Medical device temperature estimation
US-10554069-B2 · Feb 4, 2020 · US
US11896838B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11896838-B2 |
| Application number | US-202017078479-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Oct 23, 2020 |
| Priority date | Oct 25, 2019 |
| Publication date | Feb 13, 2024 |
| Grant date | Feb 13, 2024 |
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A method for controlling charging a power source of an implantable medical device (IMD) in a patient including determining a power being delivered to a primary coil of an external charging device for recharging, determining an estimated power delivered to the IMD power source an estimated heat generated by the primary coil based on a resistance of the primary coil determined as function of at least one of a recharge frequency, a temperature of the primary coil, and a current supplied to the primary coil, calculating an estimated heat generated by the IMD by subtracting the estimated heat generated by the primary coil and the estimated power delivered stored by the rechargeable power source from the power being delivered to a primary coil; and controlling based on the heat generated by the IMD, the power being delivered by the primary coil of the external charging device.
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What is claimed is: 1. A method for controlling charging of a rechargeable power source of an implantable medical device (IMD) in a patient, the method comprising: determining, by processing circuitry of an external charging device, a power being delivered to a primary coil of the external charging device for recharging the IMD, wherein the external charging device comprises the primary coil and a ferrite material adjacent to the primary coil and spanning an aperture defined by the primary coil; determining, by the processing circuitry, an estimated power delivered to the rechargeable power source during charging of the IMD; calculating, by the processing circuitry, an estimated heat generated by the primary coil based on a resistance of the primary coil, wherein the resistance of the primary coil is determined as a function of at least one of a recharge frequency, a temperature of the primary coil, and a current supplied to the primary coil, the resistance of the primary coil determined as a variable so as to account for the presence of the ferrite material in the external charging device; calculating, by the processing circuitry, an estimated heat generated by the IMD by subtracting the estimated heat generated by the primary coil and the estimated power delivered stored by the rechargeable power source from the power being delivered to a primary coil; and controlling, by the processing circuitry and based on the heat generated by the IMD, the power being delivered by the primary coil of the external charging device, wherein the estimated heat generated by the primary coil is determined at least in part by empirically derived values for a given recharge frequency based on a regression analysis fitting a curve to a measured coil resistance for the primary coil as a function of frequency for a given temperature of the primary coil. 2. The method of claim 1 , wherein the estimated heat generated by the primary coil is determined based on below Equation 2: Q CHARGER =R PRIM *( I CHARGER ) 2 (2) wherein Q CHARGER is the estimated heat generated by the primary coil; R PRIM is the resistance through a recharge circuit including the primary coil; and I CHARGER is the current passed through the primary coil. 3. The method of claim 2 , wherein R PRIM is variable dependent on the recharge frequency, the temperature of the primary coil (T PRIM ), and I CHARGER . 4. The method of claim 3 , wherein R PRIM is calculated based on below Equation (3): R PRIM −A 0 +A 1 * I CHARGER +A 2 *T PRIM (3) wherein T PRIM is a temperature of the primary coil; and A 0 , A 1 , and A 2 are empirically derived values for a given recharge frequency based on a regression analysis fitting a curve to a measured coil resistance for the primary coil as a function of frequency for a given T PRIM . 5. The method of claim 1 , wherein the IMD does not include a temperature sensor. 6. The method of claim 1 , wherein the resistance of the primary coil is determined as a function the recharge frequency, the temperature of the primary coil, and the current supplied to the primary coil. 7. The method of claim 1 , wherein the external charger is configured to deliver recharge power at a recharge frequency of greater than 40 kHz. 8. The method of claim 1 , wherein the external charger is configured to deliver recharge power at a recharge frequency of about 100 kHz and 120 kHz. 9. The method of claim 1 , wherein controlling the power being delivered by the primary coil of the external charging device comprises: calculating, by the processing circuitry, the estimated heat generated by the IMD reaches or exceeds a predetermined threshold, reducing or ceasing the power being delivered to a primary coil. 10. An external charging device comprising: a primary coil configured to provide recharge power to a rechargeable power source of an implantable medical device (IMD) through transcutaneous charging; a ferrite material adjacent to the primary coil and spanning an aperture defined by the primary coil; and processing circuitry configured to: determine a power being delivered to the primary coil of the external charging device for recharging the IMD; determine an estimated power delivered stored by the rechargeable power source during charging of the IMD; calculate an estimated heat generated by the primary coil based on a resistance of the primary coil, wherein the resistance of the primary coil is determined as a function of at least one of a recharge frequency, a temperature of the primary coil, and a current supplied to the primary coil, the resistance of the primary coil determined as a variable to account for the presence of the ferrite material in the external charging device; calculate an estimated heat generated by the IMD by subtracting the estimated heat generated by the primary coil and the estimated power delivered stored by the rechargeable power source from the power being delivered to the primary coil; and control, based on the heat generated by the IMD, the power being delivered by the primary coil of the external charging device, wherein the estimated heat generated by the primary coil is determined at least in part by empirically derived values for a given recharge frequency based on a regression analysis fitting a curve to a measured coil resistance for the primary coil as a function of frequency for a given temperature of the primary coil. 11. The external charging device of claim 10 , wherein the estimated heat generated by the primary coil is determined based on below Equation 2: Q CHARGER =R PRIM *( I CHARGER ) 2 (2) wherein Q CHARGER is the estimated heat generated by the primary coil; R PRIM is the resistance through a recharge circuit including the primary coil; and I CHARGER is the current passed through the primary coil. 12. The external charging device of claim 11 , wherein R PRIM is variable dependent on the recharge frequency, the temperature of the primary coil, and I CHARGER . 13. The external charging device of claim 12 , wherein R PRIM is calculated based on below Equation (3): R PRIM =A 0 +A 1 *I CHARGER +A 2 *T PRIM (3) wherein T PRIM is a temperature of the primary coil; and A 0 , A 1 , and A 2 are empirically derived values for a given recharge frequency based on a regression analysis fitting a curve to a measured coil resistance for the primary coil as a function of frequency for a given T PRIM . 14. The external charging device of claim 10 , wherein the processing circuitry does not rely on a measured temperature of the IMD to calculate the estimated heat generated by the IMD. 15. The external charging device of claim 10 , wherein the external charging device is configured to deliver recharge power at a recharge frequency of greater than 40 kHz. 16. The external charging device of claim 10 , wherein the external charging device is configured to deliver recharge power at a recharge frequency about 100 kHz and about 120 kHz. 17. The external charging device of claim 10 , wherein to control the power being delivered by the primary coil of the external charging device, the processing circuitry calculates the estimated heat generated by the IMD reaches or exceeds a predetermined threshold and then reduces or ceases the power being delivered to a primary coil. 18. A system comprising: an implantable neurostimulator device comprising a housing containing a rechargeable power source; and an external charging device comprising: a primary coil configured
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