METHODS AND DEVICES FOR DETECTION OF CONTEXT WHEN ADDRESSING A MEDICAL CONDITION OF A PATIENT
Methods and devices detect context related to a patient when monitoring a physiological condition of the patient and/or when applying one or more modes of therapy. The context may be a patient context such as posture or an environmental context such as ambient conditions. The context may be used in various ways in relation to the physiological measurement, such as to control when the physiological measurements are made, to appropriately flag physiological measurements, to be recorded in association with the physiological measurements, and/or to correct the physiological measurements based on a reference context. A device such as a beacon transmitter issued in detecting the context and a measurement device such as an implantable cardiovascular device is used to capture the physiological measurements.
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This application is a Continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/188,956, filed Jul. 22, 2011, entitled “Methods and Device for Detection of Context when Addressing a Medical Condition of a Patient,” which is a Divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/171,210, filed Jul. 10, 2008, entitled “Methods and Device for Detection of Context when Addressing a Medical Condition of a Patient,” now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,986,998, which is a Divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/269,611, filed Oct. 11, 2002, entitled “Methods and Device for Detection of Context when Addressing a Medical Condition of a Patient,” now issued as U.S. Pat. No, 7,400,928, which are incorporated herein by reference.
TECHNICAL FIELDThe present invention relates to monitoring physiological conditions and/or treating a medical condition of a patient. More specifically, the present invention relates to detecting a context that is related to the physiological condition and/or treatment of the patient.
BACKGROUNDPhysiological conditions of a patient may be monitored either during visits to a physician or through frequent self-examinations by the patient. Although the health of the patient may be determinable from these monitoring sessions, certain health issues may not be readily apparent from such periodic monitoring. Additionally, periodic monitoring through self-examination and visits to a physician can be an inconvenience to the patient.
Medical devices that are coupled to the patient either periodically or constantly, as in the case of an implant, address many of these issues. The patient is not encumbered by the manual self-examination and is not required to make frequent visits to a physician. Instead, the medical device automatically makes measurements of a physiological condition of the patient, such as pulse or respiration rate, and stores the information for later retrieval or streams the data to another device or communication network. Thus, the physiological condition of the patient can be automatically monitored at anytime during which the medical device is coupled to the patient, regardless of context.
However, context may temporarily affect the physiological condition of the patient being monitored. Context can be divided into both a patient context and an environmental context. The patient context is a body-related factor, such as the posture, activity level, or mental/emotional state of the patient, and the patient context can cause the physiological condition of the patient to vary to a substantial degree. The environmental context is an external factor such as the ambient temperature or sound level and can also cause the physiological condition to vary.
The context is typically unknown when the medical device is making the physiological measurements, and therefore any deviations from normal values for a physiological condition may be the result of context rather than a health condition of the patient. Therefore, the physiological measurements being made regardless of context cannot be relied upon with a high degree of certainty when assessing the health of the patient since the unknown context may skew the measurements.
Additionally, the context may be relevant to the type of therapy that is being provided to a patient. For example, for certain contexts the patient may be better served by a particular mode of therapy from a medical device, such as immediate defibrillator shocks while driving upon detection of fibrillation. For other contexts, the patient may be better served by a different mode of therapy from the medical device, such as taking more time to more accurately determine the patient's condition before administering defibrillator shocks. However, because the context is typically unknown, the medical device administers the defibrillator shocks without regard for the context surrounding the patient at any given time.
SUMMARYEmbodiments of the present invention address these problems and others by detecting the context when monitoring the physiological condition of the patient and/or when providing therapy to the patient. Thus, a particular context may be used in various ways in relation to the measurements of physiological condition and/or in relation to the type of therapy to be provided at any given time. For example, context may be used to control when the measurement of physiological conditions occurs, may be used to flag the measurements that occur, may be recorded in association with the physiological condition, or may be used to correct the measurements of the physiological condition according to a reference context. Similarly, the context may be used to determine when to provide a particular mode of therapy to a patient to address a medical condition.
One embodiment of the present invention involves utilizing a device to detect whether at least one contextual condition associated with the patient exists. When the existence of the at least one contextual condition is detected, the at least one physiological condition of the patient is automatically measured using a measurement device coupled to the patient.
