US3641994A - Turbulence-sensing blood flowmeter - Google Patents

Turbulence-sensing blood flowmeter Download PDF

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US3641994A
US3641994A US843602A US3641994DA US3641994A US 3641994 A US3641994 A US 3641994A US 843602 A US843602 A US 843602A US 3641994D A US3641994D A US 3641994DA US 3641994 A US3641994 A US 3641994A
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turbulence
duct
flow
rate
shaped member
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Raymond George Gosling
David Henry King
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B5/00Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
    • A61B5/68Arrangements of detecting, measuring or recording means, e.g. sensors, in relation to patient
    • A61B5/6846Arrangements of detecting, measuring or recording means, e.g. sensors, in relation to patient specially adapted to be brought in contact with an internal body part, i.e. invasive
    • A61B5/6867Arrangements of detecting, measuring or recording means, e.g. sensors, in relation to patient specially adapted to be brought in contact with an internal body part, i.e. invasive specially adapted to be attached or implanted in a specific body part
    • A61B5/6876Blood vessel
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B5/00Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
    • A61B5/02Detecting, measuring or recording pulse, heart rate, blood pressure or blood flow; Combined pulse/heart-rate/blood pressure determination; Evaluating a cardiovascular condition not otherwise provided for, e.g. using combinations of techniques provided for in this group with electrocardiography or electroauscultation; Heart catheters for measuring blood pressure
    • A61B5/026Measuring blood flow
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B5/00Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
    • A61B5/68Arrangements of detecting, measuring or recording means, e.g. sensors, in relation to patient
    • A61B5/6846Arrangements of detecting, measuring or recording means, e.g. sensors, in relation to patient specially adapted to be brought in contact with an internal body part, i.e. invasive
    • A61B5/6879Means for maintaining contact with the body
    • A61B5/6884Clamps or clips
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01FMEASURING VOLUME, VOLUME FLOW, MASS FLOW OR LIQUID LEVEL; METERING BY VOLUME
    • G01F1/00Measuring the volume flow or mass flow of fluid or fluent solid material wherein the fluid passes through a meter in a continuous flow
    • G01F1/66Measuring the volume flow or mass flow of fluid or fluent solid material wherein the fluid passes through a meter in a continuous flow by measuring frequency, phase shift or propagation time of electromagnetic or other waves, e.g. using ultrasonic flowmeters
    • G01F1/663Measuring the volume flow or mass flow of fluid or fluent solid material wherein the fluid passes through a meter in a continuous flow by measuring frequency, phase shift or propagation time of electromagnetic or other waves, e.g. using ultrasonic flowmeters by measuring Doppler frequency shift

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT An apparatus which evaluates and signals a characteristic which is interdependent with a rate of flow of the bloodstream ,inan animal vascular system, by detecting and signalling undular alternations of pressure in the blood which alternations are the consequence of turbulence in the flow and are characteristically related to the flow rate.
  • the invention includes the provision of means artificially to create the turbulence and may include adaptation to use in a surgical bypass duct.
  • a C- shaped member fits onto the surgical bypass duct and turbulence in the duct which is indicative of flow rate is transmitted to the C-shaped member and to an acoustic transducer means mechanically connected to the C-shaped member which generates an electrical signal indicative of flow rate.
  • the apparatus is not restricted in its application, to monitoring a blood flow.
  • the change to be signalled is one which is associated with the promotion of turbulence.
  • the apparatus may be used as a flowmeter or indicator, in connection with a duct or channel in which it isascertained that a change in flow rate results in a change in the detectable frequency or amplitude or both, or pressure waves set up by turbulence.
  • the invention includes the provision of means to promote turbulence and means to signal a resulting train of compression waves.
  • the invention may go even further; it includes a device which may be used to minimize turbulence in circumstances otherwise unduly promoting it, thus actually deferring or shifting a critical flow condition which would otherwise be signalled. That is, the threshold at which a signal is given may be raised, and further, the possible causation of the defect which is monitored, namely turbulence causing clotting, may be avoided or abated. Moreover, by using appropriate signalling means, for instance with a response or indication quantitatively related to a quantitatively varying change, the apparatus may be used (e.g.) to signal a change of or actually to indicate as a reading, a flow velocity.
