Automatic fluid container switching in a blood processing system
09956141 ยท 2018-05-01
Assignee
Inventors
- Lan Nguyen (Vernon Hills, IL, US)
- John Foley (Wheeling, IL)
- Jonathan Prendergast (Palatine, IL, US)
- Brian Case (Lake Villa, IL, US)
Cpc classification
Y10T137/7313
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T137/0324
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
A61M1/342
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Y10T137/27
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
A61J1/20
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
Systems and methods for determining when a fluid supply container of a blood processing apparatus becomes empty. The system uses a scale to monitor and detect when a fluid supply container is empty based on the rate of change of the container weight and whether the container weight is below a pre-established threshold, and a controller receives a signal from the scale and controls the operation of a pump to stop pumping when the fluid supply container is empty.
Claims
1. A blood processing apparatus configured to process blood in a disposable fluid flow system that may be associated therewith, the disposable fluid flow system having at least a first fluid supply container and a second fluid supply container, each containing a fluid to be reinfused into a patient, the apparatus comprising: a first scale for measuring a weight of the first fluid supply container and providing a first output signal indicative of the measured weight of the first fluid supply container; a second scale for measuring a weight of the second fluid supply container and providing a second output signal indicative of the measured weight of the second fluid supply container; a pump for pumping fluid from the first and second fluid supply containers for reinfusion into the patient; a first valve in fluid communication between the first fluid supply container and the pump, the first valve normally in an open condition; a second valve in fluid communication between the second fluid supply container and the pump, the second valve normally in a closed condition; a controller configured to receive the first output signal from the first scale, to determine a rate of change in weight of the first fluid supply container, to determine that the first fluid supply container is empty when the rate of change becoming substantially zero occurs simultaneously with the first fluid supply container weight being below a first pre-established threshold that is greater than a weight of the first fluid supply container when empty; to cause the pump to cease pumping upon determining that the first fluid supply container is empty, to cause the second valve to move to an open condition and to cause the first valve to move to a closed condition, to activate the pump to begin pumping fluid from the second fluid supply container, and to provide notification when a ratio of the rate of change in weight to a volume pumped is less than a predetermined value for the second fluid supply container occurs simultaneously with less than a predetermined time elapsing after the pump begins pumping fluid from the second fluid supply container.
2. The blood processing apparatus of claim 1 wherein the pump operates in a first direction when pumping fluid from the first fluid supply container and the pump operates in a second direction when pumping fluid from the second fluid supply container.
3. The blood processing apparatus of claim 1 wherein the controller is configured to receive the second output signal from the second scale, to determine the rate of change in weight of the second fluid supply container, and to determine that the second fluid supply container is empty when the rate of change becoming substantially zero occurs simultaneously with the second fluid supply container weight being below a second pre-established threshold that is greater than the weight of the second fluid supply container when empty.
4. The blood processing apparatus of claim 1 wherein the first scale measures the weight of the first fluid supply container over pump-unit intervals and the controller is configured to compare a weight change measured by the first scale for each pump-unit interval to a volume pumped during the pump-unit intervals.
5. The blood processing apparatus of claim 4 wherein the controller is configured to indicate the first fluid supply container is empty if the ratio of the weight change to the volume pumped is less than a predetermined value for two consecutive pump-unit intervals.
6. The blood processing apparatus of claim 1 wherein the fixed, constant amount by which the controller increases the accumulated volume corresponds to a first volume of a first tubing segment leading from the first fluid supply container to the first valve or to a second volume of a second tubing segment leading from the second fluid supply container to the second valve.
7. The blood processing apparatus of claim 1 wherein the controller is further configured to track an accumulated volume of fluid pumped from the first fluid supply container based on the change of weight of the first fluid supply container, and to increase the accumulated volume by a fixed, constant amount for each time the pumping switches between the first and second fluid supply containers.