Another embodiment involves measuring at least one physiological condition of the patient with a measurement device. While measuring the at least one physiological condition, an external device is utilized to detect whether at least one contextual condition associated with the patient exists. The measurements resulting from the measuring done while the at least one contextual condition continues to exist are flagged.
Another embodiment involves measuring at least one physiological condition of the patient using a measurement device. An external device is utilized to measure at least one condition defining a patient context. The measurements of the at least one physiological condition are correlated with the measurements of the at least one condition defining the patient context.
Another embodiment provides therapy to a patient. This embodiment involves utilizing a device to detect whether the patient is within a predefined proximity. When the patient is within the predefined proximity, a first mode of therapy is provided to the patient with a medical device.
Another embodiment also involves providing therapy to a patient. This embodiment involves utilizing a device to detect whether at least one contextual condition associated with the patient exists. A first mode of therapy is provided to the patient from a medical device while the at least one contextual condition continues to exists.
Embodiments of the present invention detect the context that exists when measurements of physiological conditions of the patient are measured and/or when one or modes of therapy are applied to patient. The context may be correlated with the physiological measurements in various ways so that the context from one set of measurements to the next does not influence the physiological measurements and their value in assessing the health of the patient and the control of therapy to the patient.
As shown in
To increase the value of the physiological measurements taken for the patient 100, it is desirable to correlate the context with the physiological measurements. The correlation may be brought about by detecting context and only taking measurements of the physiological condition when the context is as expected. Doing so provides a repeatable baseline for the measurements so that one set of measurements may be compared to the next or to known normal values to determine trends or deviations from normal values that indicate a health problem. Correlation may be brought about by detecting the context and flagging the measurements that are taken so that those taken during a particular context are flagged and may be used as the repeatable baseline, or conversely, not considered. Correlation may also be brought about by logging the context with the physiological measurements so that context may be considered upon reviewing the measurements. Additionally, context may be used to determine a correction for the measurements to normalize the measurements according to a baseline context.
To increase the effectiveness, safety, or other concern for therapy being provided to the patient 100, it is also desirable to determine the context when deciding what mode of therapy should be applied. One patient context may dictate that a particular mode of therapy not be used. For example, a mode of therapy may provide defibrillator shocks immediately upon detection of an abnormal rhythm, but such a form of therapy may be unsafe and/or unnecessarily uncomfortable for the patient because initial signs of fibrillation may not always call for defibrillator shocks. Therefore, when time is available, a proper mode of therapy may be to analyze over a relatively longer period of time the potential fibrillation condition of the patient to make a more accurate decision about the need for defibrillation. However, under other contexts such as while the patient is driving a car, it may be more appropriate to immediately administer the defibrillator shock upon initial detection of fibrillation to prevent the patient from losing consciousness. Thus, detecting the context allows a most appropriate mode of therapy to be chosen.
As an example of how the measurement device 102 may respond to the detection of context, the measurement device 102 may begin taking measurements of a physiological condition such as pulse rate once the measurement device 102 is in range of the transmitter 202. Alternatively, the measurement device 102 can flag data as being recorded during an appropriate patient context so that the data is acceptable. As another alternative, the measurement device 102 can log the particular patient context being experienced with the measurement data, such as where the transmission signal 204 provides an ID of the transmitter 202 to the measurement device 102. In this scenario, multiple transmitters may be used to provide information regarding multiple patient contexts such as one for sleeping and one for driving. As another alternative, the measurement device 102 may employ algorithms to normalize or correct the measurements to correspond to those taken during a baseline context different than the present patient context. This may be done by applying correction factors associated with the present patient context (e.g., multiply pulse rate by a factor of 1.3 when pulse rate is recorded while the patient is lying down to approximate upright and awake pulse rate).
For example, the external device may include a control circuit 314 that is operatively coupled to the transmitter 302 to turn the transmitter on and off according to one or more parameters. For example, it may be desirable to transmit the signal to the measurement device 102 to initiate measurements or a certain mode of therapy only during certain times of day and the controller 314 turns the transmitter 302 on and off according to the time of day. Thus, the time of day controls the measurements of physiological condition or the mode of therapy by the measurement device 102 in addition to the patient context. Environmental sensors 316 that are operatively coupled to the controller 314 may also be included so that the controller 314 turns the transmitter 302 on and off according to ambient conditions such as temperature or humidity that define an environmental context. Thus, the environmental context can control the measurements of physiological condition and/or the mode of therapy by the measurement device 102 in addition to the patient context.
