WO1983000995A1 - Pressure-responsive tourniquet - Google Patents

Pressure-responsive tourniquet Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1983000995A1
WO1983000995A1 PCT/US1982/001317 US8201317W WO8300995A1 WO 1983000995 A1 WO1983000995 A1 WO 1983000995A1 US 8201317 W US8201317 W US 8201317W WO 8300995 A1 WO8300995 A1 WO 8300995A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
tourniquet
pressure
person
blood pressure
limb
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1982/001317
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Nancy G Clark
Original Assignee
Clark, Nancy, G.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Clark, Nancy, G. filed Critical Clark, Nancy, G.
Priority to AU89973/82A priority Critical patent/AU8997382A/en
Publication of WO1983000995A1 publication Critical patent/WO1983000995A1/en

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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B17/00Surgical instruments, devices or methods, e.g. tourniquets
    • A61B17/12Surgical instruments, devices or methods, e.g. tourniquets for ligaturing or otherwise compressing tubular parts of the body, e.g. blood vessels, umbilical cord
    • A61B17/132Tourniquets
    • A61B17/135Tourniquets inflatable
    • A61B17/1355Automated control means therefor
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61HPHYSICAL THERAPY APPARATUS, e.g. DEVICES FOR LOCATING OR STIMULATING REFLEX POINTS IN THE BODY; ARTIFICIAL RESPIRATION; MASSAGE; BATHING DEVICES FOR SPECIAL THERAPEUTIC OR HYGIENIC PURPOSES OR SPECIFIC PARTS OF THE BODY
    • A61H2201/00Characteristics of apparatus not provided for in the preceding codes
    • A61H2201/50Control means thereof
    • A61H2201/5058Sensors or detectors
    • A61H2201/5071Pressure sensors
    • A61H2201/5074Pressure sensors using electric pressure transducers with proportional output

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to tourniquets utilized to provide a bloodless operative field during surgery on the extremities of the body, and more particularly relates to a pressure-responsive, self-adjusting pneumatic tourniquet.
  • Measurement of a patient's blood pressure is possible using non—invasive monitoring equipment.
  • Such monitoring equipment typically uses one or two pressure cuffs, as shown in U.S. Patents 2,193,945, 3,779,235 and 4,167,181.
  • the pressure applied by a tourniquet cuff be automatically adjusted in response to changes in a patient's blood pressure to maintain the tourniquet cuff pressure at the minimum acceptable value above the patient's blood pressure.
  • the method of occluding blood flow in a person's limb comprises the steps of applying pressure about the limb with an adjustable tourniquet, monitoring the person's blood pressure, and, responsive to changes in the person's blood pressure, adjusting the tourniquet to maintain application of pressure about the limb at a level greater than the person's blood pressure by a predetermined amount.
  • the tourniquet utilized in an apparatus embodying the invention preferably comprises a pneumatic tourniquet operable by inflating a cuff surrounding the person's limb, and the pressure monitoring means preferably comprises a non-invasive cuff means for measuring systolic pressure.
  • the means for operating the tourni ⁇ uet in response to changes in blood pressure preferably comprises a means for measuring the pressure applied by the tourni ⁇ uet, comparator means for comparing the pressure applied by the tourniquet with the person's blood pressure, and means responsive to the pressure applied by the tourniquet being greater than the person's blood pressure by more or less than the predetermined amount for lowering or raising, respectively, the pressure applied by. the tourniquet.
  • Variations in the person's blood pressure can occur during surgery as a result of reaction to anesthesia or surgical stimulation.
  • FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of an automatic tourniquet apparatus embodying the present invention.
  • a fluid line 12 leads from a pressure cuff (not shown) of conventional construction to a non-invasive pressure monitor 14.
  • the pressure monitor 14 preferably comprises the unit sold by Critikon, Inc. of Tampa, Florida under the trademark "DYNAMAP" Model 845.
  • the DYNAMAP monitor measures systolic and diastolic pressure, mean arterial pressure and heart rate using the oscillometric method.
  • the circuitry of the pressure monitor 14 causes the cuff to be inflated sufficiently to occlude the artery, and then deflates the cuff incrementally while monitoring pulses introduced into -the cuff by pulsations of the arteries.
  • a digital systolic display 15 displays the parameter relevant to operation of the present invention.
  • the apparatus shown in the Figure also includes a pneumatic tourniquet 16, elements of which are shown diagrammatically in the figure.
  • the pnuematic tourniquet 16 is preferably a Kidde pneumatic tourniquet as shown and described in U.S.
  • Patent 3,085,599 issued April 16, 1963 to J.
  • the Kidde pneumatic tourniquet includes a conventional pneumatic cuff which surrounds the limb upon which surgery will be performed and a pressure regulator (not shown in the present drawing).
  • a fluid line 17 from the tourniquet cuff is connected to a conventional pressure transducer 18.
  • the pressure, transducer 18 provides an analog output which is digitized by analog to digital converter 24, the output of which represents the pressure within the tourniquet cuff and is displayed by a digital tourniquet pressure display
  • An electr ical l ine 1 9 is connected to the digital systolic pressure output of the pressure monitor 14, and carries such signal to an adder 20.
