Heat exchange system for patient temperature control with easy loading high performance peristaltic pump
11353016 · 2022-06-07
Assignee
Inventors
- Austin Reid Hendricks (Union City, CA, US)
- Christo Petrov Pamichev (Cupertino, CA, US)
- Venkata Vishnu Gurukula (Mountain View, CA, US)
- Jeremy Thomas Dabrowiak (Santa Clara, CA, US)
Cpc classification
F04B43/1253
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B43/1276
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B43/1292
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B43/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F04B43/1223
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
A peristaltic pump has an arcuate raceway with a partially concave inner surface extending through an arc of at least one hundred eighty degrees (180°). The arc defines a midpoint, and a rotor faces the inner surface of the raceway and is both rotatable relative to the raceway and translationally movable relative to the raceway between a pump position, wherein the rotor is spaced from the midpoint a first distance, and a tube load position, wherein the rotor is spaced from the midpoint a second distance greater than the first distance. A motor is coupled to the rotor to rotate the rotor plural are rollers arranged on the rotor to contact tubing disposed between the rotor and the raceway when the rotor is in the pump position. The motor is prevented from stopping at a predetermined angular position to facilitate loading and unloading tubing.
Claims
1. A patient temperature control system comprising: a pump assembly, wherein the pump assembly is configured to pump heat exchange fluid through the system, the pump assembly comprising: a raceway comprising an arcuate raceway having a surface extending through an arc having a first arc end and a second arc end; a rotor that is spaced from the raceway; and a motor configured to rotate the rotor to urge fluid through a tube disposed between the raceway and the rotor, wherein a motor mount supporting the motor is either translationally, rotationally, or both rotationally and translationally mounted relative to the raceway to allow the rotor to move between a pump position and a tube load position; and a controller comprising a processor, wherein the processor is configured to automatically prevent the rotor from stopping at one or more predetermined angular positions where at least one roller is adjacent to the first or second arc end and interferes with tube loading and unloading or to control the motor to stop the rotor at non-critical angular positions where the at least one roller is not adjacent to the first or second arc end to avoid interfering with tube loading and unloading.
2. The patient temperature control system of claim 1, wherein the raceway includes an inner surface extending through an arc of at least one hundred eighty degrees (180°).
3. The patient temperature control system of claim 2, wherein the arc defines a midpoint, and wherein the rotor faces the inner surface of the raceway.
4. The patient temperature control system of claim 3, wherein the rotor is rotatable relative to the raceway.
5. The patient temperature control system of claim 4, wherein the pump position comprises the rotor being spaced from the midpoint a first distance, and wherein the tube load position comprises the rotor being spaced from the midpoint a second distance greater than the first distance.
6. The patient temperature control system of claim 1, comprising: at least one drive roller on the rotor, the at least one drive roller having a cylindrical outer surface, at least a portion of the cylindrical outer surface being configured to urge against the tube disposed between the rotor and the raceway, the at least one drive roller having no flanges with peripheries extending beyond the cylindrical outer surface; and at least one guide roller on the rotor, the at least one guide roller having a cylindrical outer surface and top and bottom flanges defining respective peripheries extending beyond the cylindrical outer surface of the at least one guide roller such that the tube disposed between the rotor and the raceway is receivable on the cylindrical outer surface of the at least one guide roller between the top and bottom flanges.
7. The patient temperature control system of claim 6, wherein: the arcuate raceway of the raceway has a concave inner surface extending through an arc of at least one hundred eighty degrees (180°), the arc defining a midpoint; the rotor faces the concave inner surface of the arcuate raceway, the rotor being rotatable relative to the raceway, the rotor being translationally mounted relative to the raceway, the at least one drive roller, the at least one guide roller, or both the at least one drive roller and the at least one guide roller comprises plural rollers arranged on the rotor to contact tubing disposed between the rotor and the raceway when the rotor is in the pump position, wherein the motor is prevented from stopping at an angular position in which the at least one drive roller is in a predetermined location.
