CPR gurney
12156847 ยท 2024-12-03
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61H2011/005
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61H31/008
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61G1/04
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A mechanical chest compression device is secured to a gurney, transport stretcher or ambulance cot while engaging a patient's thorax to provide mechanical CPR during transport. The mechanical chest compression device compresses the patient's thorax against the gurney deck. The mechanical chest compression device may engage the side rails on the gurney, the gurney deck or any suitable structural elements of the gurney.
Claims
1. A patient support system, comprising: a patient support apparatus comprising a patient support deck, a frame supporting the patient support deck, a set of wheels coupled to the frame, and a set of rails, each rail extending along one of the opposing lengthwise sides of the frame; and a chest compression device configured to provide automatic chest compressions to a patient, the chest compression device comprising a housing supporting a piston configured to provide the automatic chest compressions to the patient, and at least two legs each coupled to the housing, wherein the at least two legs of chest compression device are each configured to be releasably secured to a given one of the set of rails, wherein, upon securing the at least two legs, the chest compression device is configured to provide the automatic chest compressions to the patient when the patient is supine on the patient support deck and the piston is opposing the chest of the patient.
2. The patient support system of claim 1, wherein at least one leg of the at least two legs comprises an engagement element to secure the at least one leg to a given rail of the set of rails.
3. The patient support system of claim 1, wherein at least one leg of the at least two legs comprises a support element configured to rest on a given rail of the set of rails, such that the chest compression device is stabilized in part by the support element.
4. The patient support system of claim 1, further comprising a mattress disposed on the patient support deck.
5. The patient support system of claim 1, wherein the chest compression device comprises: a motor configured to mechanically actuate the piston to cause application of a compressive force to a chest of the patient; and a processor configured to control the operation of the motor to repetitively apply the compressive force to the chest of the patient.
6. A patient support system, comprising: a patient support apparatus comprising a patient support deck, a frame supporting the patient support deck, wherein the frame comprises a first rail and a second rail positioned along opposing lengthwise sides of the frame, and a set of wheels coupled to the frame; and a chest compression device configured to provide automatic chest compressions to a patient, the chest compression device comprising a housing supporting a piston configured to provide the automatic chest compressions to the patient, and at least two legs each coupled to the housing; wherein the at least two legs of chest compression device are each configured to releasably secure to the frame, wherein, upon securing the at least two legs, the chest compression device is configured to provide the automatic chest compressions to the patient when the patient is supine on the patient support deck and the piston is opposing the chest of the patient.
7. The patient support system of claim 6, wherein at least one leg of the at least two legs comprises an engagement element to secure the at least one leg to the frame.
8. The patient support system of claim 7, wherein the engagement element secures the at least one leg to the frame below an upper plane of the patient support deck.
9. The patient support system of claim 7, wherein the engagement element of the at least one leg secures the at least one leg to a given rail of the first rail and the second rail.
10. The patient support system of claim 6, further comprising a mattress disposed on the patient support deck.
11. The patient support system of claim 6, wherein the chest compression device comprises: a motor configured to mechanically actuate the piston to cause application of a compressive force to a chest of the patient; and a processor configured to control the operation of the motor to repetitively apply the compressive force to the chest of the patient.
12. A patient support system, comprising: a patient support apparatus comprising a patient support deck, a frame supporting the patient support deck, wherein the frame comprises a first rail and a second rail positioned along opposing lengthwise sides of the frame, and a set of wheels coupled to the frame; and a chest compression device configured to provide automatic chest compressions to a patient, the chest compression device comprising a housing supporting a piston configured to provide the automatic chest compressions to the patient; wherein the chest compression device is configured to releasably secure to the patient support apparatus, wherein, upon securing the chest compression device, the chest compression device is configured to provide the automatic chest compressions to the patient when the patient is supine on the patient support deck and the piston is opposing the chest of the patient.
13. The patient support system of claim 12, wherein the chest compression device comprises at least two legs each coupled to the housing, wherein the at least two legs of the chest compression device are each configured to releasably secure to the patient support apparatus.
