpensive and still utilize the well known Wheatstone bridge-type of circuit arrangement, which typically, at least partly, is fabricated directly on a silicone diaphragm. Further, the sensors are sufficiently small such that they can actually be placed on the tip of an indwelling guide wire and reside directly within the arteries, tissues or organs of the patient. This eliminates the need for a fluid line because the fluid pressure is communicated directly to the transducer diaphragm. As a result, these sensors—often referred to as an indwelling or guide wire-tipped transducers—provide a much more accurate measurement of the patient's blood pressure.
Unfortunately, the electrical configurations of these miniaturized semiconductor sensors are not always compatible with the transducer amplifiers in existing patient monitors. For instance, the miniaturized sensors often cannot operate over the entire range of excitation signal magnitudes and frequencies found among the various types of patient monitors. Thus, they cannot be connected directly to many of the patient monitors already in use. To be used with such existing monitors, a specialized interface must be placed between the sensor and the monitor. Such an arrangement necessitates additional circuitry on the interface and, because existing monitors have been designed to provide only limited amounts of power, the additional circuitry may require an independent source of electrical power. As a consequence, use of the newer miniaturized sensors often adds cost and complexity to the overall system.
In addition, because of the above limitations, these sensors must often be configured to generate an output signal which is proportional to the pressure sensed, but that is not related to the excitation signal, supplied to the sensor by the monitor, in a way that is directly usable by the physiology monitor, e.g. the sensitivity may be different. As discussed, this does not conform with the electrical format required by the many monitors that are commercially available and already in widespread use. As such, the newer sensors can only be used with specific monitor types, thereby requiring additional, and often redundant, equipment to be purchased. This is especially undesirable given the cost sensitivities so prevalent in today's health care environment.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,568,815 discloses an interface circuit for interfacing a sensor to a patient monitor. The interface circuit includes a power supply circuit that receives an excitation power signal generated by the patient monitor, and derives therefrom unregulated and regulated supply voltages for use by the electrical components on the interface circuit. Further, the power supply circuit generates an appropriate sensor excitation signal. The interface circuit further includes receiving circuitry for receiving a sensor output signal generated by the sensor. A scaling circuit then scales that signal into a parameter signal that is proportional to the physiological condition detected by the sensor, and that is also proportional to the excitation power signal generated by the patient monitor.
An obvious drawback of the device of U.S. Pat. No. 5,568,815 is that, in order to connect the sensor to the monitor, a separate additional unit in the form of the interface circuit is required.
A similar solution is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,585,660 that relates to a signal conditioning device 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 a 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.
The Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation (“AAMI”) has defined power requirements for physiology monitors and in particular the input/output connector to a sensor wire assembly must comply with the standard set by American National Standards Institute (“ANSI”)/AAMI BP22-1994 (referred to as “BP22” in the following).
According to the BP22-standard an input/output connector arranged at the proximal end of a five line connector cable includes a pair of differential output signal lines. The output signal lines are driven by a sensor adapting circuitry's output digital to analog converters (discussed further herein below). The differential output signal, by way of example, operates at 5 μV/mmHg/VEXC. An operation range of −150 μV/V to 1650 μV/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.
Obvious drawbacks of the available prior art interface devices are that they are bulky and require user input which further increase the complexity of the equipment used in an intensive care operating room.
Furthermore, available interface devices require regular service, calibration, updating of software etc. which increase the logistic administration of the equipment and require a number of extra devices to be used when some of the devices are at service, which all together increase the cost.
The general object of the present invention is to achieve an easy to use sensor wire assembly that reduces the overall cost of handling the assembly.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe above-mentioned object is achieved by the present invention.
Thus, a sensor wire assembly according to the present invention is directly connectable to a standard input/output connector of a physiology monitor, i.e. obviating the need of an additional interface device which is necessary in the described prior art.
By a standard input/output connector is meant in accordance with an established standard or in accordance with relevant parts of an established standard, e.g. BP22.
The present invention is based on the in-sight that available prior art interface devices are too bulky and sometimes difficult to use.
In the solution disclosed in accordance with the present invention the necessary circuitry is drastically scaled-down in order to be integrated within the socket connector, in the wire connector, or elsewhere along the sensor wire assembly.
The inventor has realized that by using now available standard circuitry, e.g. as signal conditioner unit, the cost for the assembly may be drastically decreased which is a presumption for making the sensor wire assembly a disposable device, i.e. this is due to the fact that the need for service, calibration and software updating, as in the prior art interface devices, have been obviated for the sensor wire assembly according to the present invention.