  • a tuner may be used to vary the set operating value to the signal. For instance, the speed of a boat in water, or of a flying aircraft, may be indicated (or evaluated) by creating or selecting a location on the skin boundary whereat turbulence is generated with an undular frequency which is a function of the speed, and then listening to and signalling the frequency of sound waves thus caused. The signal may then be read off as a quantity in terms of speed, or the device may be knob turned until a signal is given, and the speed read from the knob setting. In simplified terms this makes practical use of the singing" which is sometimes heard when there is a turbulent flow, by observing the pitch of the singing.
  • a method of evaluating rate of flow which comprises detecting turbulence in the flow, which turbulence results in alternations of fluid pressure at a point or in a region in the flow which alternations are characteristically related to the rate of flow; and signalling a variation of or the value of a so related characteristic.
  • Themethod may include synthesizing ordeliberately causing the turbulence by introducing in the flow an artificial disturbing factor; that is to say, any'of the physical factors which are known to result in turbulence, such as a critical transition point, a surfacewhich will critically cause a breakaway from laminar toturbulent flow, an obstruction, as abrupt changes of section of a duct, or a bend especially if in a diffusing (i.e., divergent-section) duct or channel.
  • an artificial disturbing factor that is to say, any'of the physical factors which are known to result in turbulence, such as a critical transition point, a surfacewhich will critically cause a breakaway from laminar toturbulent flow, an obstruction, as abrupt changes of section of a duct, or a bend especially if in a diffusing (i.e., divergent-section) duct or channel.
  • the invention includes apparatus in theform of' means for evaluating rate of flow in a duct, comprising a sensor of pressure waves responsive to frequency, amplitude, or form of the waves, a transducer actuated by, or itself being the sensor and having an output of electrical energy, and an indicator actuated by such output, the sensor being of such nature-forexample being stethoscopic or microphonic-that it can be associated with the ductor other surface whereon the turbulence exists (for example being held in contact with an elastic wall of the duct) so as to be sensitive to waves set up by turbulencein the duct or other surface in a location whereat turbulence is related to the rate of flow.
  • the invention further includes a monitoring apparatus for human, use, comprising an acoustic pickup adapted to press upon a natural or prosthetic blood vessel or duct and to be retained in such relationship; and a transducer, amplifier, and
  • the invention in this form, resides in means for detecting and signalling a change in the peak rate of flow in the blood stream in a surgical arteriovenous bypass or shunt duct, comprising an acoustic wave pickup adapted to contact and respond to acoustic pressure wave alternations by a determined level in the bypass duct in such a location as to respond to waves caused by turbulence in the duct such turbulence itself being the result of obstructions of, or changed form of, the bypass.
  • the invention may also include provision for reducing acoustic frequency turbulence in the blood, to the benefit of a monitor or (as can be medically important) to abate clotting, when such turbulence is caused by the usually tapered distal tip of a venous cannula; this provision resides in one or more holes or apertures fonned in the wall of the cannula to afford a blood passage between the base of the cannula and such sinus as may exist peripherally between the tip'of the cannula and v the vein.
  • the invention also includes an acoustic pickup and electrical circuitry which provides the required amplification filtering, timelag, and audible signal, all arranged as a monitor device for a person who has a renal dialysis shunt.
  • FIG. 1 diagrammatically illustrates the pickup and FIG. 2 the circuit, of which FIG. 3 is the block diagram.
  • FIG. 4 illustrates how the shunt, between artery and vein.
  • FIG. 1 conventional phonograph pickup 1 using a piezoelectric crystal and the conventional stylus seen at 2.
  • Attached by a tension loop 3 of nylon is a C-shaped plastics body 4, into which is molded a metal arm 5, soldered to a spring lead 6 an end of which is anchored to the body of the pickup l. The other end of the leaf engages the stylus 2.
  • the body 4 has a C-shaped formation at 7, forming a reentrant channel so dimensioned that it will retain and firmly contact pickup is attached to an arm the wall of the silicone rubber tube 8 which is part of the dialysis shunt. The firm contact of the C-shaped member on the tube promotes turbulence. This arrangement is used as illustrated by FIG.
  • the pickup l is seen positioned so that the body 4 is fitted on to the silicone rubber shunt section 8 of which one end is cannulated into the artery and the other into the vein of the patients arm (in this example).
  • the body 4 is arranged at the venous end.
  • the whole site is secured by a bandage 9.
  • the electrical lead connects to the electrical unit.
  • This comprises a self-contained pack with its own housed battery.
  • an obstruction may be situated upstream of the detection means to promote turbulence.
