ACOUSTIC OTOSCOPE
20230172493 · 2023-06-08
Assignee
Inventors
- Mark A. Moehring (Seattle, WA)
- Jay A. Chesavage (Palo Alto, CA)
- Weigang WANG (Fremont, CA, US)
- Dong Ho Choi (Palo Alto, CA, US)
Cpc classification
A61B5/0053
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
An acoustic otoscope generates volume change excitations of either a trapezoidal or sinusoidal waveforms which are coupled into a sealed ear canal using a speculum tip. The change in volume results in a pressure change, for which a pressure measurement is taken during the volume change excitation interval. In one example, a trapezoidal time-domain volume change is presented, and a pressure measurement waveform is stored, the pressure measurement waveform thereafter examined to find a change of slope point in time, after which the pressure measurement waveform is scaled to be equal to the volume change waveform at that same point in time, a difference between scaled pressure measurement and volume excitation is formed, and examined for peak value prior to the earlier determined change in slope point in time.
Claims
1. (canceled)
2. A method of characterizing an ear, the method comprising: generating, with an excitation source, dynamic volume or pressure in an ear canal with a speculum tip coupled to the ear canal, the dynamic volume or pressure being based on an input waveform; receiving one or more pressure sensor measurements from a pressure sensor coupled to the speculum tip coupled to the ear canal, the one or more pressure sensor measurements comprising an output waveform; comparing the input waveform for the dynamic volume or pressure with the output waveform; and outputting an effusion metric based at least in part on the comparison of the input waveform with the output waveform.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein outputting the effusion metric comprises generating one or more difference values from subtracting a scaled output waveform of the pressure measurement from the input waveform of the excitation source.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein outputting the effusion metric further comprises deriving the effusion metric from the one or more difference values, and wherein the one or more difference values has an elevated amplitude following a step change in pressure or volume compared to a subsequent difference value.
5. The method of claim 3, wherein outputting the effusion metric further comprises deriving the effusion metric from the one or more difference values, and wherein the one or more difference values has an elevated amplitude for a low frequency pressure or volume excitation compared to an amplitude for a high frequency pressure or volume excitation.
6. The method of claim 3, wherein the one or more difference values is averaged over at least 4 acquisition cycles.
7. The method of claim 3, wherein the scaled output waveform of the pressure measurement comprises a scaling factor, and wherein the one or more pressure measurements has a mid-point value substantially equal to a mid-point input value of the input waveform of the excitation source.
8. The method of claim 2, wherein the input waveform of the excitation source is trapezoidal.
9. The method of claim 2, wherein the input waveform of the excitation source is sinusoidal.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the sinusoidal input waveform of the excitation source and the pressure measurement output waveform are acquired over several frequencies to determine a corner frequency.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein outputting the effusion metric comprises comparing the corner frequency to a threshold frequency corresponding to one or more of a normal tympanic membrane, a viral fluid adjacent to a tympanic membrane, or a mucoid fluid adjacent to a tympanic membrane.
12. The method of claim 2, wherein the excitation source comprises: a moveable diaphragm, a moveable piston, or a source of differential pressure coupled to the speculum tip with a hose.
13. The method of claim 2, wherein the excitation source comprises a diaphragm or piston enclosed in the speculum tip or a mount for the speculum tip.
14. The method of claim 2, wherein the excitation source is coupled to a source of greater or lower air pressure through one or more valves.
15. A method of characterizing an ear, the method comprising: modulating pressure within an ear canal with an excitation source coupled to a speculum tip inserted within the ear canal, the speculum tip forming a seal when inserted into the ear canal; measuring the pressure within the ear canal with a pressure sensor coupled to the speculum tip; generating an excitation source input waveform, wherein the pressure within the ear canal is modulated based on the generated excitation source input waveform; receiving a pressure measurement output waveform based on the measured pressure; determining an effect of the excitation source input waveform on the pressure measurement output waveform; comparing the pressure measurement output waveform with the excitation source input waveform; and generating an effusion metric based at least in part on a comparison of the excitation source input waveform with the pressure measurement output waveform.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the excitation source is configured to cause a volume change or a pressure change within the ear canal.
