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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. An apparatus for cooling a body organ such as a heart, said apparatus
including a cooling pad for surrounding said body organ and a pump for
circulating a cooling liquid through said pad, the improvement wherein
said pump is arranged with respect to said pad so as to place the liquid
inside said pad under negative pressure, and
said cooling pad comprises,
an upper flexible sheet,
a lower flexible sheet,
said sheets having an areawise extent suitable for partially surrounding
said organ,
said sheets being suited for contact with said body organ and with body
fluids, and
said sheet being liquid impermeable and sealed at their peripheral edges to
form a bag,
an inlet tube means sealed to said bag for transferring cooling liquid
under negative pressure into said bag,
an outlet tube means sealed to said bag at a location spaced from said
inlet tube means for transferring said liquid from said bag.
porous and flexible filler element filling the inside of said bag in the
space between said upper and lower sheets,
the locations of said tube means together with said sheets defining a flow
path for said liquid through the interior of said bag, said flow path
being through pores in said porous element and being unconfined by any
tube between said inlet tubes means and said outlet tube means,
said porous element being selected to maintain separation between said
sheets, and thereby maintain said flow path, when the walls of said bag
are squeezed toward each other as the result of said bag being filled with
said liquid under negative pressure and being conformed around said organ,
and
said porous element, the material from which said sheets are made, and the
dimensions of said sheets being selected to permit said bag to retain its
shape surrounding said organ when filled with said liquid under negative
pressure.
2. The cooling pad of claim 1 wherein a heat exchanger is connected to said
pad, said heat exchanger being disposed below the level of said pad.
3. The cooling pad of claim 1 wherein said porous element consists of 10
PPI polyester-urethane foam.
4. The cooling pad of claim 1 wherein said circulating cooling liquid
consists of an isotonic fluid.
5. The cooling pad of claim 1 wherein said sheets are made of blood bag
grade PVC sheet.
6. The cooling pad of claim 1 wherein said pad is rectangular and said
inlet and said outlet are at opposite ends of the same long side.
7. The cooling pad of claim 1 wherein said pad is rectangular and has a
central seal extending from the middle of a short side along a major
portion of its longitudinal axis.
8. The cooling pad of claim 7 wherein said inlet and said outlet are
disposed on said short side and separated by said seal. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a cooling pad used to reduce organ metabolism,
particularly during cardiac surgery to reduce heart metabolism.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In cardiac surgery, the heart is often deprived of blood for a period of
time. When this occurs, the heart's energy requirements must be reduced to
prevent heart damage. In the prior art two methods are generally used to
accomplish this metabolism reduction or myocardial preservation.
One prior art method consists of an initial infusion of a cardioplegic
solution into the coronary arteries followed by continued low-flow
infusion or intermittent higher-flow infusion. The first infusion
initially cools and arrests the heart while the subsequent low-flow
infusion or higher-flow infusion maintains the low temperature. The major
drawback of this method is that the cardioplegic solution enters the
patient's bloodstream thereby diluting the blood with a drug that tends to
stop heart action.
Another prior art method, which is sometimes combined with the previously
described one, is an external lavage of the heart with cold normal saline.
The major drawback of the topical lavage is that the saline pored over the
heart becomes mixed with blood in the patient's chest cavity thereby
diluting it. Further, the lavage also has an undesirable tendency to cool
the surgeon's fingers.
It is also known that organs can be cooled or heated by placing a pad near
them, and passing hot or cold fluid through the pad. Shioshvili U.S. Pat.
No. 3,738,372 shows an elastic cooling pad which conforms to a kidney and
is used to cool it when it is cut off from blood supply. The pad walls,
however, are only separated by the fluid in the pad which is under
positive pressure. Miley U.S. Pat. No. 3,888,259 shows a standard
hypothermia pad which is designed to wrap or otherwise contact a patient.
This pad is connected by a return line to a fluid pump, but it does not
conform to the patient's body because of negative pressure. Further, fluid
only flows through tubing in the pad, the walls of which are not otherwise
separated.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
I have discovered that low organ metabolism can be maintained by placing a
cooling pad, which has cold fluid flowing therethrough, under and around
an organ. The pad comprises flexible walls sealed together at their edges
except at an inlet and an outlet which are disposed away from each other.
The pad encloses a filler which is flexible and porous and which separates
its walls.
In a preferred embodiment the cooling pad is rectangular having an inlet
and an outlet at opposite ends of the same long side; inlet and outlet
each have tubes sealed therein, and the tubes are connected respectively
to an upstream heat exchanger which is lower than the pad and a downstream
pump, either causing negative pressure in the pad, all part of a closed
fluid loop; the pad encloses a flexible and porous foam filler which
separates pad walls of PVC sheet. The walls are heat sealed together at
their edges except at the inlet and the outlet.
In another preferred embodiment a rectangular pad is partially divided by a
central seal so as to form a U-shaped passage therethrough from an inlet
to an outlet.
The invention reduces organ metabolism when the pad is placed underneath
the patient's organ and isotonic fluid is pumped therethrough. The
flexible pad can be molded around the organ, and it will retain its molded
shape because of the negative pressure therein. This increases the cooling
effect. The negative pressure also helps to prevent leakage from the pad
should it be punctured during operation.
PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
I turn now to description of the structure and operation of preferred
embodiments of the invention, after first briefly describing the drawings.
Drawings
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic view of a heart cooling system embodying this
invention.
FIG. 2 is an enlarged perspective view of a cooling pad of this invention
with a portion broken away.
FIG. 3 is a sectional view taken through 3--3 of FIG. 2.
FIG. 4 is an enlarged perspective view of another cooling pad of this
invention.
FIG. 5 is a sectional view taken through 5--5 of FIG. 4.