  • the circuit is based on the block diagram (FIG. 3) and the actual connections and components are to be discerned from FIG. 2. The following describes the functions and the device. 1
  • the piezoelectric element converts alternations of pressure into an electrical signal in the audio range which is amplified by a P- channeldiffused-silicon field effect transistor (Texas Instruments type 2N2497) Q1 giving a voltage gain of 10.
  • a potentiometer is employed as the load and the adjustable output from this is used to drive a low-noise germanium transistor amplifier (Mullard type GET 880) O2 giving an approximate gain of 50.
  • a subminiature transformer (type D1001) provides the collector load and a crystal earphone monitor may also be driven from the collector. A swing up to 10 volts peak to peak may be measured at this point.
  • the AC signal appearing at the collector of Q2 is capacitor coupled to a diode detector followed by an RC. tank circuit.
  • the DC output derived from this is summed with a voltage derived from a separate floating bias cell and used to control the condition of a two-transistor Schmitt trigger circuit.
  • the input is a field effect transistor (Q3) which is coupled to a germanium transistor (Q4) including in its load an alarm module (Sonalert Alarm Unit Type SC628 marketed by Highland Electronics Ltd.) which when energized provides a loud 2.5 kc./s. audio warning signal.
  • the field effect transistor 03 is normally biassed ON" and hence drives 04 OFF" i.e., the alarm is held off.
  • the DC bias on the gate of Q3 reduces to a point where Q3 is switched OFP' and Q4 is therefore switched ON and the alarm sounds.
  • the level is set by varying the potentiometer setting and hence the system sensitivity.
  • the circuit has an audio band-pass characteristic adjusted to reject 50H2. mains pickup frequencies and low-frequency signals generated by the transducer as a result of arm movements, rubbing of clothing etc. It accentuates however the response to frequencies indicative of satisfactory flow, estimated from sonograms taken from shunts in patients to be in the range 500 Hz. to 2 kHz.
  • the circuit uses miniaturized components and has been designed for low power consumption.
  • the total current drain under normal monitoring conditions i.e., alarm off
  • This is supplied by an. 8.4-volt mercury cell (Mallory TRl46X) which has a 650 ma./hour capacity.
  • the complete unit therefore has 1,000 hours life of possible continuous monitoring.
  • the pack dimensions are 13X5 2 cm. and its weight is grams.
  • the acoustic pickup may be secured within a thin and flexible area coplanar with the skin of an aircraft or that of a boat and if required a small obstruction of negligible drag-such as a rivet head-may be positioned just upstream of that area so that turbulence which it promotes ma be listened to" and monitored so as to signal speed, sta mg, shift of a boundary transition locality, or any similarly related characteristic or effect.
  • Apparatus for monitoring the rate of flow of blood within a duct having a pliable wall comprising, 7
  • displacement transmission means positioned in external communication with said pliable wall of said duct and displaceable in accordance with movements of said pliable wall for transmitting movements indicative of turbulence in said duct
  • acoustic transducer means mechanically connected to said transmission means. for generating an electrical signal proportional to said movements indicative of turbulence, amplifier means for applying said electrical signal,
  • detection means for generating an alarm signal when said electrical signal and hence said turbulence and said rate of flow changes by a predetermined amount.
  • said detection means includes a time delay means which allows said alarm signal to be generated only after said change by said predetermined amount takes place for a predetermined minimum period of time.
  • the apparatus of claim 1 further including obstruction means positioned in said duct for creating said turbulence.
  • said transmission means includes a C-shaped body which grips said artificial shunt around part of its curved surface.
  • said transmission means further includes two separate members attached at one end to said C-shaped member and at the other end to said acoustic transducer means.
  • said detection means further includes means for providing a continuous indication of flow rate.

Abstract

An apparatus which evaluates and signals a characteristic which is interdependent with a rate of flow of the bloodstream in an animal vascular system, by detecting and signalling undular alternations of pressure in the blood which alternations are the consequence of turbulence in the flow and are characteristically related to the flow rate. The invention includes the provision of means artificially to create the turbulence and may include adaptation to use in a surgical bypass duct. A C-shaped member fits onto the surgical bypass duct and turbulence in the duct which is indicative of flow rate is transmitted to the C-shaped member and to an acoustic transducer means mechanically connected to the C-shaped member which generates an electrical signal indicative of flow rate.

Description

United States Patent Gosling et a1.