17. The method of claim 15, wherein the excitation source is a moving diaphragm.
18. The method of claim 15, further comprising, after a monotonic pressure sequence of a first threshold and a second threshold, using the effusion metric to identify a non-diagnostic speculum tip leak when: (i) a transfer function for the pressure measurement output waveform to the excitation source input waveform is below the first threshold; (ii) a high frequency transfer function for the pressure measurement output waveform to the excitation source input waveform is below the second threshold; (iii) a negative pressure response is detected when the excitation source is a volume modulating piston or diaphragm which is returned to an original position; or (iv) a pressure measurement change is not detected in response to the excitation source waveform.
19. The method of claim 15, wherein the excitation source input waveform is a sinusoidal waveform and the effusion metric is based on a corner frequency in a frequency response function ΔP(f) / ΔV(f) where: ΔP(f) is a pressure amplitude for a plurality of discrete frequencies; ΔV(f) is a volume excitation amplitude for a plurality of discrete frequencies; and the corner frequency is a frequency f for which the frequency response function is less than 1/√ { square root over (2)} of a value at a higher frequency.
20. The method of claim 15, wherein the excitation source input waveform is a trapezoidal waveform, wherein the effusion metric is based on a difference waveform, wherein the difference waveform is a difference between the excitation source input waveform and the pressure measurement output waveform, and wherein the pressure output measurement waveform is scaled to a midpoint of the excitation source input waveform.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein the midpoint is an earliest of a point in time where a slope of the pressure measurement output waveform changes to ¼ or less of its initial value or a half interval point, whichever occurs sooner.
22. The method of claim 20, wherein the effusion metric is based on a maximum amplitude of the difference waveform before the midpoint.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0017]
[0018] When inserted into the ear canal of a subject (detail 122), a conformable seal 120 may be used which comfortably seals the speculum tip 116, thereby providing effective coupling of volume changes generated by volume excitation generator 106 to the inner ear and tympanic membrane 124. Volume (or pressure) excitation generator 106 may be any of: a voice coil integrated with a movable diaphragm, a diaphragm coupled to a piston actuator, or any mechanism modulating a volume or introducing an external pressure source which is coupled to speculum tip 116 to cause a change in pressure (such as by a change in enclosed volume or introduction and removal of a gas such as air from a fixed volume) which couples the change in pressure into the speculum tip 116 and to the tympanic membrane. In the present description, a volume modulating device such as a diaphragm or piston is described, however it is understood that the pressure change generated by the pressure excitation generator 105 may be formed by any volume displacement method. The volume change is intended to result in a very slight change in position of the tympanic membrane 124. If there is no fluid present behind the tympanic membrane 124, the tympanic membrane is able to move freely and accommodate slowly changing (low frequency) changes in volume with negligible changes in pressure. If fluid is present behind the tympanic membrane 124, the tympanic membrane will exhibit reduced displacement for high frequency pressure change. Additionally, for a tympanic membrane which is coupled to watery viral fluid or mucoid infectious fluid, the tympanic membrane may be less able to respond to high frequency changes in volume, which result in greater pressure changes for a given incremental volume change when fluid is present adjacent to the less mobile tympanic membrane, and the greater the mass of the fluid present, the greater the constriction for movement of the tympanic membrane at lower frequencies, resulting in greater induced pressures at greater frequencies.
[0019] When fluid is adj acent to the tympanic membrane, the mobility of the tympanic membrane is reduced, which results in greater developed pressure for a given change in volume at high frequencies. This is shown in
[0020] The plots of
[0021]
[0022]
[0023] In another measurement method, a trapezoidal pressure excitation 402 is applied by the controller 104, and the measured pressure 406 in the speculum tip 406 is examined to determine a settling time t1 404 where the temporal rate of change in pressure is reduced to an exemplar ¼ of its initial rate of change value, or is selected to be a particular fixed time 404, whichever occurs first. A scaling factor k is applied to the measured pressure waveform 406 such that the at time t1 404, k*ΔP(t1) = ΔV(t1). When k is determined from this measurement, a difference waveform dP(t) 408 is computed, such that dP(t)= ΔV(t)-k*ΔP(t). Waveform 408 is examined, and a peak value dP(max) is determined and tested according to the following criteria (where the first threshold, second threshold, and third threshold are established as a monotonically increasing sequence of thresholds): [0024] if dP < T1 (a first threshold), then it is likely no fluid is present; [0025] if T1 <= dP <= T2 (a second threshold), it is likely watery fluid is present; [0026] if T2 <= dP <= T3 (a third threshold), it is likely mucoid fluid or glue ear is present.
