Adjustable bed with improved shear reducing mechanism
09572736 ยท 2017-02-21
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61G7/015
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61G7/0573
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A sliding thorax assembly subframe is mounted to a thorax assembly main frame section of an articulating bed and is adapted to descend as the torso section of the bed is raised to an inclined position. The mechanism, which is optionally combined with a slideback mechanism to extend the pelvic area of the bed in a longitudinal direction, reduces compressive and shear forces on the patient during bed articulation.
Claims
1. An articulating bed comprising: a base frame configured to support the articulating bed on a floor; a support surface; a pelvic assembly mounted on the base frame; a thorax assembly mounted on the base frame and beneath the support surface and coupled for articulation to the pelvic assembly about an articulation axis between flat and inclined orientations, wherein: the thorax assembly includes a thorax assembly main frame and a lower thorax area cartridge; the lower thorax area cartridge is slidably mounted to the thorax assembly main frame and operative for straight linear travel between upper and lower positions relative to the thorax assembly main frame, wherein in the lower position, the lower thorax area cartridge is downwardly displaced from the thorax assembly main frame; the lower thorax area cartridge is positioned under a portion of the support surface configured to support a lower thoracic region of a person lying on the support surface, the lower thorax area cartridge coupled to the thorax assembly main frame for travel along an axis that is substantially perpendicular to a deck section of the thorax assembly main frame; the thorax assembly main frame is positioned under a portion of the support surface configured to support an upper thoracic region of a person lying on the support surface; the lower thorax area cartridge and the main frame each bear corresponding portions of the support surface; and a displacement mechanism including a first actuator coupled to the lower thorax area cartridge and the thorax assembly main frame, the first actuator configured to displace the thorax area cartridge toward the lower position as the thorax assembly is articulated toward the inclined orientation; the displacement mechanism also being configured to displace the thorax area cartridge toward the upper position as the thorax assembly is articulated toward the flat orientation.
2. The articulating bed of claim 1, wherein the displacement mechanism comprises guides that slidingly couple the lower thorax area cartridge for linear travel with respect to the thorax assembly main frame between the upper and lower positions.
3. The articulating bed of claim 1, further comprising a second displacement mechanism that displaces a pelvic assembly subframe outwardly from a pelvic assembly main frame.
4. The articulating bed of claim 1, further comprising a thorax assembly articulation actuator coupled to a thorax assembly articulation lever and operable to drive the thorax assembly between the flat and inclined orientations.
5. The articulating bed of claim 4, wherein the thorax assembly articulation lever is fixedly mounted to the thorax assembly main frame, and the lever extends through an opening in the lower thorax area cartridge; wherein the thorax assembly articulation lever is operable to drive the thorax assembly main frame without interference with the lower thorax area cartridge, and the lower thorax area cartridge is operable to travel between the upper and lower positions without interference with the thorax assembly articulation lever.
6. The articulating bed of claim 1, further comprising a scissoring mechanism mounted to the lower thorax area cartridge and operable to raise and contract a corresponding portion of the support surface to embrace an abdominal area of a person lying on the surface.
7. The articulating bed of claim 1, further comprising a head-end scissoring mechanism mounted to the thorax assembly main frame and operable to raise and contract a corresponding portion of the patient support to cradle a patient's upper body and head.
8. An articulating bed comprising: a base frame configured to carry the articulating bed on a floor; a pelvic assembly and a thorax assembly mounted on the base frame; the pelvic assembly comprising a pelvic assembly subframe slidingly coupled to a pelvic assembly main frame for linear travel along a longitudinal axis extending between a foot end of the bed and a head end of the bed; a thorax assembly comprising a lower thorax area cartridge slidingly coupled to a thorax assembly main frame for straight linear travel along the thorax assembly main frame between relatively elevated and lower positions with respect to the thorax assembly main frame, the lower thorax area cartridge coupled to the thorax assembly main frame for travel along an axis that is substantially perpendicular to a deck section of the thorax assembly main frame; a pelvic assembly actuator operable to extend and retract the pelvic assembly subframe with respect to the pelvic assembly main frame as the thorax assembly articulates between flat and inclined orientations; and a thorax assembly actuator coupled to the lower thorax area cartridge and the thorax assembly main frame, the thorax assembly actuator operable to extend and retract the lower thorax area cartridge with respect to the thorax assembly main frame as the thorax assembly articulates between the flat and inclined orientations.
9. The articulating bed of claim 8, wherein the thorax assembly actuator is operable to extend the lower thorax area cartridge away from the deck section as the thorax assembly articulates from the flat orientation to the inclined orientation.