[ Feb. 15,1972
2,658,505 11/1953 Sheer.....
[54] TURBULENCE-SENSING BLOOD FLOWMETER [72] inventors: Raymond George Gosling, Hartron, Oldfield Road, Bickley, Kent; David Henry King, 14, Aldersey Gardens, Barking, Essex, both of England [22] Filed: July 22, 1969 [21 Appl. No.: 843,602
[30] Foreign Application Priority Data July 19, 1968 Great Britain ..34,537/68 [52] US. Cl. ..l28/2.05 F, 73/194 A, l28/2.05 S [51] int. Cl. ..A6lb 5/02 Field of Search ..128/2.05 D, 2.05 E, 2.05 F, 128/205 N, 2.05 P, 2.05 R, 2.05 S, 2.05 V; 73/94 A,
[56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,936,619 5/ 1960 Gibney ..73/194 8 3,002,185 9/1961 Bases ....l28/2.05 S 3,017,885 1/1962 Robicsek..... ....128/2.05 F 3,189,023 6/1965 Salz et a1 ....l28/2.05 E 3,403,672 10/1968 Curtis ..128l2.05 F
Primary Examiner-William E. Kamm Attorney-Beveridge and DeGrandi [57] ABSTRACT An apparatus which evaluates and signals a characteristic which is interdependent with a rate of flow of the bloodstream ,inan animal vascular system, by detecting and signalling undular alternations of pressure in the blood which alternations are the consequence of turbulence in the flow and are characteristically related to the flow rate. The invention includes the provision of means artificially to create the turbulence and may include adaptation to use in a surgical bypass duct. A C- shaped member fits onto the surgical bypass duct and turbulence in the duct which is indicative of flow rate is transmitted to the C-shaped member and to an acoustic transducer means mechanically connected to the C-shaped member which generates an electrical signal indicative of flow rate.
8 Claims, 4 Drawing Figures ment, and a venous cannula. It is desirable continuously to monitor the flow of blood in such a shunt because there can be change due to clotting, which builds up and not only impedes the proper circulation but may (if not anticipated by washing out or other steps)'shed emboli which may of course be dangerous. The monitoring to which we refer, may be in either or both of two respects; it may be as to rate of flow itself, or as to a characteristic related to the rate, i.e., turbulence. It is pointed out that blood clotting may produce a detectable decrease in turbulence before it causes detectable change of means rate of flow-particularly because the rate of flow which is susceptible to monitoring is the peak rate.
In surgical applications of the invention, regardmust be had to possible interferences in function, or examples dueto rustle of clothing, change of posture, change of mean pressure (raising or loweringa peak pressure) temporary. strangulation of arterial flow, and so on.
However the apparatus is not restricted in its application, to monitoring a blood flow. As will be seen from what follows, it is widely applicable to signalling change of fluid flow in various circumstances in which the change to be signalled is one which is associated with the promotion of turbulence. Thus, the apparatus may be used as a flowmeter or indicator, in connection with a duct or channel in which it isascertained that a change in flow rate results in a change in the detectable frequency or amplitude or both, or pressure waves set up by turbulence. To apply such a deviceit may therefore be that the invention includes the provision of means to promote turbulence and means to signal a resulting train of compression waves. The invention may go even further; it includes a device which may be used to minimize turbulence in circumstances otherwise unduly promoting it, thus actually deferring or shifting a critical flow condition which would otherwise be signalled. That is, the threshold at which a signal is given may be raised, and further, the possible causation of the defect which is monitored, namely turbulence causing clotting, may be avoided or abated. Moreover, by using appropriate signalling means, for instance with a response or indication quantitatively related to a quantitatively varying change, the apparatus may be used (e.g.) to signal a change of or actually to indicate as a reading, a flow velocity. If it be uneconomic to provide a variable signalling device, then a tuner may be used to vary the set operating value to the signal. For instance, the speed of a boat in water, or of a flying aircraft, may be indicated (or evaluated) by creating or selecting a location on the skin boundary whereat turbulence is generated with an undular frequency which is a function of the speed, and then listening to and signalling the frequency of sound waves thus caused. The signal may then be read off as a quantity in terms of speed, or the device may be knob turned until a signal is given, and the speed read from the knob setting. In simplified terms this makes practical use of the singing" which is sometimes heard when there is a turbulent flow, by observing the pitch of the singing.