Thus, according to the present invention there is provided a sensor signal adapting circuitry between an intravascular guide wire-mounted pressure sensor and a physiology monitor that displays a human-readable output corresponding to the sensed pressure. The adapting circuitry receives synchronization information, e.g. in the form of an excitation signal, from the physiology monitor and provides conditioned, standardized output in the form of an analog voltage output signal.
According to a preferred embodiment the adapting circuitry energizes the guide wire-mounted pressure sensor, e.g. with a sensor current/voltage, conditions a sensed analog sensor input signal, and performs mathematical transformations (by means of a microprocessor) to render the standardized output to the physiology monitor.
Furthermore, major advantages of the present invention is that no user input is required in order to use the assembly, instead it is ready to plug-in and directly use and that the sensor signal adapting circuitry automatically adapts the output to the applied sensor signal.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail in the following with reference made to accompanying drawings, in which:
In the prior art, it is known to mount a sensor on a guide wire and to position the sensor via the guide wire in a blood vessel in a living body to detect a physical parameter, such as pressure or temperature. The sensor includes elements that are directly or indirectly sensitive to the parameter. Numerous patents describing different types of sensors for measuring physiological parameters are owned by the applicant of the present patent application. For example, temperature could be measured by observing the resistance of a conductor having temperature sensitive resistance as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,615,067. Another exemplifying sensor may be found in U.S. Pat. No. 6,167,763, in which blood flow exerts pressure on the sensor which delivers a signal representative of the exerted pressure.
In order to power the sensor and to communicate signals representing the measured physiological variable to an external physiology monitor, one or more cables or leads for transmitting the signals are connected to the sensor, and are routed along the guide wire to be passed out from the vessel to the external physiology monitor via a connector means. In addition, the guide wire is typically provided with a central metal wire (core wire) serving as a support for the sensor and (optionally) also as an electrical connection to the sensor, and a surrounding tubing. Hence, a guide wire typically comprises a core wire, leads and a protective tubing.
With references to
The programmable sensor conditioning unit is preferably a PGA309 programmable analog sensor conditioner (available from Texas Instruments Inc.) specifically designed for bridge sensors.
Also illustrated in
The assembly further comprises a connector cable connected to the guide wire via a wire connector arranged at said connecting cable, where the guide wire is arranged at the distal part of the assembly. The adapting circuitry is preferably arranged in the wire connector but may also be arranged in the connecting means or elsewhere along the assembly.
Also shown in
The physiology monitor 316 supplies the sensor assembly with a reference voltage via the cable 315. By considering the signal standard with which the physiology monitor 316 complies, which is indicated to the sensor assembly by means of the reference voltage, and the actual value of the physical parameter measured by the sensor element 308, the signal adapting circuitry 312 will process the signal from the sensor element such that an adapted signal in accordance with the standard expected by the monitor may be sent hack via the cable 315.
The wire connector comprises a wire connector casing being the body of a female connector enclosing a circuitry casing that in turn encloses the programmable sensor conditioning unit (PGA309), the calibration unit, e.g. an electrically erasable programmable read-only memory (EEPROM), energy means and the output amplifying unit connecting the adapting circuitry to the connecting cable. The wire connector is provided with a guidewire receptacle tubing in which the guidewire is insertable. A number of connector sockets are arranged along the tubing to be electrically connected to electrical connection points along the inserted part of the guidewire. The connection points are connected to the above-mentioned electrical leads in the hollow tube of the guidewire. The guidewire is inserted into the receptacle tubing and then fixated by means of a fixation device and a collar nut.
As mentioned above the programmable sensor conditioner unit is preferably implemented by means of a PGA309 programmable analog sensor conditioner schematically shown in
Thus, the conditioner unit generates an analog output voltage signal related to the sensor signal such that the measured physiological variable may be retrieved by the physiological monitor.
Since each sensor element is an individual item with its own characteristics, each sensor assembly comprises a calibration unit, preferably an electrically erasable programmable read-only memory (EEPROM) which contains individual calibration data obtained during calibration of the sensor element performed for each individual sensor wire assembly. The calibration is performed in connection with manufacture of the sensor wire assembly. Calibration data takes into account parameters such as voltage offsets and temperature drift, etc.
The bridge pressure sensor is preferably energized from the PGA309 via an excitation voltage VEXC, generated by the PGA309 circuit. As an alternative the pressure sensor may be energized from a separate energy source, e.g. a battery or a capacitor means.
The PGA309 circuit is energized either from a separate energy source, e.g. a battery or a capacitor, which may be the same energy source that energizes the sensor, or a separate one, or via energy received from the physiology monitor or from a combination of energy sources. The energy source may be charged via the excitation voltage.