  • An increment signal generator 21 provides another input to the adder 20.
  • Increment signal generator 21 may be embodied by any switching arrangement, such as a plurality of thumbwheel switches, which provides an appropriately scaled binary number to adder 20.
  • the signal supplied by the increment signal generator 21 can be manually adjusted, and represents the predetermined amount by which the tourniquet pressure about the limb will be maintained above the systolic blood pressure measured by the pressure monitor 14.
  • the recommended increment is 100-150 mm Hg.
  • the cuff connected to the line 12 for blood pressure measurement can be placed around any limb which will provide an accurate measurement of the person's blood pressure.
  • the blood pressure is measured on a limb other than the limb upon which surgery is being performed, so that the tourniquet on the same limb cannot affect the accuracy of the blood pressure readings.
  • the output of the analog to digital converter 24 is connected along bus 26 to a magnitude comparator 23, the other input of which is the output signal from the adder 20 which is connected to the comparator 23 along bus 22.
  • the comparator 23 is a digital device of well known construction which compares the two input signals and provides one of three output signals depending on the relative magnitudes of the signals being compared. If the signal along bus 22 from the adder 20, representing the sum of the systolic blood pressure and the increment signal, is greater than the signal on bus 26 representing the pressure within the tourniquet cuff, the magnitude comparator 23 provides a ''+" output. If the signal along bus 26 is greater than the signal along bus 22, then the comparator 23 provides a "-" output signal.
  • Magnitudinal comparator 23 may be constructed in a known manner by using one or more integrated circuit digital magnitude comparators, for example, the type 4063 CMOS circuit currently manufactured by
  • the "+" and “-" outputs of the comparator 23 are input to a selector 28 which is also of conventional construction.
  • the selector is activated at regular small intervals by pulses from a pulse generator 29 which is constructed to provide its regular pulses throughout operation of the apparatus
  • the selector 28 provides output signals in either a clockwise ("CW") or a counter clockwise (“CCW”) mode to a digital stepping motor 32.
  • the stepping motor 32 is connected mechanically by a diagrammatically shown connection 33 to a shaft 35 which is the shaft of the pneumatic tourniquet 16 rotatable to operate the pressure regulator to change the pressure within the tourniquet cuff.
  • the clockwise output of the selector 28 activates the motor 32 to rotate the shaft 35 a small amount in the clockwise direction so as to decrease the pressure applied by the tourniquet 16.
  • the counter clockwise output of the selector 28 activates the motor 32 to rotate the shaft 35 in the counter clockwise direction so as to increase the pressure applied by the tourniquet 16.
  • the shaft 35 is also rotatable manually by a manual pressure set control 36 which is connected mechanically to the shaft 35 by a mechanical connection 37 diagrammatically shown in the Figure.
  • the apparatus 10 includes a tourniquet on/off switch 40 which provides power to the components of the apparatus 10 and activates a timer 41 which accumulates the time that the tourniquet has been asserting pressure around the person's limb.
  • the output of the timer 41 is connected to a digital display 42 of the duration of tourniquet application, and also to an audible alarm 43 constructed to provide an audible signal at predetermined intervals, such as every fifteen minutes of tourniquet application.
  • the monitor cuff and the tourniquet cuff are applied to limbs of the person and the surgical area is prepped, draped and exsanguinated.
  • the manual pressure set control 36 is adjusted to a value believed to be near the desired increment above the person's blood pressure, and the increment signal generator 21 is adjusted to provide the desired pressure increment signal to the adder 20.
  • the switch 40 is then turned on, initiating operation of the timer 41 and the time display 42.
  • Pressure is provided to the pneumatic tourniquet 16, in the conventional manner, and that pressure is measured by the pressure transducer 18 and displayed on the digital display 25. Power is at the same time supplied to the pressure monitor 14, which begins the series of steps required to measure the person's systolic blood pressure and to display the pressure on the digital display 15.
  • the pressure monitor 15 measures the systolic blood pressure at selected intervals as often as once per minute.
  • the digital systolic pressure signal is added to the increment signal by the adder 20, and the magnitude comparator
  • the selector 28 compares the magnitudes of the signal from the adder 20 and the signal representing the tourniquet cuff pressure measured by the transducer 18. If the tourniquet cuff pressure is not greater than the systolic blood pressure by at least the amount of the predetermined increment signal, then the signal along bus 22 will be greater than the signal along bus 26, and the magnitude comparator 23 will provide a "+" output to the selector 28. Upon the next pulse from the pulse generator 29, the selector 28 provides a. counter clockwise output to the stepping motor 32.
  • the signal along bus 22 will be less than the signal along bus 26, and the pressure in the tourniquet cuff will be greater than the systolic blood pressure by more than the amount of the increment signal. This will cause the magnitude comparator 23 to provide a "-" output, and the pulse generator 29 will again be enabled to activate the selector 28.