8. A blood processing apparatus configured to process blood in a selected one of a plurality of differently-configured disposable fluid flow systems that may be associated therewith, each fluid flow system having at least a first fluid supply container with a first tubing segment connected thereto and a second fluid supply container with a second tubing segment connected thereto, the apparatus comprising: a first scale for measuring a weight of the first fluid supply container of the selected one of the plurality of differently-configured disposable fluid flow systems and providing a first output signal indicative of the measured weight of the first fluid supply container; a second scale for measuring a weight of the second fluid supply container of the selected one of the plurality of differently-configured disposable fluid flow systems and providing a second output signal indicative of the measured weight of the second fluid supply container; a pump for pumping fluid from the first fluid supply container; a first valve in fluid communication between the first fluid supply container and the pump, the first valve normally in an open condition; the first tubing segment connected to the first supply container leading to the first valve, the first scale being configured so as not to measure the weight of the first tubing segment when measuring the weight of the first fluid supply container; a second valve in fluid communication between the second fluid supply container and the pump, the second valve normally in a closed condition; the second tubing segment connected to the second supply container leading to the second valve, the second scale being configured so as not to measure the weight of the second tubing segment when measuring the weight of the second fluid supply container; a controller configured to receive the first output signal from the first scale, and to determine a rate of change in weight of the first fluid supply container, the controller further configured to determine that the first fluid supply container is empty when a ratio of the rate of change in weight of the first fluid supply container to a rate of fluid flow from the pump being less than a predetermined value occurs simultaneously with the weight of the first fluid supply container being less than a first pre-established threshold; to cause the pump to cease pumping upon determining that the first fluid supply container is empty; to cause the second valve to move to an open condition and to cause the first valve to move to a closed condition; to then activate the pump to begin pumping fluid from the second fluid supply container; to provide notification when the ratio of the rate of change in weight to a volume pumped is less than a predetermined value for the second fluid supply container occurs simultaneously with less than a predetermined time elapsing after the pump begins pumping fluid from the second fluid supply container; to track an accumulated volume of fluid pumped from the first fluid supply container based on the change of weight of the first fluid supply container; and to increase the accumulated volume by a fixed, constant amount specific to the selected one of the plurality of differently-configured disposable fluid flow systems associated with the blood processing apparatus corresponding to a first volume of the first tubing segment leading to the first valve or to a second volume of the second tubing segment leading to the second valve for each time the pumping switches between the first and second fluid supply containers.
9. A method of processing blood in a disposable fluid flow system associated with a blood processing apparatus, the method comprising: providing a first fluid supply container of the disposable fluid flow system adapted to be in communication with a patient when a first valve is in an open condition; providing a second fluid supply container of the disposable fluid flow systems adapted to be in communication with the patient when a second valve is in an open condition; monitoring a weight of the first fluid supply container while it is being emptied by a pump that is pumping fluid from the first fluid supply container into the patient; establishing a first threshold weight for the first fluid supply container that is greater than a weight of the first fluid supply container when empty; determining a rate of change of the weight of the first fluid supply container; determining when the rate of change of the weight of the first fluid supply container becomes substantially zero simultaneously with the weight of the first fluid supply container being less than the first threshold weight; stopping the operation of the pump and moving the first valve to a closed condition when the rate of change of the weight of the first fluid supply container is determined to be substantially zero and the weight of the first fluid supply container is less than the first threshold weight and moving the second valve to an open condition; and providing notification when a ratio of the rate of change of the weight to a volume pumped is less than a predetermined value for the second fluid supply container occurs simultaneously with less than a predetermined time elapsing after the pump begins pumping fluid from the second fluid supply container.
10. The method of claim 9 further comprising: measuring the weight of the second fluid supply container while it is being emptied by the pump that is pumping fluid from the second fluid supply container into the patient; establishing a second threshold weight for the second fluid supply container that is greater than a weight of the second fluid supply container when empty; determining a rate of change of the weight of the second fluid supply container; determining when the rate of change of the weight of the second fluid supply container becomes substantially zero simultaneously with the weight of the second fluid supply container being less than the second threshold weight; and stopping the operation of the pump when the rate of change of the weight of the second fluid supply container is determined to be substantially zero and the weight of the second fluid supply container is less than the second threshold weight.