10. The articulating bed of claim 9, wherein the pelvic assembly actuator is operable to extend the pelvic assembly subframe outwardly as the thorax assembly articulates from the flat orientation to the inclined orientation.
11. The articulating bed of claim 8, further comprising a thorax assembly articulation actuator coupled to a thorax assembly articulation lever and operable to drive the thorax assembly between the flat and inclined orientations.
12. The articulating bed of claim 11, wherein the thorax assembly articulation lever is fixedly mounted to the thorax assembly main frame, and the lever extends through an opening in the lower thorax area cartridge; wherein the thorax assembly articulation lever is operable to drive the thorax assembly main frame without interference with the lower thorax area cartridge, and the lower thorax area cartridge is operable to travel between the relatively elevated and lowered positions with respect to the thorax assembly main frame without interference with the thorax assembly articulation lever.
13. The articulating bed of claim 8, further comprising a scissoring mechanism mounted to the lower thorax area cartridge and operable to raise and contract a corresponding portion of the support surface to embrace an abdominal area of a person lying on the surface.
14. The articulating bed of claim 8, further comprising a head-end scissoring mechanism mounted to the thorax assembly main frame and operable to raise and contract a corresponding portion of the patient support to cradle a patient's upper body and head.
15. An articulating bed comprising: a pelvic assembly; a thorax assembly coupled for articulation to the pelvic assembly and configured to articulate between flat and inclined orientations; the pelvic assembly including a pelvic assembly subframe coupled to a pelvic assembly main frame and operable to translate outwardly toward a head-end of the bed when the thorax assembly articulates toward the inclined orientation; the thorax assembly including a thorax main frame pivotally coupled to the translating pelvic assembly subframe; and the thorax assembly also including a sliding lower thorax area cartridge coupled for straight linear translation between upper and lower positions relative to the thorax assembly main frame and in a direction that is substantially perpendicular to a deck section of the thorax assembly main frame.
16. The articulating bed of claim 15, further comprising a support surface mounted to the pelvic and thorax assemblies and further mounted for movement with the pelvic assembly subframe and lower thorax area cartridge to reduce shear and compression forces on a patient as the thorax assembly articulates between the flat and inclined orientations.
17. The articulating bed of claim 15, further comprising guides that slidingly couple the lower thorax area cartridge for linear travel with respect to the thorax assembly main frame.
18. The articulating bed of claim 1, wherein the lower thorax area cartridge is rectilinear.
19. The articulating bed of claim 1, wherein the lower thorax area cartridge houses a support-surface-modulating actuator.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(18) In describing preferred and alternate embodiments of the technology described herein, as illustrated in
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(20) The articulating bed 10 comprises a base frame 12, an articulating midframe 15 (
(21) The articulating midframe 15 resembles in some aspects a conventional articulating hospital bed deck, less some of the deck surfaces. The articulating midframe 15 comprises a leg assembly 18 oriented under an area where a patient's legs would lie, a pelvic assembly 25 oriented under an area where a patient's pelvis would rest, and a thorax assembly or torso section 32 oriented under an area where a patient's upper body would repose. The leg assembly 18 includes a lower leg assembly 20 and an upper leg assembly 22 (
(22) The improvements most relevant to the claims of this particular application are those that reduce compression of the lump-sacral area during articulation of the thorax assembly 32 between high-tilt and low-tilt or zero-tilt orientations. These improvements include, according to one non-exclusive characterization of the invention, a dual-axis displacement mechanism 40 (
(23) More particularly, the first displacement mechanism 42 translates a pelvic assembly subframe 30 (
(24) The first displacement mechanism 42, also referred to herein as a slideback mechanism, displaces the torso tilt axis 48 using structure similar to that described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,559,102, which is herein incorporated by reference. An actuator 26 (
(25) U.S. Pat. No. 7,559,102 did not describe the second displacement mechanism 50 of the present invention. The second displacement mechanism 50 comprises a thorax assembly subframe 38 slidingly connected to a thorax assembly main frame 35 (
(26) The thorax assembly main frame 35 and subframe 38 each provide structure for bearing corresponding portions of the patient support surface 24. The thorax assembly subframe 38 provides structure for bearing the patient support surface 24 in the vicinity of a patients lower thorax. The thorax assembly main frame 35 provides structure, including a deck or platform section 33, for bearing the patient support surface 24 in the vicinity of the patients mid and upper thorax. As the thorax assembly 32 articulates upwardly into a tilted position, the second displacement mechanism 50 moves the thorax assembly subframe 38 downwardly, creating a depression in the lower thoracic area of the bed surface along an axis perpendicular to the thorax assembly 32. Likewise, as the thorax assembly 32 articulates downwardly to a flat position, the second displacement mechanism 50 moves the thorax assembly subframe 38 back up into alignment with the main frame 35, eliminating or reducing the depression formerly created by the subframe 38's downward extension. These actions, which are preferably (but optionally) combined with the slideback motion, reduce compressive and shear forces on the patient as the thorax assembly 32 is moved between inclined and flat positions.