  • the selector 28 will provide a clockwise signal output to the stepping motor 32, stepping the shaft of the motor 32 in a clockwise direction and thereby causing the shaft 35 of the pressure regulator of the pneumatic tourniquet 16 to be rotated incrementally so as to slightly decrease the pressure in the tourniquet cuff. This will be repeated automatically until the signals to the comparator 23 along buses 22 and 26 are equalized.
  • the compression exerted by the tourniquet cuff about the limb is continually monitored and maintained at a predetermined pressure above the systolic blood pressure of the patient.
  • the predetermined amount is determined by the setting of the increment signal which is combined with the systolic blood pressure signal by the adder 20.
  • An automatic tourniquet apparatus 10 embodying the present invention thus responds to changes in the patient's blood pressure which may occur during surgery for reasons such as reaction to anesthesia or surgical stimulation.
  • the pressure in the tourniquet cuff were to remain at a fixed value, as has been the case in prior pneumatic tourniquet systems, a drop in the patient's blood pressure would unnecessarily increase the differential between the pressure of the tourniquet cuff and the blood pressure.
  • the present invention minimizes nerve damage caused by the compression of the tourniquet on nerve tissues.
  • the present invention will minimize or eliminate accidents that have occurred from time-to-time as the result of human error by the misreading or misadjustment of manual controls of present pneumatic tourniquets. If the tourniquet cuff pressure is unintentionally set at an extremely high value, the resulting damage to the limb below the tourniquet can result in a need for limb amputation. This would not happen to a patient on which the automatic tourniquet of the present invention is used. Further advantages include a more accurate accounting of actual tourniquet lapsed time, and reductions in hospital and patient costs through the elimination of long rehabilitative processes now necessitated by the slow regeneration of damaged nerve tissue.
  • the apparatus 10 can be constructed as a single unit or as a modular unit utilizing commercially available units for the pressure monitor and pneumatic tourniquet components. It is preferable to provide a central control panel including the on/off switch 40, the monitor pressure display 15, the tourniquet pressure display 25, the tourniquet time display 42, the audible alarm 43, and adjustment controls for the increment signal generator 21.

Abstract

An automatic pneumatic tourniquet apparatus for occluding blood flow in a person's limb includes an adjustable pneumatic tourniquet (16) operable to vary the pressure applied about the limb, a systolic blood pressure monitor (14) and a control circuit responsive to changes in the blood pressure measured by the pressure monitor to operate the tourniquet to maintain the pressure about the limb at a level greater than the person's blood pressure by a predetermined amount. The apparatus maintains tourniquet pressure at a minimum acceptable level and thereby minimizes nerve damage caused by the compression of the tourniquet on nerve tissues over long periods.

Description

"PRESSURE-RESPONSIVE TOURNIQUET"
Technical Field
The present invention relates to tourniquets utilized to provide a bloodless operative field during surgery on the extremities of the body, and more particularly relates to a pressure-responsive, self-adjusting pneumatic tourniquet.
Background Art During surgery on the upper and lower extremities of the body, it is highly desirable to provide a bloodless field in order to shorten the operating time and thus decrease the surgical and anesthetic risk to the patient. In many operative procedures, it is necessary to cut off essentially all blood flow in a limb by using a tourniquet. Pneumatic tourniquets, such as the Kidde pneumatic tourniquet described in U.S. Patents 3,085,599 and 2,884,941, have been widely used for this purpose-. Fluid, such as compressed air, is supplied to a cuff surrounding the limb at a manually-set arbitrary level of 300-500 mm Hg for a recommended duration of up to one and one-half hours.
Many complications associated with the use of pneumatic tourniquets have been reported in medical literature. The most frequently reported have been nerve palsies arising from a slowing resolving nerve compression syndrome secondary to the use of the pneumatic tourniquet. Such nerve palsies can greatly delay the patient's rehabilitation. Tourniquet-related problems have been reported in the following articles: Rorabeck, "Tourniquet-Induced Nerve Ischemia: An Experimental Investigation", THE JOURNAL OF TRAUMA, Vol. 20, No. 4, pages 280-286 (1980); Weingarden, Louis and Waylonis, "Electromyographic Changes in Postmeniscectomy Patients", JAMA, Vol. 241, No. 12, pages 1248-1250 (March 23, 1979). It has been concluded that the fluid pressure supplied to the cuff of a pneumatic tourniσuet should be maintained as low as possible with respect to the patient's systolic blood pressure.
Measurement of a patient's blood pressure is possible using non—invasive monitoring equipment. Such monitoring equipment typically uses one or two pressure cuffs, as shown in U.S. Patents 2,193,945, 3,779,235 and 4,167,181. However, there has been no suggestion in the art that the pressure applied by a tourniquet cuff be automatically adjusted in response to changes in a patient's blood pressure to maintain the tourniquet cuff pressure at the minimum acceptable value above the patient's blood pressure.