11. The method of claim 9 further comprising tracking an accumulated volume of fluid pumped from the first and second fluid supply containers based on the change of weight of the fluid supply containers and increasing the accumulated volume by a fixed, constant amount corresponding to a first volume of a first tubing segment leading from the first fluid supply container to the first valve or to a second volume of a second tubing segment leading from the second fluid supply container to the second valve for each time the pumping switches between the first and second fluid supply containers.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) This disclosure may best be understood by reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals identify like elements in the figures, and in which:
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DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(7) The present disclosure is directed to apparatus systems and methods of using weight scales, a pump and a controller to detect, as quickly as possible, an empty fluid supply container. The apparatus identifies the time at which the weight of the container is less than a pre-established threshold and the rate of change of the weight of the container is less than expected based on a known pump rate. The pump that is drawing fluid from the now empty fluid container is then commanded to stop pumping from the container before air enters a blood collection kit. If using two fluid supply containers, the apparatus can be made to automatically start pumping from the second container when it determines that the first container is empty and also determines that there is a non-empty container available. By analyzing both the weight of the container and the rate of change of the weight of the container, the system can recognize and differentiate between a condition where the supply container is, in fact, empty and a condition where the supply container is not yet empty.
(8) The system also preferably notifies the operator if the system detects a low flow scenario within a predetermined time after a switch of pumping from a first container to pumping from a second container, or a low weight is detected on one or both of the scales for the fluid containers. This may include a scenario where a second supply container has not been loaded or is otherwise missing.
(9) The apparatus and methods of the present disclosure also more accurately track an accumulated volume of fluid pumped from the first and second fluid supply containers based on the weight of the containers, and adjusts the accumulated volume by an appropriate amount for each time pumping switches between the containers in response to a determination that a container is empty. This is to account for the volume of replacement fluid in the tubing segment leading to the valve(s) that is not otherwise accounted for in the weight of the container.
(10) The improved monitoring of empty fluid supply containers with the present methods and apparatus keeps air from being pumped into the blood collection kit from an empty container and substantially decreases the need to perform air purges. Thus, procedural efficiency is increased. The automatic switching between two replacement fluid supply containers during therapeutic apheresis, also allows the operator to concentrate on the patient and not the amount of fluid remaining in the container that is in use.
(11) It will be understood that the present methods and apparatus may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit of the disclosure. The present examples and embodiments, therefore, are to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, and the scope of the disclosure is not to be limited to the details presented herein.
(12) The apparatus of the present disclosure detects an empty fluid supply container and/or the need to switch to a non-empty replacement fluid supply container by continuously analyzing its change in weight over short intervals and weighing the fluid supply container to determine whether its weight is below a pre-established threshold weight. Thus, it can accurately detect the presence of an empty container and, if appropriate, switch to a replacement fluid container.
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(16) When the pump 202 causes fluid to be dispensed from the first fluid supply container 204 at a rate of Q milliliters each second, the output weight indicated by the scale 402 continuously changes with time as shown by an angular line portion 411 of graph 410. When the metric components are empty, the weight determined by the scale 402 flat lines, i.e. stops changing, as indicated by the horizontal line portion 412 of graph 410. When the procedure reaches the horizontal line portion 412 of graph 410, air will be drawn into the non-metric fluid line 416. Thus, it is important to recognize when the flat line 412 begins. Unfortunately, noise in the output signal of the scale 402 may make it impossible to determine from the scale data alone the exact time at which the rate of change in the weight becomes zero, especially at low flow rates.
(17) Preferably, to overcome this noise issue, the controller 310 (
(18) To avoid pumping air into the disposable kit 418, the scale flat line must be identified and the pump 202 stopped before the pump 202 can move fluid the full length of the non-metric portion of the replacement fluid line 416. Given a fluid line 416 length L (in inches) that is V milliliters/inch (ml/in) in volume, and a pump rate of q milliliters/second (ml/s), the maximum response time must be tr=LV/q seconds. If the scale has a minimum resolution of w grams (g), then the weight monitoring of the scale output must allow for a weight change of at least w. Given the replacement fluid density grams/milliliter (g/ml) and a pump rate of q ml/s, the minimum detection period is td=w/(*q) seconds. Accordingly, to insure that air will not be pumped past the disposable kit 418, the ratio tr/td (response time available to response time required) must be greater than 1, i.e., LV/qw/(*q)=LV /w>1. Thus, where ID is an internal diameter for a tubing or replacement fluid line 416, then if ID=0.126, and V=0.2045 ml/in, for a high capacity scale having w=5 g, assuming =1 g/ml, then for L(0.2045)(1)/5>1 it must be that L>25. That is, the non-metric portion of tubing L, which is the replacement fluid line 416, must be >25 in length to respond in time to stop the pump 202 so as to prevent the air from reaching the disposable kit 418.
