CPR chest compression system with dynamic parameters based on physiological feedback

US10729615B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-10729615-B2
Application numberUS-201615298198-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateOct 19, 2016
Priority dateOct 19, 2015
Publication dateAug 4, 2020
Grant dateAug 4, 2020

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  4. Key dates

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  5. First independent claim

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  7. Citations and related patents

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Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

A CPR system includes a retention structure to retain the patient's body, and a compression mechanism to perform CPR compressions to the patient's chest. The CPR system further includes a processor to control the compression mechanism, and thus the performance of the CPR compressions. In embodiments, the CPR system compresses at a rate or frequency that is varied based on feedback gathered from physiological sensors that detect physiological characteristics of the patient during treatment.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. A Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) system that is usable by a rescuer to care for a patient, the CPR system comprising: an automated compression mechanism configured to perform CPR compressions to a chest of the patient, the CPR compressions being described by one or more parameters; a plurality of physiological sensors operative to measure, when affixed, physiological characteristics of the patient, the physiological characteristics being indicative of an effect introduced to the patient by the CPR compressions, each physiological sensor being further configured to output a physiological value determined from the physiological characteristics; a memory for storing an index, the index including a number of optimized CPR patterns, each pattern including a rate and a depth, and each optimized CPR pattern associated with one or more physiological values; and a processor in operative communication with the compression mechanism, the memory, and the plurality of physiological sensors, the processor being configured to: determine the index by varying the one or more parameters of the CPR chest compressions to determine optimal compression parameters for two or more physiological values; storing the optimal parameters as an optimized CPR pattern associated with the two or more physiological values; select two or more of the optimized CPR patterns in the index based on a set of physiological values; and control the CPR compressions during treatment by alternating the selected two or more optimized CPR patterns. 2. The CPR system recited in claim 1 , wherein the physiological characteristics comprise one or more of cerebral oximetry, EtCO2. 3. The CPR system recited in claim 1 , wherein the memory stores a plurality of predetermined correlations between the physiological characteristics and the optimized CPR patterns. 4. The CPR system recited in claim 3 , wherein the processor is configured to select one or more of the optimized CPR patterns in the index based at least in part on the index and one or more of the plurality of predetermined correlations. 5. The CPR system recited in claim 1 , wherein the one or more of the optimized CPR patterns in the index remain within a range predetermined to be medically safe during CPR. 6. The CPR system recited in claim 1 , wherein the index is a priority index, the processor is configured to select the one of the optimized CPR patterns in the index based on a first set of physiological values and select another optimized CPR patterns based on a second set of physiological values. 7. The CPR system recited in claim 1 , wherein the index is derived at least in part by assignment of different weights to the outputs of the plurality of physiological sensors. 8. A Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) system that is usable by a rescuer to care for a patient, the CPR system comprising: an automated compression mechanism configured to perform CPR compressions to a chest of the patient, the CPR compressions being described by one or more parameters; a plurality of physiological sensors operative to measure, when affixed, physiological characteristics of the patient, the physiological characteristics being indicative of an effect introduced to the patient by the CPR compressions, each physiological sensor being further configured to output a physiological value determined from the physiological characteristics; and a processor in operative communication with the compression mechanism and the plurality of physiological sensors, the processor being configured to select a first set of parameters for a first optimized CPR pattern from an index based on a first set of physiological signals, to operate the compression mechanism at the first set of parameters for a first period of time during treatment, to select a second set of parameters for a second optimized CPR pattern from the index based on a second set of physiological signals, and to operate the compression mechanism at the second set of parameters for a second period of time during treatment alternating with the first set of parameters for the first period of time, the second set of parameters including at least one changed parameter value based at least in part on the second set of physiological parameters. 9. The CPR system of claim 8 , wherein the processor is configured to select a third set of parameters for a third optimized CPR pattern from the index based on a third set of physiological signals and to operate the compression mechanism at the third set of parameters for a third period of time during treatment, the third set of parameters including at least one changed parameter value based at least in part on the third set of physiological parameters. 10. The CPR system of claim 9 , wherein the processor is configured to compare the first set of physiological signals, the second set of physiological signals, and the third physiological signals, select one of the first set of parameters, the second set of parameters, and the third set of parameters based at least on part of the comparison, and operate the compression mechanism at the selected one of the first set of parameters, the second set of parameters, and the third set of parameters. 11. The CPR system recited in claim 10 , wherein the comparison of the first set of physiological signals, the second set of physiological signals, and the third set of physiological signals is based at least in part on optimization of one of the physiological characteristics of the patient. 12. The CPR system recited in claim 8 , wherein the index is derived at least in part by assignment of different weights to the outputs of the plurality of physiological sensors. 13. The CPR system recited in claim 8 , wherein the processor is configured to cycle the operation of the compression mechanism between the first set of parameters and the second set of parameters based at least in part on the output by the plurality of physiological sensors. 14. A Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) system that is usable by a rescuer to care for a patient, the CPR system comprising: an automated compression mechanism configured to perform CPR compressions to a chest of the patient, the CPR compressions being described by one or more parameters; a plurality of physiological sensors operative to measure, when affixed, physiological characteristics of the patient, the physiological characteristics being indicative of an effect introduced to the patient by the CPR compressions, each physiological sensor being further configured to output a physiological value determined from the physiological characteristics; a memory for storing an index, the index including a number of optimized CPR patterns, each pattern including a rate and a depth, and each optimized CPR pattern associated with one or more physiological signals; and a processor in operative communication with the compression mechanism, the memory, and the plurality of physiological sensors, the processor being configured to determine the index derived from the physiological values output by the plurality of physiological sensors, to select two or more of the optimized CPR patterns in the index based on a set of physiological values, and to control the CPR compressions during treatment by alternating the selected two or more optimized CPR patterns. 15. The CPR system recited in claim 14 , wherein the memory stores a plurality of predetermined correlations between the physiological characteristics and the optimized CPR patterns. 16. The CPR system recited in claim 15 , wherein the processor is configured to select one or

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • partial CO2-value · CPC title

  • Supine patient supports or bases, e.g. improving air-way access to the lungs · CPC title

  • Rate · CPC title

  • with feedback for the user · CPC title

  • Blood pressure (A61H2230/04 takes precedence) · CPC title

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What does patent US10729615B2 cover?
A CPR system includes a retention structure to retain the patient's body, and a compression mechanism to perform CPR compressions to the patient's chest. The CPR system further includes a processor to control the compression mechanism, and thus the performance of the CPR compressions. In embodiments, the CPR system compresses at a rate or frequency that is varied based on feedback gathered from…
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Physio Control Inc
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification A61H31/006. Mapped technology areas include Human Necessities.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Aug 04 2020 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 5 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).