Summary of the Invention
The present invention provides a method and apparatus for automatically maintaining the pressure applied by a tourniquet cuff at a level selected to minimize nerve damage to each individual patient. Generally described, an automatic tourniquet apparatus according to the present invention for occluding blood flow in a person's limb comprises a tourniquet operable to adjust the pressure applied about the limb by the tourniquet, pressure monitoring means for measuring the person's blood pressure, and means responsive to changes in the person's blood pressure for operating the tourniquet to maintain pressure about the limb at a level greater than the person's blood pressure by a predetermined amount. The method of occluding blood flow in a person's limb according to the present invention comprises the steps of applying pressure about the limb with an adjustable tourniquet, monitoring the person's blood pressure, and, responsive to changes in the person's blood pressure, adjusting the tourniquet to maintain application of pressure about the limb at a level greater than the person's blood pressure by a predetermined amount.
The tourniquet utilized in an apparatus embodying the invention preferably comprises a pneumatic tourniquet operable by inflating a cuff surrounding the person's limb, and the pressure monitoring means preferably comprises a non-invasive cuff means for measuring systolic pressure. The means for operating the tourniσuet in response to changes in blood pressure preferably comprises a means for measuring the pressure applied by the tourniσuet, comparator means for comparing the pressure applied by the tourniquet with the person's blood pressure, and means responsive to the pressure applied by the tourniquet being greater than the person's blood pressure by more or less than the predetermined amount for lowering or raising, respectively, the pressure applied by. the tourniquet. Variations in the person's blood pressure can occur during surgery as a result of reaction to anesthesia or surgical stimulation. Thus, it is an object of the present invention to provide an automatic tourniquet apparatus and method which minimizes nerve damage caused by the compressive force of the tourniquet about a limb.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an automatic tourniquet apparatus which measures a person's systolic blood pressure and maintains pressure applied about a limb by said tourniquet at a predetermined level above the systolic blood pressure. it is a further object of the present invention to provide a method and apparatus for occluding blood flow in a person's limb in an individualized manner for any person.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an automatic tourniquet apparatus that is less subject to operator error and therefore safer than prior manually-operated tourniquets.
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon reading the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment, when taken in conjunction with the drawing.
Brief Description of the Drawing The Figure is a diagrammatic representation of an automatic tourniquet apparatus embodying the present invention.
Detailed Description Referring now in more detail to the drawing, the Figure shows a diagrammatic representation of circuit elements of an automatic tourniquet apparatus 10 embodying the present invention. A fluid line 12 leads from a pressure cuff (not shown) of conventional construction to a non-invasive pressure monitor 14. The pressure monitor 14 preferably comprises the unit sold by Critikon, Inc. of Tampa, Florida under the trademark "DYNAMAP" Model 845. The DYNAMAP monitor measures systolic and diastolic pressure, mean arterial pressure and heart rate using the oscillometric method. The circuitry of the pressure monitor 14 causes the cuff to be inflated sufficiently to occlude the artery, and then deflates the cuff incrementally while monitoring pulses introduced into -the cuff by pulsations of the arteries. The monitor
14 determines where such pulsations increase, peak and decrease, and interprets such data to provide digital displays of the blood pressure and pulse measurements.
A digital systolic display 15 displays the parameter relevant to operation of the present invention.
The apparatus shown in the Figure also includes a pneumatic tourniquet 16, elements of which are shown diagrammatically in the figure. The pnuematic tourniquet 16 is preferably a Kidde pneumatic tourniquet as shown and described in U.S.
Patent 3,085,599, issued April 16, 1963 to J.
Kronheim. Said patent is expressly incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. The Kidde pneumatic tourniquet includes a conventional pneumatic cuff which surrounds the limb upon which surgery will be performed and a pressure regulator (not shown in the present drawing). A fluid line 17 from the tourniquet cuff is connected to a conventional pressure transducer 18. The pressure, transducer 18 provides an analog output which is digitized by analog to digital converter 24, the output of which represents the pressure within the tourniquet cuff and is displayed by a digital tourniquet pressure display
25. An electr ical l ine 1 9 is connected to the digital systolic pressure output of the pressure monitor 14, and carries such signal to an adder 20. An increment signal generator 21 provides another input to the adder 20. Increment signal generator 21 may be embodied by any switching arrangement, such as a plurality of thumbwheel switches, which provides an appropriately scaled binary number to adder 20. The signal supplied by the increment signal generator 21 can be manually adjusted, and represents the predetermined amount by which the tourniquet pressure about the limb will be maintained above the systolic blood pressure measured by the pressure monitor 14. The recommended increment is 100-150 mm Hg. The cuff connected to the line 12 for blood pressure measurement can be placed around any limb which will provide an accurate measurement of the person's blood pressure. Preferably, the blood pressure is measured on a limb other than the limb upon which surgery is being performed, so that the tourniquet on the same limb cannot affect the accuracy of the blood pressure readings.