For a given excitation voltage VEXC, e.g. generated by the PGA309 circuit, the output voltage (VIN1-VIN2) of the bridge is a voltage proportional to the pressure applied to the sensor. Hence, the sensor output voltage (VIN1-VIN2) (sensor signal in
According to another preferred embodiment a processing unit, preferably a microprocessor (e.g. a PIC16C770, shown with dashed lines in
If pulse width modulation is required, the circuitry illustrated in the schematic drawing of
The sensor wire assembly may be directly connected to the physiology monitor via the connecting means. In some cases the pin configuration of the connecting means does not fit with the receptacle of the physiology monitor, in those cases an adapter is provided to be connected between the connecting means and the physiology monitor. The adapter may be a single unit or may include a cable interconnecting the two parts of the adapter, one that fits with the connecting means and another to be connected to the physiology monitor.
According to an alternative embodiment the communication between the sensor wire assembly and the physiology monitor is wireless. This is achieved by integrating a wireless communication unit (not shown) in the assembly, e.g. into a modified wire connector, in order to establish a wireless communication connection by using an established communication protocol, e.g. Bluetooth, to the external physiology monitor.
The sensor wire assembly according to the present invention is adapted to be sterilized prior usage.
The present invention is not limited to the above-described preferred embodiments. Various alternatives, modifications and equivalents may be used. Therefore, the above embodiments should not be taken as limiting the scope of the invention, which is defined by the appending claims.
Claims
1. A sensor wire assembly for measuring a physiological variable in a body, said assembly comprising:
- a sensor element configured to measure the physiological variable and to generate a sensor signal representative of said variable;
- a guide wire having said sensor element at its distal portion, and adapted to be inserted into the body in order to position the sensor element within the body;
- a wire connector provided with a guide wire receptacle tubing in which a proximal end of said guide wire is inserted, wherein a number of connector sockets are arranged along the tubing to be electrically connected to electrical connection points along an inserted part of the guide wire; and
- a connecting cable configured to directly connect said wire connector to an external physiology monitor,
- wherein the wire connector comprises a wire connector casing that encloses sensor signal adapting circuitry,
- wherein the sensor signal adapting circuitry comprises a programmable sensor conditioning unit, a calibration unit, an energy device, and an output amplifying unit,
- wherein the assembly is configured such that the sensor signal is provided to the sensor signal adapting circuitry, which is adapted to automatically generate an output signal, related to the sensor signal, in a standardized format such that the measured physiological variable is retrievable by said external physiology monitor via said connecting cable, and
- wherein the wire connector casing is configured such that, in use, all information delivered to and transmitted from the wire connector is conveyed only by the guide wire and the connecting cable.
2. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein said programmable sensor conditioning unit is a PGA309 programmable analog sensor conditioner.
3. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein said sensor wire assembly further comprises a connecting device at one end of the connecting cable that is configured to directly connect to an input/output connector of the external physiology monitor.
4. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein the guide wire is arranged at a distal part of the sensor wire assembly.
5. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein said sensor signal adapting circuitry is energized via said physiology monitor.
6. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein said sensor element is energized via said sensor signal adapting circuitry.
7. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 6, wherein said sensor element is energized by the energy device of the sensor signal adapting circuitry, wherein the energy device is an integrated part of the sensor wire assembly.
8. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein said sensor wire assembly is adapted to be sterilized prior to usage.
9. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein said standardized format is a BP22-standard or relevant parts of the BP22-standard.
10. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein the calibration unit includes a storage device that contains individual calibration data obtained during calibration of the sensor element, performed for each individual sensor wire assembly, wherein the calibration is performed in connection with manufacture of the sensor wire assembly.
11. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein the wire connector casing encloses a circuitry casing that in turn encloses the sensor signal adapting circuitry.
12. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein the programmable sensor conditioning unit is a programmable analog sensor conditioner specially designed for bridge sensors.
13. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein the sensor element is energized by another energy device that is an integrated part of the sensor wire assembly.
14. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, further comprising the external physiology monitor.
15. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein the connector sockets of the wire connector are spaced along a longitudinal axis of the tubing of the wire connector.
16. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein the sensor signal adapting circuitry is configured to generate the output signal in different formats, each format being compatible with a different type of external physiology monitor.
17. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein the sensor signal adapting circuitry is configured to receive synchronization information from the external physiology monitor and in response provide conditioned, standardized output for the external physiology monitor.
18. The sensor wire assembly according to claim 1, wherein the wire connector is physically separate from the external physiology monitor.
Type: Application
Filed: May 4, 2012
Publication Date: Aug 30, 2012
Applicant:
Inventor: Sauli TULKKI (Uppsala)
Application Number: 13/464,375
International Classification: A61B 5/00 (20060101); A61M 25/09 (20060101);