[0027] In another example, the difference dP(t) is formed by averaging several instances of AΔ(t) and ΔP(t).
[0028] In another example, the volume excitation AΔ(t) rise time Tr 401 is varied over several successive cycles in sets, each set of pressure excitations being identical with the pressure response of each cycle averaged to provide a composite ΔP(t) to provide both a reliable pressure response for each set of cycles, as well as vary the rise time Tr 401 over different sets of measurement cycles to characterize the tympanic membrane for a variety of pressure excitation rise times.
[0029] In another example, delta V rise time 401 is reduced to a minimum and the pressure response rise time 405 from 0 to tr and fall time 406 from tr to t2 are examined and fit to a curve. For example, it may be possible to fit pressure rise time response 405 (or t difference rise time 409)
where: [0030] Pr(t) is rise time of 405 or 409 from 0 to tr; [0031] Pf(t) is the fall time of 406 or 408 offset to 0 at t2; [0032] t is time (x axis of the plots); [0033] kl is an amplitude scaling constant; [0034] T1 is the rise time coefficient to be determined by curve fit matching, having units of time; [0035] T2 is the fall time coefficient to be determined, by curve fit matching, having the units of time.
[0036] After determination of kl and Tl, or k2 and T2 from at least one of corresponding waveforms 408, 409, 405, or 406, it is then possible to form an effusion metric, where a comparatively longer T1 or T2 and a comparatively greater kl and k2 indicates less likelihood of effusion or glue ear, and a comparatively shorter T1 or T2 indicates greater likelihood of effusion, yet shorter T1 or T2 indicating glue ear for large values of kl and k2, and where comparatively smaller values of kl and k2 may be used to indicate a poor seal (or perforated TM), particularly when accompanied by comparatively short T1 or T2.
[0037] In another example, a burst of sinusoidal volume excitation 302 of 5 cycles or more is provided as ΔV(t), each cycle of the burst being used to average the measured pressure waveform ΔP(t) for a single cycle at frequency f to provide a pressure response point for a particular frequency f1, thereafter computing the frequency transfer function .sup.Vp(
.sup.l) for each frequency f. The resultant AV(f 1) transfer function response corner frequencies 214, 212, 210 of
[0038] Each of the above methods as described for
[0039] In another embodiment, the signatures of the pressure responses are examined for evidence of a seal 120 leak. Where a pressure leak to the ear canal is present, the high frequency transfer is adversely affected, if the seal leak is large enough, no pressure will be measured in response to a pressure excitation. An example of a speculum tip leak is shown in the pressure plots 420 and 422 of
[0043]
[0044] In an example embodiment, the piston diameter 606 is selected to have the same approximate diameter of a pediatric (or adult) tympanic membrane. The piston 606 displacement is modulated and pressure 110 measured. For minimal pressure change and with a sealed system, the output value of displacement measurement 618 may be regarded as a proxy for the tympanic membrane movement. Accordingly, for movement of the piston 608 which generates a minimal change in measured pressure 616, the piston 606 displacement may be regarded as a proxy for the movement of the tympanic membrane. In one example, the piston 606 displacement is a swept frequency and a break point in the measured pressure measurement 616 frequency response is noted, this frequency break point represents the excitation frequency where the mobility of the tympanic membrane 124 is adversely affected by the mass of adjacent fluid which is preventing the high frequency modulation of the tympanic membrane 124. Alternative diaphragm pressure actuator 603 is shown in view 650, where a voice coil 660 with leads 658 is actuated when a current is developed which causes attraction or repulsion with permanent magnet 656, thereby displacing diaphragm 652 with respect to flexible support 654 which provides high frequency response for diaphragm 652 in enclosed volume 608, with coupling to speculum tip 610 as before, or the excitation generator may be enclosed in speculum tip 116 of
[0045] The illustrative examples are for understanding the invention, the scope of which is set forth in the claims which follow.
[0046] While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes, and substitutions will now occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the invention. It should be understood that various alternatives to the embodiments of the invention described herein may be employed in practicing the invention. It is intended that the following claims define the scope of the invention and that methods and structures within the scope of these claims and their equivalents be covered thereby.