The output of the analog to digital converter 24 is connected along bus 26 to a magnitude comparator 23, the other input of which is the output signal from the adder 20 which is connected to the comparator 23 along bus 22. The comparator 23 is a digital device of well known construction which compares the two input signals and provides one of three output signals depending on the relative magnitudes of the signals being compared. If the signal along bus 22 from the adder 20, representing the sum of the systolic blood pressure and the increment signal, is greater than the signal on bus 26 representing the pressure within the tourniquet cuff, the magnitude comparator 23 provides a ''+" output. If the signal along bus 26 is greater than the signal along bus 22, then the comparator 23 provides a "-" output signal. If the signals along buses 22 and 26 are equal, the comparator 23 provides an "=" output signal. Magnitudinal comparator 23 may be constructed in a known manner by using one or more integrated circuit digital magnitude comparators, for example, the type 4063 CMOS circuit currently manufactured by
RCA. The "+" and "-" outputs of the comparator 23 are input to a selector 28 which is also of conventional construction. The selector is activated at regular small intervals by pulses from a pulse generator 29 which is constructed to provide its regular pulses throughout operation of the apparatus
10 unless disabled. The pulse generator 29 is disabled when the comparator 23 provides an "=" output. Pulse generator 29 is preferably embodied by an oscillator, the output of which is gated by the "=" output of comparator 23. The selector 28 provides output signals in either a clockwise ("CW") or a counter clockwise ("CCW") mode to a digital stepping motor 32. The stepping motor 32 is connected mechanically by a diagrammatically shown connection 33 to a shaft 35 which is the shaft of the pneumatic tourniquet 16 rotatable to operate the pressure regulator to change the pressure within the tourniquet cuff. The clockwise output of the selector 28 activates the motor 32 to rotate the shaft 35 a small amount in the clockwise direction so as to decrease the pressure applied by the tourniquet 16. The counter clockwise output of the selector 28 activates the motor 32 to rotate the shaft 35 in the counter clockwise direction so as to increase the pressure applied by the tourniquet 16. The shaft 35 is also rotatable manually by a manual pressure set control 36 which is connected mechanically to the shaft 35 by a mechanical connection 37 diagrammatically shown in the Figure. The apparatus 10 includes a tourniquet on/off switch 40 which provides power to the components of the apparatus 10 and activates a timer 41 which accumulates the time that the tourniquet has been asserting pressure around the person's limb. The output of the timer 41 is connected to a digital display 42 of the duration of tourniquet application, and also to an audible alarm 43 constructed to provide an audible signal at predetermined intervals, such as every fifteen minutes of tourniquet application. In operation of a tourniquet apparatus 10 according to the present invention, the monitor cuff and the tourniquet cuff are applied to limbs of the person and the surgical area is prepped, draped and exsanguinated. The manual pressure set control 36 is adjusted to a value believed to be near the desired increment above the person's blood pressure, and the increment signal generator 21 is adjusted to provide the desired pressure increment signal to the adder 20. The switch 40 is then turned on, initiating operation of the timer 41 and the time display 42. Pressure is provided to the pneumatic tourniquet 16, in the conventional manner, and that pressure is measured by the pressure transducer 18 and displayed on the digital display 25. Power is at the same time supplied to the pressure monitor 14, which begins the series of steps required to measure the person's systolic blood pressure and to display the pressure on the digital display 15. The pressure monitor 15 measures the systolic blood pressure at selected intervals as often as once per minute. The digital systolic pressure signal is added to the increment signal by the adder 20, and the magnitude comparator
23 compares the magnitudes of the signal from the adder 20 and the signal representing the tourniquet cuff pressure measured by the transducer 18. If the tourniquet cuff pressure is not greater than the systolic blood pressure by at least the amount of the predetermined increment signal, then the signal along bus 22 will be greater than the signal along bus 26, and the magnitude comparator 23 will provide a "+" output to the selector 28. Upon the next pulse from the pulse generator 29, the selector 28 provides a. counter clockwise output to the stepping motor 32.
This causes the shaft of the stepping motor 32 to rotate counter clockwise a very short rotational distance, and thereby through the mechanical connection 33 causes the shaft 35 to rotate and operate the pressure regulator of the pneumatic tourniquet 16 to increase the pressure in the tourniquet cuff. If the increase in pressure thus obtained does not equalize the signals input to the magnitude comparator 23, the output of the comparator
23 will remain "+" and the selector 28 upon the next pulse of the pulse generator 29 will again cause the stepping motor 32 to incrementally rotate to increase the tourniquet cuff pressure another step.
When the magnitude of the signals along buses 22 and 26 becomes equal, the magnitude comparator 23 will provide an "=" output, disabling the pulse generator 29. Under this condition, the selector 28 will not be activated to step the stepping motor 32, and the pressure in the tourniquet cuff will remain unchanged. If, when the pressure monitor 14 makes a subsequent determination of systolic blood pressure representing a change in the person's systolic blood pressure, the signal along line 22 will change by the amount of the change in systolic blood pressure. If, for example, the change in the signal along bus 22 represents a reduction in blood pressure, then the signal along bus 22 will be less than the signal along bus 26, and the pressure in the tourniquet cuff will be greater than the systolic blood pressure by more than the amount of the increment signal. This will cause the magnitude comparator 23 to provide a "-" output, and the pulse generator 29 will again be enabled to activate the selector 28. In response to an activating pulse from the pulse generator 29 and a "-" output from the comparator 23, the selector 28 will provide a clockwise signal output to the stepping motor 32, stepping the shaft of the motor 32 in a clockwise direction and thereby causing the shaft 35 of the pressure regulator of the pneumatic tourniquet 16 to be rotated incrementally so as to slightly decrease the pressure in the tourniquet cuff. This will be repeated automatically until the signals to the comparator 23 along buses 22 and 26 are equalized.