The external device 202 may also include a receiver 312 operatively coupled to the controller 314. The receiver 312 can be used to receive information from the measurement device 102 for embodiments of the measurement device 102 that include a transmitter. As one example, the measurement device 102 may transmit the measurements of the physiological condition either in real time or after some period of storage to the receiver 312. The receiver 312 then passes the data to the controller 314 that may also act as a data logger to store the data in memory or pass it through a network connection. The data controller 314 may add the environmental context taken from the environmental sensor 316 to storage in association with the measurement data, and may add the patient context established by the external device 202, such as the sleeping context, to storage as well.
The measurement device 102 includes a detector such as receiver 304 that is coupled to a controller 306 and that signals to the controller 306 when the signal from the external device 202 is in range. Upon receiving the signal from the receiver 304, the controller 306 begins the activity that permits correlation of the patient context to the measurements of the physiological condition, such as beginning taking the measurements or flagging the measurements that are taken from that point forward. Additionally, or alternatively, the controller 306 may choose the mode of therapy to apply upon receiving the signal from receiver 304. A sensor 308 is operatively coupled to the controller 306 so that the measurements acquired by the sensor 308 may be passed to the controller to be stored in memory or transmitted to the external device 202 if the measurement device 102 is equipped with a transmitter 310 in communication with the controller 306.
The sensor 308 may be of various forms to capture the desired physiological conditions of the patient. For example, the measurement device 102 may be an implantable medical device such as a pacemaker that includes leads and circuitry forming a sensor that measures electrical activity of the heart such as the QRS complex, pulse rate, or atrioventricular delay. Other sensors are also applicable, such as an internal or external blood pressure or body temperature sensor.
Although the device 202 is shown as being an external device used to detect proximity to define a patient context, other forms of devices for use in detecting context in conjunction with a measurement device 102 may be used as well. For example, a detector device such as a tilt switch (not shown) may be included within the measurement device 102 to capture the tilt of the patient's body and can trigger the controller 306 to respond in a particular way in place of the receiver 304 triggering the controller 306. For example, the tilt switch may cause the controller 306 to begin taking measurements through the sensor 308 of a particular physiological condition only when the patient has become recumbent as determined from the output of the tilt switch. Additionally or alternatively, the tilt switch may cause the controller 306 to choose a particular mode of therapy when the patient has become recumbent as opposed to upright.
Additionally, other situations may utilize proximity sensing to determine the patient context. For example, in
When query operation 604 does detect that the beacon signal 204 is received, then the controller 306 begins flagging the recorded measurements with an indicator based on the presence of beacon reception at flag operation 606. Additionally or alternatively, the controller 306 begins application of a first mode of therapy at therapy operation 610 in response to the beacon being received. The first and second modes of therapy may also rely upon the physiological measurements being made at record operation 602 to control therapy as necessary to address the medical condition of the patient 100, such as speeding up or slowing down the pulse rate based on the current pulse rate being recorded as well as the context of the recording as indicated by the presence or absence of the beacon signal.
The measurements may be flagged at flag operations 606 or 608 to simply indicate that a predefined patient context such as lying down is occurring while the measurements are being recorded. Alternatively, such as where multiple patient contexts may be detectable by providing Ms from the external devices 202 (i.e., bedside vs. car), the ID or other patient context descriptor may be logged in association with the physiological measurements being made. Subsequently, a physician or machine reviewing the measurements may account for the patient context that occurred, such as by applying a known correction factor to the measurements for the known patient context to normalize the measurements relative to a baseline context.
The signal 718 is received by a receiver 706 of an external device 702 when the device 702 is within transmission range of the measurement device 710 while the transmitter 716 is providing the signal 718. A controller 704 of the device 702 acts as a data logger to store the data in memory or forward that data on to another device or network. The controller 704 may be configured to respond to receiving the signal from the transmitter 716 by beginning the recording of the data as soon as the receiver 706 is in range. Alternatively, the controller 704 may be configured to begin recording data, flagging data, or logging the patient context only upon an indication within the signal 718 that a particular patient context has been detected by the measurement device. For example, an incorporated tilt switch may indicate that the patient is recumbent, and this indication is provided through the signal 718 to the controller 704 to control how and whether the measurement data of the signal 718 is recorded.