(19) Looking at two different examples of pump flow rates for a procedure, relatively low and relatively high, one could also determine the response time required, if given the other variables. Thus, if for example, the pump flow rate is 25 ml/min (0.417 ml/s) and the length L of the non-metric line 416 is 22, the response time, or time permitted between when a container would be empty and when air would begin to be pumped into the disposable kit 418, would be represented by tr=LV/q=22*0.2045/0.41711 seconds. Similarly, if for example, the pump flow rate is 80 ml/min (1.333 ml/s) and the other variables remain the same, the response time would be represented by tr=LV/q=22*0.2045/1.3334 seconds.
(20) Further, to try to capture the moment at which the first fluid supply container 204 empties it is desired to identify the point in time at which the slope of the scale time trace changes to 0, or surpasses a defined threshold. Calculating the scale slope must rely on a discrete backward difference formula. Given that the minimum resolution of the scale 402 is w grams, the minimum time over which the discrete difference stencil must be applied is >w/q. Thus, for the lower example flow rate of 25 ml/min (0.417 ml/s) and assuming 1 g/ml, and a scale resolution of w=5 g, the difference stencil must cover at least 5/(1*0.417)11 seconds. For the higher example flow rate of 80 ml/min (1.333 ml/s) and assuming 1 g/ml, and a scale resolution of w=5 g, the difference stencil must cover at least 5/(1*0.417)4 seconds. Thus, the sampling rates for the scale must be suitable to avoid air ingestion, as an alternative, a longer time interval would be available for a non-metric replacement fluid line 416 having a longer length L.
(21) In accordance with one aspect of the disclosure, in order to confirm that the first fluid supply container is, in fact, empty, and is not simply in a low flow rate condition due to, e.g., the high viscosity of the fluid in the container, to poor spike performance, or to improper loading of the fluid container (any one of which could result in a false switching of containers), the weight of the container must also be below a pre-established threshold weight, W.sub.th in graph 410, when the low flow rate condition, indicated by line 412 occurs. In one non-limiting example, a pre-established threshold weight of approximately 390 g may be selected, if a therapeutic plasma exchange is being performed, with albumin as the replacement fluid. This is suitable for fluid containers of both 500 ml and 250 ml of albumin, as an empty 500 ml bottle weighs approximately 316 g, while a full 250 ml bottle weights approximately 460 g. When both the low flow rate and a container weight below the pre-established threshold weight are detected, pumping from the empty container (204) will cease and, if appropriate, pumping from a second replacement fluid container (205) will commence.
(22) In another aspect of the disclosure, by additionally monitoring the weight(s) of the replacement fluid containers, the system notifies the operator if the system detects a low flow scenario within a predetermined time after a switch of pumping from a first container to pumping from a second container, or a low weight, e.g. 45 grams, is detected on one or both of the scales for the fluid containers (indicating that no replacement fluid container is present). This permits the operator to take remedial actions to ensure that fluid flow continues uninterrupted, and avoid potential complication resulting from air entering the apheresis kit.
(23) As illustrated in
(24) It is also desirable to accurately track the accumulated volume of fluid that is returned to the patient during the exchange procedure to ensure that it is either substantially equal to the amount of fluid that is removed or substantially equal to the programmed endpoint for desired fluid balance. This is typically determined based on the change in weight of the fluid containers during the exchange procedure. With reference to
(25) While particular embodiments have been shown and described, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made therein without departing from the disclosure in its broader aspects.