It will thus be seen that through the action of the magnitude comparator 23, the selector 28, the pulse generator 29 and the stepping motor 32, the compression exerted by the tourniquet cuff about the limb is continually monitored and maintained at a predetermined pressure above the systolic blood pressure of the patient. The predetermined amount is determined by the setting of the increment signal which is combined with the systolic blood pressure signal by the adder 20. An automatic tourniquet apparatus 10 embodying the present invention thus responds to changes in the patient's blood pressure which may occur during surgery for reasons such as reaction to anesthesia or surgical stimulation. If the pressure in the tourniquet cuff were to remain at a fixed value, as has been the case in prior pneumatic tourniquet systems, a drop in the patient's blood pressure would unnecessarily increase the differential between the pressure of the tourniquet cuff and the blood pressure. By maintaining a desired differential, the present invention minimizes nerve damage caused by the compression of the tourniquet on nerve tissues.
In addition to individualizing the tourniquet cuff pressure for each patient as. determined by their own physiological needs, the present invention will minimize or eliminate accidents that have occurred from time-to-time as the result of human error by the misreading or misadjustment of manual controls of present pneumatic tourniquets. If the tourniquet cuff pressure is unintentionally set at an extremely high value, the resulting damage to the limb below the tourniquet can result in a need for limb amputation. This would not happen to a patient on which the automatic tourniquet of the present invention is used. Further advantages include a more accurate accounting of actual tourniquet lapsed time, and reductions in hospital and patient costs through the elimination of long rehabilitative processes now necessitated by the slow regeneration of damaged nerve tissue.
It will be understood by reference to the drawing that the apparatus 10 can be constructed as a single unit or as a modular unit utilizing commercially available units for the pressure monitor and pneumatic tourniquet components. It is preferable to provide a central control panel including the on/off switch 40, the monitor pressure display 15, the tourniquet pressure display 25, the tourniquet time display 42, the audible alarm 43, and adjustment controls for the increment signal generator 21.
While the preferred embodiment shown herein uses digital control techniques, it will be appreciated that embodiments of the present invention using conventional analog servo mechanisms may be constructed.
While this invention has been described in .detail with particular reference to a preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood that variations and modification can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention as described hereinbefore and as defined in the appended claims.

Claims

Claims
1. An automatic tourniquet apparatus for occluding blood flow in a person's limb, comprising: a tourniquet operable to adjust the pressure applied about said limb by said tourniquet; pressure monitoring means for measuring said person's blood pressure; and means responsive to changes in said person's blood pressure for operating said tourniquet to maintain pressure about said limb at a level greater than said person's blood pressure by a predetermined amount.
2. The apparatus of Claim 1, wherein said tourniquet comprises a pneumatic tourniquet operable by inflating a cuff surrounding said person's limb.
3. The apparatus of Claim 1, wherein said pressure monitoring means comprises a non-invasive cuff means for measuring systolic pressure.
4. The apparatus of Claim 1, wherein said means for operating said tourniquet comprises: means for measuring the pressure applied by said tourniquet; comparator means for comparing the pressure applied by said tourniquet with said person's blood pressure; and means for (a) lowering the pressure applied by said tourniquet in response to said pressure applied by said tourniquet being greater than said person's blood pressure by more than said predetermined amount, and (b) raising the pressure applied by said tourniquet in response to said pressure applied by said tourniquet being less than said person's blood pressure or greater than said person's blood pressure by less than said predetermined amount.
5. The apparatus of Claim 1 further comprising means for varying said predetermined amount of pressure above said person's blood pressure.
6. A method of occluding blood flow in a person's limb comprising the steps of: applying pressure about said limb with an adjustable tourniquet; monitoring said person's blood pressure; and responsive to changes in said person's blood pressure, adjusting said tourniσuet to maintain application of pressure about said limb at a level greater than said person's blood pressure by a predetermined amount.
7. The method of Claim 6, wherein said step of adjusting said tourniquet comprises the steps of: measuring the pressure applied by said tourniquet; comparing the pressure applied by said tourniquet with said person's blood pressure; and responsive to said pressure applied by said tourniquet being greater than said person's blood pressure by more or less than said predetermined amount, lowering or raising, respectively, the pressure applied by said tourniquet.