8. The patient temperature control system of claim 7, wherein the concave inner surface of the raceway extends through an arc of between one hundred eighty degrees (180°) and two hundred degrees (200°).
9. The patient temperature control system of claim 6, wherein the at least one drive roller or the at least one guide roller or both comprises either: (a) plural drive rollers and/or plural guide rollers, or (b) two and only two drive rollers and two and only two guide rollers.
10. The patient temperature control system of claim 6, comprising: a positioning mechanism coupled to the motor mount and manipulable to move the motor mount to move the rotor between the pump position and the tube load position.
11. The patient temperature control system of claim 10, wherein the motor mount is parallel to the raceway when the rotor is in the pump position, and wherein the motor mount is obliquely angled relative to the raceway when the rotor is in the tube load position.
12. The patient temperature control system of claim 7, wherein the first and second arc ends of the arc oppose each other, and the predetermined location corresponding to the angular position at which the motor is prevented from stopping is at the first or second arc end.
13. The patient temperature control system of claim 7, wherein the controller is configured for controlling the motor and an angular position sensor configured for sensing angular position of the motor and generating a signal indicative thereof to the controller, the controller configured to use the signal to prevent the motor from stopping at the angular position in which the at least one drive roller is in the predetermined location.
14. A method for controlling a patient temperature control system, the method comprising: rotating a rotor of a peristaltic pump, the rotor rotating relative to a raceway to urge fluid through a tube disposed between the raceway and the rotor, the raceway having a surface extending through an arc having a first arc end and a second arc end; and automatically preventing the rotor from stopping at one or more predetermined angular positions where at least one roller is adjacent to the first or second arc end and interferes with tube loading and unloading, or to control a motor to stop the rotor at non-critical angular positions where the at least one roller is not adjacent to the first or second arc end to avoid interfering with tube loading and unloading; wherein a motor mount supporting the motor is either translationally, rotationally, or both rotationally and translationally mounted relative to the raceway.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein the raceway includes an inner surface extending through an arc of at least one hundred eighty degrees (180°).
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the arc defines opposed arc ends, and at least one predetermined angular location corresponding to an arc end.
17. The method of claim 14, wherein the rotor includes at least one drive roller, the at least one drive roller having a cylindrical outer surface, at least a portion of the cylindrical outer surface being configured to urge against the tube disposed between the rotor and the raceway, the at least one drive roller having no flanges with peripheries extending beyond the cylindrical outer surface; and wherein the rotor includes at least one guide roller, the at least one guide roller having a cylindrical outer surface and top and bottom flanges defining respective peripheries extending beyond the cylindrical outer surface of the at least one guide roller such that the tube disposed between the rotor and the raceway is receivable on the cylindrical outer surface of the at least one guide roller between the flanges.
18. The method of claim 17, further comprising sensing angular position of the motor; and preventing the motor from stopping at the angular position in which at least one drive roller is in a predetermined location relative to the raceway.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(8) Referring initially to
(9) Instead of or in addition to the catheter 12, the system 10 may include one or more pads 18 that are positioned against the external skin of the patient 16 (only one pad 18 shown for clarity). The pad 18 may be, without limitation, any one of the pads disclosed in the external pad patents. The temperature of the pad 18 can be controlled by the control system 14 to exchange heat with the patient 16, including to induce therapeutic mild or moderate hypothermia in the patient in response to the patient presenting with, e.g., cardiac arrest, myocardial infarction, stroke, high intracranial pressure, traumatic brain injury, or other malady the effects of which can be ameliorated by hypothermia. The pad 18 may receive working fluid from the system 14 through a fluid supply line L3, and return working fluid to the system 14 through a fluid return line L4. The pump “P” may be a peristaltic pump which engages any one of the lines L1-L4, which are typically plastic IV lines, to urge working fluid through the lines through peristalsis.
