Implantable pressure transducer

4127110
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Inventors

Bullara, Leo A.

Application #

689169

Filed

May-24-1976

Published

Nov-28-1978

Current US Class

073/718
073/729.1
128/903
600/561

International Classes

A61B 005/00

Field of Search

128/2.1 73/398 325/67 325/118 324/40

Assignee

Huntington Institute of Applied Medical Research (Pasadena, CA)

Examiners

Howell; Kyle L.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Christie, Parker & Hale

US Patent References

3943915   Intracranial pressu...
3958558   Implantable pressu...
4022190   Apparatus for sensi...
4026276   Intracranial pressu...
4027661   Pressure sensor

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Other References

Atkinson, J. R., et al., Journ. of Neurosurgery, vol. 27, No. 5, 1967, pp. 428-432. Medical Engineering, Ch. 15, C. R. Ray, Yearbook Publishing, Chicago, 1974, p. 156.

Citation

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Abstract
A wireless, surgically implantable pressure transducer for measuring pressure of fluid or tissue in a body chamber such as a brain ventricle of a patient suffering hydrocephalus or a head injury. The transducer includes an inductor and a capacitor connected in parallel to form a resonant L-C circuit. One of these reactive components is variable, and a bellows (or similar pressure-sensitive force-summing device) is mechanically connected to the variable component to vary the value of capacitance or inductance and hence the resonant frequency of the L-C circuit in response to pressure changes of the fluid in which the bellows is immersed. The transducer is electromagnetically coupled to an external source of variable-frequency energy such as a grid-dip oscillator, enabling external detection of the transducer resonant frequency which is a measure of the fluid pressure being sensed. An antenna coil is inductively coupled to the transducer inductor, and is positioned in the transducer to be just beneath the skin when the housing is implanted to provide efficient coupling of the external oscillator and internal resonant circuit. A second bellows or analogous device may be coupled to a reference-pressure side of the transducer to provide improved compensation of variations in ambient temperature and atmospheric pressure.
 
Claims
What is claimed is:

1. In a transducer adapted for implantation beneath the skin and having a resonant L-C circuit with capacitor and inductor elements, one of the elements being variable and driven by a mechanical force sensor whereby the circuit has a variable resonant frequency which is related to the magnitude of force sensed by the sensor, and the frequency can be determined without wired connection by a remote circuit, the transducer including a housing for supporting the circuit elements and force sensor, the housing having an end adapted to be positioned closer to the skin than the inductor element when the transducer is implanted; the improvement comprising a coupling coil positioned adjacent and inductively coupled to the inductor element, and an antenna coil connected across and spaced from the coupling coil, the antenna coil being positioned adjacent said housing end to be closer to the skin than the inductor element to enable enhanced transmission of electromagnetic energy between the remote circuit and the resonant L-C circuit through the antenna coil.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Hydrocephalus is a brain condition in which cerebrospinal fluid accumulates at abnormally high pressure in ventricles or chambers within the brain. The ventricles expand in response to the pressure exerted by the fluid, and surrounding brain tissue is compressed between the ventricles and the skull. Hydrocephalus usually occurs in babies or young children, and, if unchecked, results in brain damage, enlargement and deformation of the head, and eventual death.

Modern medical methods are effective in arresting many cases of hydrocephalus, but it is often desirable to monitor pressure of the cerebrospinal fluid over an extended period to detect relapse and to determine longrange effectiveness of treatment. In the past, this measurement has been made by surgically implanting a miniature but generally conventional transducer such as a straingage-bridge pressure pickup. This technique requires that wiring be conducted from the implanted transducer to external instrumentation which provides excitation voltage to the bridge and detects bridge-unbalance voltage signals indicative of pressure. Alternatively, non-electrical manometric measurement methods may be used, but these techniques require installation of a conduit extending from the interior of the brain ventricle through the skull and scalp to external measurement equipment.
 
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