PCT/US1982/001317 1981-09-28 1982-09-24 Pressure-responsive tourniquet WO1983000995A1 (en)

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US30617681A 1981-09-28 1981-09-28
US306,176810928 1981-09-28

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Cited By (26)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4520820A (en) * 1983-04-15 1985-06-04 Aspen Laboratories, Inc. Automatic tourniquet with improved pressure resolution
EP0264848A2 (en) * 1986-10-22 1988-04-27 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Occlusive cuff
EP0440111A2 (en) * 1990-01-29 1991-08-07 Abatis Medical Technologies Limited Tourniquet apparatus for intravenous regional anesthesia
WO1994022364A1 (en) * 1993-04-04 1994-10-13 Frank Vincenz Jonas Gruenfeld An automatic tourniquet system
US5556415A (en) * 1990-01-29 1996-09-17 Mcewen; James A. Physiologic tourniquet for intravenous regional anesthesia
US5607447A (en) * 1993-09-28 1997-03-04 Mcewen; James A. Physiologic tourniquet
US5855589A (en) * 1995-08-25 1999-01-05 Mcewen; James A. Physiologic tourniquet for intravenous regional anesthesia
US5931853A (en) * 1995-08-25 1999-08-03 Mcewen; James A. Physiologic tourniquet with safety circuit
WO2008128332A1 (en) 2007-04-19 2008-10-30 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Adaptive surgical tourniquet apparatus and method
US7717855B2 (en) 2006-12-06 2010-05-18 The Hospital For Sick Children System for performing remote ischemic preconditioning
WO2011094730A2 (en) 2010-02-01 2011-08-04 The Hospital For Sick Children Remote ischemic conditioning for treatment and reventon of restenosis
WO2011121402A2 (en) 2010-03-31 2011-10-06 The Hospital For Sick Children Use of remote ischemic conditioning to improve outcome after myocardial infarction
WO2011127341A2 (en) 2010-04-08 2011-10-13 The Hospital For Sick Children Use of remote ischemic conditioning for traumatic injury
US8764789B2 (en) 2011-04-15 2014-07-01 CellAegis Devices Inc. System for performing remote ischemic conditioning
US9039730B1 (en) 2014-07-10 2015-05-26 Western Clinical Engineering, Ltd. Personalized tourniquet system having dual-purpose cuff
EP2789355A4 (en) * 2011-12-07 2015-09-02 Nobuyuki Masaki Simple automatic electronic tourniquet
WO2016004519A1 (en) * 2014-07-10 2016-01-14 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Personalized tourniquet system
US9301701B2 (en) 2007-11-09 2016-04-05 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Method for measuring tourniquet limb occlusion pressure
US9726155B2 (en) 2010-09-16 2017-08-08 Wilson Solarpower Corporation Concentrated solar power generation using solar receivers
US9931126B2 (en) 2014-07-10 2018-04-03 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Personalized tourniquet methods and apparatus
US10098779B2 (en) 2013-03-15 2018-10-16 The Hospital For Sick Children Treatment of erectile dysfunction using remote ischemic conditioning
US10213206B2 (en) 2013-03-15 2019-02-26 CellAegis Devices Inc. Gas powered system for performing remote ischemic conditioning
US10252052B2 (en) 2013-03-15 2019-04-09 The Hospital For Sick Children Methods relating to the use of remote ischemic conditioning
US10272241B2 (en) 2013-03-15 2019-04-30 The Hospital For Sick Children Methods for modulating autophagy using remote ischemic conditioning
US10876521B2 (en) 2012-03-21 2020-12-29 247Solar Inc. Multi-thermal storage unit systems, fluid flow control devices, and low pressure solar receivers for solar power systems, and related components and uses thereof
EP3755243A4 (en) * 2018-03-05 2021-11-24 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Personalized tourniquet for intermittent vascular occlusion

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Cited By (52)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4520820A (en) * 1983-04-15 1985-06-04 Aspen Laboratories, Inc. Automatic tourniquet with improved pressure resolution
EP0264848A2 (en) * 1986-10-22 1988-04-27 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Occlusive cuff
EP0264848A3 (en) * 1986-10-22 1988-07-20 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Occlusive cuff
US5556415A (en) * 1990-01-29 1996-09-17 Mcewen; James A. Physiologic tourniquet for intravenous regional anesthesia
EP0440111A3 (en) * 1990-01-29 1992-01-02 Western Clinical Engineering, Ltd. Tourniquet apparatus for intravenous regional anesthesia
EP0440111A2 (en) * 1990-01-29 1991-08-07 Abatis Medical Technologies Limited Tourniquet apparatus for intravenous regional anesthesia
US5911735A (en) * 1990-01-29 1999-06-15 Mcewen; James A. Time-limited physiologic tourniquet
WO1994022364A1 (en) * 1993-04-04 1994-10-13 Frank Vincenz Jonas Gruenfeld An automatic tourniquet system
US5842996A (en) * 1993-04-04 1998-12-01 Fms-Future Medical System, S.A. Automatic tourniquet system
US6299629B1 (en) 1993-04-04 2001-10-09 Fms-Future Medical System, S.A. Automatic tourniquet system
US5607447A (en) * 1993-09-28 1997-03-04 Mcewen; James A. Physiologic tourniquet