According to one aspect, there is a method of evaluating rate of flow which comprises detecting turbulence in the flow, which turbulence results in alternations of fluid pressure at a point or in a region in the flow which alternations are characteristically related to the rate of flow; and signalling a variation of or the value of a so related characteristic. Thus, there being a place in the flow whereat turbulence is manifested by a train of pressure waves (usually within the acoustic range) when a certain rate of flow occurs or when an occurrence takes place (such as clotting of blood) which may reduce the rate of flow, the method will reside in detecting either the frequency or the amplitude (or both) of such waves and signalling a significant variation of the detected parameter.
Themethod may include synthesizing ordeliberately causing the turbulence by introducing in the flow an artificial disturbing factor; that is to say, any'of the physical factors which are known to result in turbulence, such as a critical transition point, a surfacewhich will critically cause a breakaway from laminar toturbulent flow, an obstruction, as abrupt changes of section of a duct, or a bend especially if in a diffusing (i.e., divergent-section) duct or channel.
The invention includes apparatus in theform of' means for evaluating rate of flow in a duct, comprising a sensor of pressure waves responsive to frequency, amplitude, or form of the waves, a transducer actuated by, or itself being the sensor and having an output of electrical energy, and an indicator actuated by such output, the sensor being of such nature-forexample being stethoscopic or microphonic-that it can be associated with the ductor other surface whereon the turbulence exists (for example being held in contact with an elastic wall of the duct) so as to be sensitive to waves set up by turbulencein the duct or other surface in a location whereat turbulence is related to the rate of flow.
The invention further includes a monitoring apparatus for human, use, comprisingan acoustic pickup adapted to press upon a natural or prosthetic blood vessel or duct and to be retained in such relationship; and a transducer, amplifier, and
a change of position results in a change of flow. Indeed, it
appears to be shown experimentally that it suffices (to give warning of blood clotting)'to indicate a drop in flow rate of say 40 percent from normal. The invention in this form, resides in means for detecting and signalling a change in the peak rate of flow in the blood stream in a surgical arteriovenous bypass or shunt duct, comprising an acoustic wave pickup adapted to contact and respond to acoustic pressure wave alternations by a determined level in the bypass duct in such a location as to respond to waves caused by turbulence in the duct such turbulence itself being the result of obstructions of, or changed form of, the bypass.
The invention may also include provision for reducing acoustic frequency turbulence in the blood, to the benefit of a monitor or (as can be medically important) to abate clotting, when such turbulence is caused by the usually tapered distal tip of a venous cannula; this provision resides in one or more holes or apertures fonned in the wall of the cannula to afford a blood passage between the base of the cannula and such sinus as may exist peripherally between the tip'of the cannula and v the vein.
The invention, as will be seen from the following description of an example of apparatus, also includes an acoustic pickup and electrical circuitry which provides the required amplification filtering, timelag, and audible signal, all arranged as a monitor device for a person who has a renal dialysis shunt.
The accompanying drawings illustrate by way of example, a pickup and a circuit suitable for use therewith.
FIG. 1 diagrammatically illustrates the pickup and FIG. 2 the circuit, of which FIG. 3 is the block diagram.
FIG. 4 illustrates how the shunt, between artery and vein.
In FIG. 1 is illustrated conventional phonograph pickup 1 using a piezoelectric crystal and the conventional stylus seen at 2. Attached by a tension loop 3 of nylon is a C-shaped plastics body 4, into which is molded a metal arm 5, soldered to a spring lead 6 an end of which is anchored to the body of the pickup l. The other end of the leaf engages the stylus 2. The body 4 has a C-shaped formation at 7, forming a reentrant channel so dimensioned that it will retain and firmly contact pickup is attached to an arm the wall of the silicone rubber tube 8 which is part of the dialysis shunt. The firm contact of the C-shaped member on the tube promotes turbulence. This arrangement is used as illustrated by FIG. 4; in this, the pickup l is seen positioned so that the body 4 is fitted on to the silicone rubber shunt section 8 of which one end is cannulated into the artery and the other into the vein of the patients arm (in this example). The body 4 is arranged at the venous end. The whole site is secured by a bandage 9. From the pickup l, the electrical lead connects to the electrical unit. This comprises a self-contained pack with its own housed battery. As may be seenby reference to FIG. 4 in one embodiment of the invention an obstruction may be situated upstream of the detection means to promote turbulence.