As another alternative, transmission from the measurement device 710 may be controlled in other ways based upon patient context determined by a device coupled to the patient, such as a tilt switch in communication with the controller 712. For example, the transmission of signal 718 may occur only during periods when the patient is recumbent. So, the system of
Furthermore, the controller 704 may make a determination as to what mode of therapy should be provided based on whether the signal 718 is being received. In this scenario, the device 702 must have access to a transmitter and a device coupled to the patient 100 must include a receiver such that the controller 704 may convey instructions to the device coupled to the patient 100 to initiate execution of a particular mode of therapy.
An external device 802 includes a transmitter 808 that transmits an electromagnetic wave 824 that may be reflected by the transponder chip 814 when the transponder chip 814 is within range of the external device 802. A receiver 810 included in the external device 802 receives the reflected electromagnetic wave from the transponder chip 814 and provides the ID of the reflected wave to a controller 804. Thus, the range of the transponder chip 814 fir receiving and reflecting an electromagnetic wave defines the area of proximity that is used to detect a patient context such as lying down or driving. The controller 804 then causes a second transmitter 806 to transmit a signal 826 to a measurement device 816 upon receiving the reflected wave from the transponder chip 814.
The measurement device 816 is coupled to the patient 100, either externally or as an implant. The measurement device 816 includes a controller 818 coupled to a receiver 822 and a sensor 820. The receiver 822 receives the signal 826 transmitted by the external device 802, Upon receiving the signal 826, a controller 818 coupled to the receiver 822 begins recording physiological measurements made by a sensor 820, flagging measurements already being made, or logs a patient context with the measurements. As discussed above in relation to other illustrative systems, the controller 818 may transmit the measurement and context information to additional devices if the measurement device 816 is equipped with a transmitter. Additionally or alternatively, the controller 818 may activate a mode of therapy depending upon whether the signal 826 is being received.
The logical operations of the controller of the measurement device 102 for this system begin at query operation. 902 where the controller detects whether the patient has entered (or exited) the room by determining if the receiver has momentarily received the beacon signal for the first time, As an alternative, multiple beacons may be provided at the doorway so that the beacons are received in one sequence upon ingress and are received in the reverse order upon egress and the device 102 can then determine whether the patient 100 is entering or exiting. If the beacon signals are not received, then query operation 902 repeats until the reception of the beacon signal has occurred. Alternatively, the controller may begin to record the physiological measurement from the sensor at record operation 914 and then flag the recorded measurements with an indicator based on the patient's non-entry at flag operation 916. As another alternative, the controller may initiate or continue the application of a second therapy mode at therapy operation 918.
Once query operation 902 detects that the beacon signal has been received, the controller begins recording the physiological measurements of the sensor, logging the patient context with the measurements being recorded, or applying a correction factor to the measurements at record operation 904. Additionally or alternatively, the controller begins flagging the measurements with an indicator based on the patient's entry at flag operation 910. Additionally or alternatively, the controller initiates application of a first mode of therapy at therapy operation 912.
During this time, the controller again detects whether the beacon signal has been momentarily received again at query operation 906. If not, then the controller continues to correlate the physiological measurements with the context as was started at record operation 904 and/or flag operation 906 or continues to apply the first mode of therapy. Once query operation 906 detects that the receiver has received the beacon signal again or in the order of egress for a multi-beacon setup, then the controller stops correlating the physiological measurements with the patient context defined by the entry (or exit) to the room at stop operation 908. Stopping correlation of the measurements with the context may involve stopping the recording of measurements altogether, stopping the flagging of measurements being recorded, stopping or changing the patient context being logged in association with the measurements being recorded, or stopping or changing the correction factors applied to the measurements. Furthermore, after exiting, query operation 902 will detect that the patient has not re-entered so that the second therapy mode will be initiated by the controller at therapy operation 918.
The controller of the various devices discussed herein may be of various forms of a processing device for implementing the logical operations also discussed above. For example, the controller may be hardwired digital logic such as an application specific integrated circuit. As another example, the controller may be a general-purpose programmable processing device implementing code stored in memory.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to illustrative embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various other changes in the form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Claims
1. (canceled)
2. A system for providing a therapy to a patient, the system comprising:
- a controller configured to provide therapy to the patient according to at least two therapy modes; and
- a detector coupled to the controller, the detector configured to detect a patient context of the patient;
- wherein the controller is configured to deliver therapy to the patient according to a first therapy mode when the detector detects a first patient context, and to deliver therapy to the patient according to a second therapy mode when the detector detects a second patient context.