US5855589A (en) * 1995-08-25 1999-01-05 Mcewen; James A. Physiologic tourniquet for intravenous regional anesthesia
US5931853A (en) * 1995-08-25 1999-08-03 Mcewen; James A. Physiologic tourniquet with safety circuit
EP2441429A1 (en) 2006-12-06 2012-04-18 The Hospital For Sick Children System for performing remote ischemic preconditioning
US8790266B2 (en) 2006-12-06 2014-07-29 The Hospital For Sick Children Methods and system for performing remote ischemic preconditioning
US7717855B2 (en) 2006-12-06 2010-05-18 The Hospital For Sick Children System for performing remote ischemic preconditioning
US9119759B2 (en) 2006-12-06 2015-09-01 The Hospital For Sick Children System for performing remote ischemic preconditioning
EP2436360A1 (en) 2006-12-06 2012-04-04 The Hospital For Sick Children System for performing remote ischemic preconditioning
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US9119761B2 (en) 2006-12-06 2015-09-01 The Hospital For Sick Children Methods and system for performing remote ischemic preconditioning
EP2441428A1 (en) 2006-12-06 2012-04-18 The Hospital For Sick Children System for performing remote ischemic preconditioning
EP2136720A1 (en) * 2007-04-19 2009-12-30 Western Clinical Engineering, Ltd. Adaptive surgical tourniquet apparatus and method
EP2136720A4 (en) * 2007-04-19 2014-06-25 Western Clinical Eng Adaptive surgical tourniquet apparatus and method
WO2008128332A1 (en) 2007-04-19 2008-10-30 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Adaptive surgical tourniquet apparatus and method
US9301701B2 (en) 2007-11-09 2016-04-05 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Method for measuring tourniquet limb occlusion pressure
WO2011094730A2 (en) 2010-02-01 2011-08-04 The Hospital For Sick Children Remote ischemic conditioning for treatment and reventon of restenosis
WO2011121402A2 (en) 2010-03-31 2011-10-06 The Hospital For Sick Children Use of remote ischemic conditioning to improve outcome after myocardial infarction
CN102939054A (en) * 2010-03-31 2013-02-20 儿童医院 Use of remote ischemic conditioning to improve outcome after myocardial infarction
US10136895B2 (en) 2010-03-31 2018-11-27 The Hospital For Sick Children Use of remote ischemic conditioning to improve outcome after myocardial infarction
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US11045207B2 (en) 2010-04-08 2021-06-29 The Hospital For Sick Children Use of remote ischemic conditioning for traumatic injury
US10194918B2 (en) 2010-04-08 2019-02-05 The Hospital For Sick Children Use of remote ischemic conditioning for traumatic injury
US9393025B2 (en) 2010-04-08 2016-07-19 The Hospital For Sick Children Use of remote ischemic conditioning for traumatic injury
US10280903B2 (en) 2010-09-16 2019-05-07 Wilson 247Solar, Inc. Concentrated solar power generation using solar receivers
US11242843B2 (en) 2010-09-16 2022-02-08 247Solar Inc. Concentrated solar power generation using solar receivers
US9726155B2 (en) 2010-09-16 2017-08-08 Wilson Solarpower Corporation Concentrated solar power generation using solar receivers
US8764789B2 (en) 2011-04-15 2014-07-01 CellAegis Devices Inc. System for performing remote ischemic conditioning
USRE47219E1 (en) 2011-04-15 2019-02-05 CellAegis Devices Inc. System for performing remote ischemic conditioning
US9205019B2 (en) 2011-04-15 2015-12-08 CellAegis Devices Inc. System for performing remote ischemic conditioning
EP2789355A4 (en) * 2011-12-07 2015-09-02 Nobuyuki Masaki Simple automatic electronic tourniquet
US10876521B2 (en) 2012-03-21 2020-12-29 247Solar Inc. Multi-thermal storage unit systems, fluid flow control devices, and low pressure solar receivers for solar power systems, and related components and uses thereof
US10213206B2 (en) 2013-03-15 2019-02-26 CellAegis Devices Inc. Gas powered system for performing remote ischemic conditioning
US10252052B2 (en) 2013-03-15 2019-04-09 The Hospital For Sick Children Methods relating to the use of remote ischemic conditioning
US10272241B2 (en) 2013-03-15 2019-04-30 The Hospital For Sick Children Methods for modulating autophagy using remote ischemic conditioning
US10098779B2 (en) 2013-03-15 2018-10-16 The Hospital For Sick Children Treatment of erectile dysfunction using remote ischemic conditioning
WO2016004519A1 (en) * 2014-07-10 2016-01-14 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Personalized tourniquet system
US9814467B2 (en) 2014-07-10 2017-11-14 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Personalized tourniquet apparatus
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US9931126B2 (en) 2014-07-10 2018-04-03 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Personalized tourniquet methods and apparatus
US9039730B1 (en) 2014-07-10 2015-05-26 Western Clinical Engineering, Ltd. Personalized tourniquet system having dual-purpose cuff
EP3755243A4 (en) * 2018-03-05 2021-11-24 Western Clinical Engineering Ltd. Personalized tourniquet for intermittent vascular occlusion

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