14. The patient support system of claim 13, wherein at least one leg of the at least two legs comprises an engagement element to secure the at least one leg to the patient support apparatus.
15. The patient support system of claim 14, wherein the engagement element secures the at least one leg to the frame below an upper plane of the patient support deck.
16. The patient support system of claim 14, wherein the engagement element of the at least one leg secures the at least one leg to a given rail of the first rail and the second rail.
17. The patient support system of claim 14, wherein the engagement element of the at least one leg secures the at least one leg to the patient support deck.
18. The patient support system of claim 12, further comprising a mattress disposed on the patient support deck.
19. The patient support system of claim 12, wherein the chest compression device comprises: a motor configured to mechanically actuate the piston to cause application of a compressive force to a chest of the patient; and a processor configured to control the operation of the motor to repetitively apply the compressive force to the chest of the patient.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTIONS
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(13) Chest compression unit 15 includes any suitable drive means such as motor 22 which may be an electromotor, a hydraulic motor, a linear, pneumatic or hydraulic actuator or the like. Plunger 16 has a distal end 16D and a proximal end 16P, and proximal end 16P of the plunger is operably coupled to motor 22. Plunger 16 extends from and withdraws into the housing upon operation of motor 22 causing plunger tip 16X to apply compressive force 28 to chest 2 directly over sternum 2A. A motor control unit or controller 23 is operably connected to motor 22 and includes a microprocessor 23U to control the operation of the motor and the plunger and one or more of firmware routines or instruction sets to enable the controller to initially orient the piston or compression components to the patient's sternum and cyclically and repetitively compress the patient's chest.
(14) Chest compression device 12 engages side rails 13 from external or outside 24. Leg 14 may include support element 14A which rests on side rail 13 and stabilizes chest compression device 12. Leg 14 further includes engagement element or hook 14B to frictionally secure leg 14 to side rail 13 exerting retention force 27 to counter compression force 28 exerted by chest compression device 12. One or more force sensors such as force sensor 26 may be incorporated into the deck or the pad to measure the force applied by the chest compression unit to the patient's thorax. The output of the force sensors, sensor data 26A may be used by compression unit 15 to adjust the force applied to the patient. Similarly, force data 26A may also be provided to the device operator.
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(16) Chest compression device 40 of
(17) Chest compression gurney 50 of
(18) In addition to the spindles under the patient's scapulae, bladder 68 may be optionally installed between the patient and the belt sections 64 and 65. With bladder 68 in position, the thorax is maintained in a somewhat oval cross section, and is preferentially compressed in the front to back direction along arrows 69. Some patients, for unknown reasons, tend to compress more readily from the sides, resulting in the rounder shape in the cross section of the torso during chest compressions. Using the bladder avoids the tendency in some patients to compress into a rounder cross section compressed excessively in the lateral dimension direction (line 70), thus potentially lifting sternum 2A upwardly.
(19) Referring now to
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(21) An optional accessory, a guide, shield, sleeve or sock such as guides 90 surrounds a portion of belt 85, pull straps 87A and 87B and buckles 76 to prevent abrasion and tissue injury to the patient's arm and chest adjacent to the belt path from the deck to the patient's chest. Guides 90 may be formed of any suitable material such as plastics, fabric or a combination.
(22) Once the patient is positioned and the belt is secured, drive spool 91 tightens belt 85 as motor 92 turns the drive spool, thereby providing anterior-posterior or sternal compression the patient's chest as shown in
(23) While the preferred embodiments of the devices and methods have been described in reference to the environment in which they were developed, they are merely illustrative of the principles of the inventions. The elements of the various embodiments may be incorporated into each of the other species to obtain the benefits of those elements in combination with such other species, and the various beneficial features may be employed in embodiments alone or in combination with each other. Other embodiments and configurations may be devised without departing from the spirit of the inventions and the scope of the appended claims.