DESCRIPTION
Turning to FIG. 1, there is shown a heart cooling system 100 generally
comprising a cooling pad 10, a pump 30, and a heat exchanger 40, all
interconnected by tubing to form a closed fluid loop. During open-heart
surgery, pad 10 is positioned under and partially surrounds patient's
heart 11, while heat exchanger 40 is located below heart and pad level. As
shown by the flow direction arrows, pump 30 is downstream from pad 10.
In the most preferred embodiment, as shown in FIGS. 2 and 3, cooling pad 10
is generally rectangular and has an inlet 12 and an outlet 14 extending
through opposite ends of one of the long sides of the pad. Pad 10, which
has overall dimensions of about 9 inches by 3.5 inches, has walls 16 made
of flexible, blood bag grade PVC sheet having a thickness of 0.015 inches.
The sheet is embossed on its inner surface. Pad 10 encloses a foam filler
18 of 10 PPI polyester-urethane. Filler 18 separates the sheet walls of
pad 10 but is flexible and porous. The edges of pad walls 16 are heat
sealed together except at inlet 12 and outlet 14. The heat seal is made so
as to avoid entrapping any air or foam filler, and the edge is free of any
burrs.
Inlet tube 20 and outlet tube 22 partially extend into pad 10 through
respective openings 12, 14 and are sealed in place. Tubes 20, 22 are
standard PVC tubes such as Norton Tygon S-50HL or Sunlight 966-9. Tubes
20, 22 have a 0.209 inch outer diameter and a 0.125 inch inner diameter.
The portion of tubes 20, 22 outside pad 10 are adapted for connection to
other flexible tubing. Pad 10 may have an insulating blanket 24 on its
underside. The blanket 24 may be made of closed cell foam.
Pump 30 is a constant flow type such as a blood pump from the Cobe
Centry.RTM. 2 Dialysis Delivery Machine. A Sarns 6002 roller pump is also
suitable. Pump 30 has a silicone header (not shown) which resists
hardening caused by low fluid temperature in the system. Pump 30 has an
inlet 32 and an outlet 34. Pump inlet 32 is connected by tubing 36 to the
outlet tube 22 of pad 10. Pump outlet 34 is connected (as hereafter
described) by additional tubing 38 to heat exchanger 40.
Heat exhanger 40 comprises a reservoir 42, which is a Thermos
"Jugler".sup..TM. multi-purpose cooler. Reservoir 42, which may be
bracketed to pump 30, holds an ice water bath. A saline bag 46, which is a
standard I.V. bag, is wholly or partially immersed in the ice bath. Bag 46
has a pair of ports 50, 52 at one end, and bag 46 is disposed in the
reservoir 42 so that ports 50, 52 are adjacent to the reservoir bottom.
The end of tubing 38 opposite pump 30 is connected to first port 50. A
portion of the tubing 38 connecting pump outlet 34 and bag port 50 is
wrapped to form a cooling coil 48 which is also immersed in the bath.
Second port 52 is connected by tubing 54 to the inlet tube 20 of pad 10.
The tubing 36, 38, 54 is all standard PVC tubing.
OPERATION
First, pad 10, pump 30, and saline bag 46 are all connected by tubing 36,
38, 54. Saline bag 46 and cooling coil 48 are then immersed in the ice
bath of heat exchanger reservoir 42, which is positioned lower than the
patient's heart.
Pump 30 is activated, and air is bled from the system, which is then filled
with normal saline solution or other isotonic liquid. The flow, at a rate
of 300 to 400 mil/min., is in the direction indicated by the arrows in
FIG. 1.
During open-heart surgery the aorta, which supplies blood to the heart, is
cross-clamped cutting off the flow of blood. Heart metabolism is then
initially reduced by an infusion or "bolus" injection of a cardioplegic
solution into the coronary arteries. This solution arrests the heart
action and initially cools it. The reduced metabolism is maintained by
slipping pad 10, with the cooled saline solution being pumped
therethrough, underneath the heart. Because of the size and shape of the
pad 10, it is not necessary to remove the heart to put it in place. Pad 10
is longitudinally positioned under the heart so that the insulation pad 24
is away from the heart. The weight of the heart tends to collapse the pad
and wrap it around the heart. The outside surface of pad 10 is sterile,
and it has an internal temperature of about 8.degree. C.
There is a negative pressure in the pad when the system is in operation.
The negative pressure independently results from positioning heat
exchanger 40 below the pad and heart level and also from positioning the
pump 30 downstream from the pad. When it is in place, pad 10 is molded
around the heart. Surface area contact with the heart is not essential,
however. Because of the negative pressure, the pad, which would otherwise
flex back to its initial flat shape, retains its molded shape around the
heart. The negative pressure also prevents leakage from the pad should it
be accidentally punctured. During operation, the pressure inside the pad
is approximately 50 mm Hg.
OTHER EMBODIMENTS
In another preferred embodiment shown in FIGS. 4, 5 a cooling pad 60 is
rectangular and partially divided by a central heat seal 63, extending
from the middle of an edge 61 on one short side along pad's longitudinal
axis almost to an opposite edge 65. This creates a U-shaped passage inside
the pad. Pad 60 has inlet 62 and outlet 64 in the edge 61 on opposite
sides of the central heat seal 63. Inlet tube 66 and outlet tube 68 extend
into the pad 60 through the inlet 62 and outlet 64 respectively. Tubes 66,
68 are sealed in place. Flexible and porous foam filler 70 is inside the
pads and separates pad walls 67. Of course, pads of other shapes and sizes
are also within the scope of this invention.
It is also within the scope of this invention to use the pad to cool organs
other than the heart.
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Description  |
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