3. The system of claim 2, wherein:
- the patient context includes patient posture;
- the detector is configured to detect patient posture including at least a first posture state of the patient and a second posture state of the patient; and
- the controller is configured to deliver therapy to the patient according to the first therapy mode when the detector detects the first posture state, and to deliver therapy to the patient according to the second therapy mode when the detector detects the second posture state.
4. The system of claim 3, wherein the detector is configured to detect one or more of a sleeping state, an upright state, a recumbent state, a running state, or a driving state.
5. The system of claim 3, wherein the detector includes a posture sensor that has a tilt switch, and wherein the detector is configured to detect one or more body tilts using the tilt switch.
6. The system of claim 3, further comprising a physiological sensor configured to detect a physiological condition of the patient, wherein the controller is configured to deliver therapy to the patient according to the detected patient posture and the detected physiological condition.
7. The system of claim 6, wherein the physiological sensor is configured to measure the physiological condition in response to the detection of the first posture state or the detection of the second posture state.
8. The system of claim 7, wherein the physiological sensor is configured to measure a cardiac electrical activity of the patient.
9. The system of claim 3, wherein the detector is further configured to receive a time of day indicator, and the controller is configured to deliver therapy to the patient according to the detected patient posture and the received time of day indicator.
10. The system of claim 3, wherein the detector is further configured to receive environmental information, and the controller is configured to deliver therapy to the patient according to the detected patient posture and the received environmental information.
11. The system of claim 10, wherein the environmental information includes an ambient temperature or an ambient humidity.
12. The system of claim 2, wherein the at least two therapy modes diner by at least one therapy parameter.
13. A system for providing a therapy to a patient, the system comprising:
- a controller configured to provide therapy to the patient according to at least two therapy modes; and
- a detector coupled to the controller, the detector including a posture sensor and configured to use the posture sensor to detect one or more body tilts to determine patient posture including at least a first posture state of the patient and a second posture state of the patient;
- wherein the controller is configured to deliver therapy to the patient according to a first therapy mode when the detector detects the first posture state, and to deliver therapy to the patient according to a second therapy mode when the detector detects the second posture state.
14. The system of claim 13, further comprising a physiological sensor configured to detect a physiological condition of the patient, wherein the controller is configured to deliver therapy to the patient according to the detected patient posture and the detected physiological condition,
15. The system of claim 13, wherein the detector is further configured to receive a time of day indicator, and the controller is configured to deliver therapy to the patient according to the detected patient posture and the received time of day indicator.
16. The system of claim 13, wherein the detector is further configured to receive environmental information, and the controller is configured to deliver therapy to the patient according to the detected patient posture and the received environmental information.
17. A method for operating a medical system for providing a therapy to a patient, the method comprising:
- detecting a patient context of the patient;
- providing therapy to the patient according to at least two therapy modes; and
- delivering therapy to the patient according to a first therapy mode in response to the detection of a first patient context, and delivering therapy to the patient according to a second therapy mode in response to the detection of a second patient context.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein detecting the patient context includes detecting at least a first posture state of the patient and a second posture state of the patient, and delivering therapy to the patient includes delivering therapy according to the first therapy mode in response to the detection of the first posture state, and to deliver therapy to the patient according to the second therapy mode in response to the detection of the second posture state.
19. The method of claim 18, further comprising detecting a physiological condition of the patient, wherein delivering therapy to the patient includes delivering therapy to the patient according to the detected patient posture and the detected physiological condition.
20. The method of claim 18, wherein detecting the patient context further includes receiving a time of day indicator, and delivering therapy to the patient includes delivering therapy to the patient according to the detected patient posture and the received time of day indicator.
21. The method of claim 18, wherein detecting the patient context further includes receiving environmental information, and delivering therapy to the patient includes delivering therapy to the patient according to the detected patient posture and the received environmental information.
Type: Application
Filed: Feb 21, 2014
Publication Date: Jun 19, 2014
Applicant: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc. (St. Paul, MN)
Inventor: John D. Hatlestad (Maplewood, MN)
Application Number: 14/185,953
International Classification: A61N 1/39 (20060101);