(10) The control system 14 may include one or more microprocessors 20 receiving target and patient temperatures as input and controlling, among other things, the pump “P” and a refrigerant compressor 22 with a bypass valve 24 that can be opened to permit refrigerant to bypass the compressor.
(11) Turning now to
(12) As understood herein, covering more than 180° degrees of arc with the raceway provides an extra margin against internal leakage due to a pump roller not fully compressing the tubing against the raceway (a flaw colloquially known as “blowby”). Furthermore, it is possible that covering more than 180° degrees of arc allows the tubing to open gradually after being compressed by a drive roller and thereby reduce the degree of pulsatility of the flow. This in turn can reduce the amount of unwanted movement experienced by the downstream tubing and catheter when subject to pulsating flow.
(13) A motor, described further below, rotates the rotor 34 relative to the raceway 32. As well, the rotor 34 is movable translationally relative to the raceway 32 between a pump position (
(14) Indeed, and now referring to
(15) As shown in
(16) Also, in the example shown, owing to the non-square shape of the rotor 34 body, the angle 54 between the drive roller 46 and guide roller 48 at one of the ends of the rotor body, with a vertex on a point on the roller body (e.g., the midpoint), is not ninety degrees. Instead, in the example shown, the angle 54 may be, for example, fifty-five degrees. The same angle obtains at the opposite end of the rotor body. However, in some embodiments the rotor body is square, in which case all rollers are separated from the adjacent rollers by ninety degrees.
(17) A block-like motor mount 56 supports a motor 58 such as a small ac or dc motor, in some embodiments, a stepper motor or other appropriate motor type. The motor 58 is coupled to the rotor 34 by an output shaft 60, with, in some embodiments, a reduction gear train (not shown) being meshed between the motor shaft and the output shaft 60.
(18) A positioning mechanism is coupled to the motor mount 56 and is manipulable by a person to move the motor mount 56 to thereby move the rotor 34 between the pump position and the tube load position. In a non-limiting example, referring briefly back to
(19) Also, and focusing on
(20) Owing to the example positioning mechanism described above, as best shown in
(21) Thus, the rotor 34 can move linearly relative to raceway 32. In the example shown, linear bearings are used, it being understood that equivalently a multi-bar linkage between the rotor and raceway can be used for pseudo-linear motion. In any case, in the tube position the rotor is a sufficient distance (typically an inch or more) so that the tube 44 can be inserted freely between the rotor and raceway by a person. Then, when the rotor is moved to the pump position, at least the drive rollers 46 urge into the tube 44 sufficiently to stretch the tube 44 by an elongation of at least 3% and typically 3-15%. This elongation advantageously ensures that slack does not build up in the tubing as it wears and stretches during use. As understood herein, such slack can lead to kinking of the tubing or excessive wear.
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(23) In any case, the processor 20 shown in
(24) Thus, the position sensor 94 can be coupled to the motor shaft to indicate critical angular positions to avoid stopping the motor at. The processor 20 can control the motor so that it will not stop on these critical positions. Altemately, the signal from the one or more sensors 94 can be used to indicate non-critical positions, with the processor 20 controlling the motor so it will always stop on these non-critical angular positions. Yet again, a mechanical may be used to ensure that the motor/rotor does not stop in critical positions.
(25) Completing the description, the tube 44 may be configured as a loop as best shown in
(26) Components included in one embodiment can be used in other embodiments in any appropriate combination. For example, any of the various components described herein and/or depicted in the Figures may be combined, interchanged or excluded from other embodiments.
(27) “A system having at least one of A, B, and C” (likewise “a system having at least one of A. B, or C” and “a system having at least one of A, B, C”) includes systems that have A alone, B alone, C alone, A and B together, A and C together, B and C together, and/or A. B, and C together, etc.
(28) While the particular HEAT EXCHANGE SYSTEM FOR PATIENT TEMPERATURE CONTROL WITH EASY LOADING HIGH PERFORMANCE PERISTALTIC PUMP is herein shown and described in detail, the scope of the present invention is to be limited by nothing other than the appended claims.