(27) The thoracic area bearing structures depicted in the drawings comprise elevators 70 (
(28) The modulating superframe 60 depicted herein differs from the embodiments described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,761,942, which is also incorporated herein by reference, in some respects. For one, each left/right pair of elevators 70 is coupled together in a scissoring mechanism 71 (
(29) It should be appreciated that the modulating superframe 60 includes structural components and provides a number of functions that are ancillary to the functions of reducing shear and compressive forces during bed articulation. Thus, the present invention encompasses beds that do not include a modulating superframe 60 or that provide a more conventional patient support surface. For example, in an alternative embodiment, the bed 10 has a stationary superframe (in place of the modulating superframe 60) that suspends a patient support surface 24 over the articulating midframe 15, causing the patient support surface 24 to substantially conform to whatever configuration the articulating midframe assumes. And in yet another alternative embodiment, the bed 10 hasin place of a superframe 60a complete deck mounted to the articulating midframe 15, along with a deck portion that recesses as the thorax assembly subframe 38 travels toward its second extent.
(30) Four substantially vertically-oriented and rectilinear actuator cages or cartridges, each having a major transverse axis and a minor vertical axis, are mounted to corresponding portions of the underside of the articulating midframe 15. Each of the cages or cartridges houses actuators used to provide various bed functions. Each of the cages or cartridges may also serve as stands for the corresponding portions of the articulating midframe 15that is, supporting the midframe 15 on the base frame 12when the bed 10 is in a flat position.
(31) Starting at the head end of the bed, an upper thorax area cartridge 64 is fixedly mounted to an underside of the thorax assembly 32. It houses a support-surface-modulating actuator configured as two elevators 70 used to manipulate the upper left and right corners of the patient support surface.
(32) Next, a subframe carrier 72 is fixedly mounted to an underside of the thorax assembly 32. The subframe carrier 72 houses an actuator 74 that causes the thorax assembly subframe 18 to slide relative to the thorax assembly main frame 15.
(33) Next, the lower thorax area cartridge 66 is mounted on glides 76 for sliding movement with respect to the subframe carrier 72. The lower thorax area cartridge 66 houses two more elevators 70 used to manipulate the lower thoracic left and right corners of the patient support surface 24.
(34) Finally, a thigh area cartridge 68 is mounted to the underside of the upper leg assembly 22. The thigh area cartridge 68 houses yet another pair of elevators 70 used to manipulate left and right upper leg portions of the patient support surface 24.
(35) To articulate the thorax assembly 32 with respect to the pelvic assembly 25, a thorax assembly articulation actuator 17 drives a rod 21 that is pivotally connected, at a pivot 52, to a thorax assembly articulation lever 39 (
(36) The motion of the thorax assembly articulation actuator 17 to extend the rod 21 causes the thorax assembly 32 to pivot about the torso tilt axis 48 coupling the thorax assembly main frame 35 to the pelvic assembly subframe 38. Similarly, retracting the rod 21 causes the thorax assembly main frame 28 to recline toward a level position.
(37) To articulate the leg assembly 18 with respect to the pelvic assembly 25, a leg assembly articulation actuator 16 drives a rod 19 that is pivotally connected to the thigh area cartridge 68 (
(38) It will be further appreciated that, in the illustrated embodiments, a total of five independently operable actuatorsthe subframe carrier actuator 72 and four modulating superframe elevators 70are mounted to the thorax assembly 32.
(39) And again, it will be appreciated that, in the illustrated embodiments, two additional independently operable actuatorstwo modulating superframe elevators 70are mounted to the leg assembly 18.
(40) The actuators may comprise motors, worm drives, hydraulic cylinders, or any other suitable structures.
(41) However, it is important to again stress that much of the structure depicted in the drawings, including most of the actuators, are ancillary to the function of minimizing compressive and shear forces on the patient during bed articulation. Accordingly, the invention should not be construed as being limited to these details unless and to the extent expressly so stated in the claims.
(42) Having thus described exemplary embodiments of the present invention, it should be noted that the disclosures contained in