Methods and devices for treating sleep apnea
US-8925545-B2 · Jan 6, 2015 · US
US10946152B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10946152-B2 |
| Application number | US-201715823108-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Nov 27, 2017 |
| Priority date | Mar 28, 2005 |
| Publication date | Mar 16, 2021 |
| Grant date | Mar 16, 2021 |
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An anesthesia delivery and monitoring system for use during outpatient surgery performed under sedation level anesthesia that includes a ventilatory system, a system for supplying sedation anesthesia, a respiratory sensor adapted to detect a respiration parameter of such a patient, and a system for supplying a timed back-up breath to such a patient through the ventilatory system. The timed back-up breaths are supplied in response to the respiration parameter falling outside a preset threshold and at a positive pressure exceeding a base operating pressure of the respiratory system. The system for supplying sedation anesthesia is an intravenous supply system for anesthesia, a ventilatory system coupled to the patient, a needle and syringe, or any combination thereof. The respiratory system includes a PC-based physiologic monitor with user modified feedback control signal.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A system for resolving apnea or hypopnea during sedation, the system comprising: a respiratory sensor; a pressure/flow generator; and a computer programmed to perform a method for resolving apnea or hypopnea during sedation, the method including: maintaining the pressure/flow generator at a normal operating pressure wherein the normal operating pressure is zero or is not enough to assist the patient in breathing; while maintaining the normal operating pressure, using the respiratory sensor, detecting a time interval over which a patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea; and in response to and after detecting the time interval over which the patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea, operating the pressure/flow generator to provide at least one back-up breath to the patient to assist the patient's breathing at a positive pressure exceeding the normal operating pressure and then returning to the maintaining of the pressure/flow generator at the normal operating pressure. 2. The system of claim 1 comprising a passive back-up ventilator system in which the maintaining of the pressure/flow generator at the normal operating pressure comprises keeping the pressure/flow generator off except when operating the pressure/flow generator to provide the at least one back-up breath to the patient. 3. The system of claim 1 further comprising: an anesthesia gas supply input conduit; and a CO 2 /anesthesia scrubber; wherein the pressure/flow generator, the anesthesia gas supply input conduit, and the CO 2 /anesthesia scrubber are configured to operate as a system for supplying sedation anesthesia to the patient. 4. The system of claim 1 further comprising an intravenous anesthesia supply system. 5. The system of claim 1 wherein the pressure/flow generator comprises a blower. 6. The system of claim 1 further comprising a nasal mask, nasal/oral mask, or nasal cannula operatively coupled to deliver the at least one back-up breath from the pressure/flow generator to the patient. 7. The system of claim 1 wherein the respiratory sensor comprises a pressure sensor or flow sensor. 8. The system of claim 1 wherein the respiratory sensor is configured to measure tidal volume of the patient's respiration over time and the time interval over which the patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea is detected as a time interval without a breath as indicated by the measured tidal volume. 9. The system of claim 1 wherein, in response to and after detecting the time interval over which the patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea, the pressure/flow generator is operated to provide a single back-up breath to the patient at the positive pressure exceeding the normal operating pressure and then returns to the maintaining of the pressure/flow generator at the normal operating pressure. 10. The system of claim 1 wherein the computer is a personal computer with its own operating system. 11. A method for resolving apnea or hypopnea during sedation, the method comprising: sedating a patient at a sedation level in which the airway is not protected and breathing is not assisted; with the patient sedated, maintaining a normal operating pressure delivered to the patient by a pressure/flow generator wherein the normal operating pressure is zero or is not enough to assist the patient in breathing; and with the patient sedated and while maintaining the normal operating pressure delivered to the patient, detecting a time interval over which the patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea using a respiratory sensor and, in response to and after detecting the time interval over which the patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea, operating the pressure/flow generator to provide at least one back-up breath to the patient to assist the patient's breathing at a positive pressure exceeding the normal operating pressure and then returning to the normal operating pressure delivered to the patient by the pressure/flow generator; wherein the maintaining of the normal operating pressure, the detecting of the time interval over which the patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea, and the operating of the pressure/flow generator to provide the at least one back-up breath to the patient are performed by a computer. 12. The method of claim 11 wherein the maintaining of the normal operating pressure comprises keeping the pressure/flow generator off except when operating the pressure/flow generator to provide the at least one back-up breath to the patient. 13. The method of claim 11 wherein sedating the patient includes delivering anesthesia to the patient using the pressure/flow generator maintained at the normal operating pressure delivered to the patient. 14. The method of claim 11 wherein sedating the patient includes delivering anesthesia to the patient using an intravenous anesthesia supply system or a needle and syringe injection. 15. The method of claim 11 wherein: the normal operating pressure is delivered to the patient by the pressure/flow generator via a nasal mask, nasal/oral mask, or nasal cannula; and the at least one back-up breath is provided to the patient via the nasal mask, nasal/oral mask, or nasal cannula. 16. The method of claim 11 wherein the time interval over which the patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea is detected as a time interval without a breath being detected using the respiratory sensor. 17. The method of claim 11 wherein, in response to and after detecting the time interval over which the patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea, the pressure/flow generator is operated to provide a single back-up breath to the patient at the positive pressure and then returns to the normal operating pressure delivered to the patient by the pressure/flow generator. 18. A system for resolving apnea or hypopnea during sedation, the system comprising: a respiratory sensor; a blower; and a computer programmed to perform a method for resolving apnea or hypopnea during sedation, the method including: using the respiratory sensor, detecting a time interval over which a patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea; in response to and after detecting the time interval over which the patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea, operating the blower to provide at least one back-up breath to the patient to assist the patient's breathing; and keeping the blower off except when operated to provide the at least one back-up breath to the patient. 19. The system of claim 18 wherein the time interval over which the patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea is detected as a time interval without a breath as indicated by the measured tidal volume. 20. The system of claim 19 wherein, in response to and after detecting the time interval over which the patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea, the blower is operated to provide a single back-up breath to the patient. 21. A system for resolving apnea or hypopnea during sedation, the system comprising: a respiratory sensor; a pressure/flow generator; and a computer programmed to perform a method for resolving apnea or hypopnea during sedation, the method including: maintaining the pressure/flow generator at a normal operating pressure wherein the normal operating pressure is zero or is not enough to assist the patient in breathing; using the respiratory sensor, detecting a time interval over which a patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea; and in response to and after detecting the time interval over which the patient is experiencing apnea or hypopnea,
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using feedback of body parameters, e.g. blood-sugar, pressure (measurement of body parameters A61B5/00) · CPC title
Sleep apnoea · CPC title
specially adapted for anaesthetics (A61M16/18 takes precedence) · CPC title
specially adapted for anaesthetising {(A61M16/104, A61M16/18 take precedence)} · CPC title
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