The circuit is based on the block diagram (FIG. 3) and the actual connections and components are to be discerned from FIG. 2. The following describes the functions and the device. 1
In the turbulence detector (i.e., adapted pickup), the piezoelectric element converts alternations of pressure into an electrical signal in the audio range which is amplified by a P- channeldiffused-silicon field effect transistor (Texas Instruments type 2N2497) Q1 giving a voltage gain of 10.
A potentiometer is employed as the load and the adjustable output from this is used to drive a low-noise germanium transistor amplifier (Mullard type GET 880) O2 giving an approximate gain of 50. A subminiature transformer (type D1001) provides the collector load and a crystal earphone monitor may also be driven from the collector. A swing up to 10 volts peak to peak may be measured at this point.
The AC signal appearing at the collector of Q2 is capacitor coupled to a diode detector followed by an RC. tank circuit. The DC output derived from this is summed with a voltage derived from a separate floating bias cell and used to control the condition of a two-transistor Schmitt trigger circuit. The input is a field effect transistor (Q3) which is coupled to a germanium transistor (Q4) including in its load an alarm module (Sonalert Alarm Unit Type SC628 marketed by Highland Electronics Ltd.) which when energized provides a loud 2.5 kc./s. audio warning signal. The field effect transistor 03 is normally biassed ON" and hence drives 04 OFF" i.e., the alarm is held off.
When a decrease in flow below a chosen level persists for more than 5 seconds, as determined by the tank circuit, the DC bias on the gate of Q3 reduces to a point where Q3 is switched OFP' and Q4 is therefore switched ON and the alarm sounds. The level is set by varying the potentiometer setting and hence the system sensitivity.
The circuit has an audio band-pass characteristic adjusted to reject 50H2. mains pickup frequencies and low-frequency signals generated by the transducer as a result of arm movements, rubbing of clothing etc. It accentuates however the response to frequencies indicative of satisfactory flow, estimated from sonograms taken from shunts in patients to be in the range 500 Hz. to 2 kHz.
The circuit uses miniaturized components and has been designed for low power consumption. The total current drain under normal monitoring conditions (i.e., alarm off) is approximately 0.65 milliamps. This is supplied by an. 8.4-volt mercury cell (Mallory TRl46X) which has a 650 ma./hour capacity.
The complete unit therefore has 1,000 hours life of possible continuous monitoring. The pack dimensions are 13X5 2 cm. and its weight is grams.
It will be clear from the foregoing that by suitable adaption, a similar arrangement may be used to monitor other fluid flows; and by modification of the specific elements involved, the various uses of the invention previously indicated may be practiced. For example the acoustic pickup may be secured within a thin and flexible area coplanar with the skin of an aircraft or that of a boat and if required a small obstruction of negligible drag-such as a rivet head-may be positioned just upstream of that area so that turbulence which it promotes ma be listened to" and monitored so as to signal speed, sta mg, shift of a boundary transition locality, or any similarly related characteristic or effect.
We claim:
1. Apparatus for monitoring the rate of flow of blood within a duct having a pliable wall comprising, 7
displacement transmission means positioned in external communication with said pliable wall of said duct and displaceable in accordance with movements of said pliable wall for transmitting movements indicative of turbulence in said duct,
acoustic transducer means mechanically connected to said transmission means. for generating an electrical signal proportional to said movements indicative of turbulence, amplifier means for applying said electrical signal,
detection means for generating an alarm signal when said electrical signal and hence said turbulence and said rate of flow changes by a predetermined amount.
2. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein said detection means includes a time delay means which allows said alarm signal to be generated only after said change by said predetermined amount takes place for a predetermined minimum period of time.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 further including obstruction means positioned in said duct for creating said turbulence.
4. The apparatus of claim I wherein said duct is an artificial shunt connecting two blood vessels.
5. The apparatus of claim 4 wherein said transmission means includes a C-shaped body which grips said artificial shunt around part of its curved surface.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein the gripping of said artificial shunt by said C-shaped member promotes said turbulence.
7. The apparatus of claim 6 wherein said transmission means further includes two separate members attached at one end to said C-shaped member and at the other end to said acoustic transducer means.
8. The apparatus of claim .7, wherein said detection means further includes means for providing a continuous indication of flow rate.

Claims (8)

1. Apparatus for monitoring the rate of flow of blood within a duct having a pliable wall comprising, displacement transmission means positioned in external communication with said pliable wall of said duct and displaceable in accordance with movements of said pliable wall for transmitting movements indicative of turbulence in said duct, acoustic transducer means mechanically connected to said transmission means for generating an electrical signal proportional to said movements indicative of turbulence, amplifier means for applying said electrical signal, detection means for generating an alarm signal when said electrical signal and hence said turbulence and said rate of flow changes by a predetermined amount.
2. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein said detection means includes a time delay means which allows said alarm signal to be generated only after said change by said predetermined amount takes place for a predetermined minimum period of time.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 further including obstruction means positioned in said duct for creating said turbulence.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 whereIn said duct is an artificial shunt connecting two blood vessels.
5. The apparatus of claim 4 wherein said transmission means includes a C-shaped body which grips said artificial shunt around part of its curved surface.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein the gripping of said artificial shunt by said C-shaped member promotes said turbulence.
7. The apparatus of claim 6 wherein said transmission means further includes two separate members attached at one end to said C-shaped member and at the other end to said acoustic transducer means.
8. The apparatus of claim 7 wherein said detection means further includes means for providing a continuous indication of flow rate.
US843602A 1968-07-19 1969-07-22 Turbulence-sensing blood flowmeter Expired - Lifetime US3641994A (en)

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Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3921622A (en) * 1973-02-27 1975-11-25 Edward Michael Cole Method and apparatus for ultrasonic detection of inclusions in a flowing fluid
US3958458A (en) * 1974-08-26 1976-05-25 Grumman Aerospace Corporation Acoustic emission flow measurement system
US4088138A (en) * 1974-01-02 1978-05-09 Cardiac Resuscitator Corp. Cardiac resuscitator and monitoring apparatus
FR2415804A1 (en) * 1978-01-25 1979-08-24 Howmedica METHOD AND DEVICE FOR DETECTION OF STRICTIONS IN DUCTS
USRE30750E (en) * 1972-05-15 1981-09-29 Cardiac Resuscitator Corporation Cardiac resuscitator and monitoring apparatus
US5394732A (en) * 1993-09-10 1995-03-07 Cobe Laboratories, Inc. Method and apparatus for ultrasonic detection of air bubbles
US5690115A (en) * 1995-09-21 1997-11-25 Feldman; Charles L. Detecting vascular stenosis in chronic hemodialysis patients
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US8033157B2 (en) 2007-10-01 2011-10-11 Baxter International Inc. Medical fluid air bubble detection apparatus and method
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US11844893B2 (en) 2021-01-17 2023-12-19 Inspire M.D Ltd. Shunts with blood-flow indicators

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USRE30750E (en) * 1972-05-15 1981-09-29 Cardiac Resuscitator Corporation Cardiac resuscitator and monitoring apparatus
US3921622A (en) * 1973-02-27 1975-11-25 Edward Michael Cole Method and apparatus for ultrasonic detection of inclusions in a flowing fluid
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US3958458A (en) * 1974-08-26 1976-05-25 Grumman Aerospace Corporation Acoustic emission flow measurement system
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US4166455A (en) * 1978-01-25 1979-09-04 Howmedica Inc. Apparatus and method for non-invasive detection of strictures in conductive fluid conduits
US5394732A (en) * 1993-09-10 1995-03-07 Cobe Laboratories, Inc. Method and apparatus for ultrasonic detection of air bubbles
US5830365A (en) * 1995-08-05 1998-11-03 Fresenius Ag Means for determining hemodynamic parameters during extracorporeal blood treatment
US5690115A (en) * 1995-09-21 1997-11-25 Feldman; Charles L. Detecting vascular stenosis in chronic hemodialysis patients
US20050119573A1 (en) * 2003-11-05 2005-06-02 Boris Vilenkin Method and system for quantification of arterial stenosis
US8033157B2 (en) 2007-10-01 2011-10-11 Baxter International Inc. Medical fluid air bubble detection apparatus and method
WO2012050499A1 (en) * 2010-10-12 2012-04-19 Braennstroem Roland A method and an apparatus for indicating a critical level of a liquid flow
CN103314279A (en) * 2010-10-12 2013-09-18 布兰斯特罗姆集团有限公司 A method and an apparatus for indicating a critical level of a liquid flow
CN103314279B (en) * 2010-10-12 2016-04-13 布兰斯特罗姆集团有限公司 A kind of method and apparatus being used to indicate the critical level of fluid flow
US11844893B2 (en) 2021-01-17 2023-12-19 Inspire M.D Ltd. Shunts with blood-flow indicators

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