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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A transcutaneous carbon dioxide probe for producing a signal having a
characteristic with a magnitude indicative of carbon dioxide perfusion
through the skin substantially independent of temperature variations
comprising
pH sensitive electrode means having a surface adapted to engage the skin
and an output terminal at which there is produced an output signal having
a characteristic with a magnitude which varies with the magnitude of
carbon dioxide emitted through the skin at the region of engagement,
temperature sensor means for sensing the temperature of said pH electrode
means and generating an error signal independent of said output signal and
having a characteristic with a magnitude dependent on the temperature of
said pH electrode means, and
means for combining said output signal and said error signal to produce a
corrected signal having a characteristic with a magitude indicative of
transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure at a predetermined temperature.
2. Apparatus according to claim 1 wherein said temperature sensor means
includes a temperature sensitive element having an output at which there
is produced a current having a magnitude proportional to temperature.
3. Apparatus according to claim 2 further comprising means for maintaining
the voltage-temperature function of said temperature sensor means
substantially linear over a temperature range including 35 degrees
centigrade.
4. Apparatus according to claim 3 further comprising means for maintaining
the slope of said voltage-temperature function in predetermined
relationship to the voltage-temperature coefficient of said probe.
5. Apparatus according to either of claims 3 and 4 further comprising means
for maintaining the slope of the voltage-temperature function of said
probe at a magnitude dependent upon the carbon dioxide pressure-skin
temperature gradient coefficient.
6. A transcutaneous carbon dioxide sensor comprising a pH electrode, a
reference electrode, a carbon dioxide dissolving solution in contact with
said electrodes and means for engaging the skin surface of a person whose
carbon dioxide pressure output is to be measured, said engaging means
maintaining said solution in contact with said electrodes and being
permeable to carbon dioxide to permit the carbon dioxide to be measured to
be dissolved in said solution, measuring circuit means responsive to the
voltage induced across said pH and reference electrodes in response to the
carbon dioxide dissolved in said solution for producing an output signal
having a characteristic with a magnitude indicative of the pressure of
carbon dioxide transcutaneous through the skin,
compensating means responsive to the temperature of said sensor for
providing an error signal independent of said output signal and having a
characteristic with a magnitude dependent on said temperature, and
combining means operatively connected to said measuring circuit means and
to said compensating means and responsive to said error signal and said
output signal for producing a corrected signal having a characteristic
with a magnitude indicative of transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure at a
predetermined temperature.
7. Apparatus according to claim 6 wherein said compensating means comprises
temperature sensitive means for producing a temperature current having a
characteristic with a magnitude variable with temperature, said error
signal being dependent on said temperature current.
8. Apparatus according to claim 6 wherein said compensating means comprises
a temperature sensitive device providing a signal variable with
temperature and error signal generating circuit means responsive to said
temperature sensitive device for generating said error signal in response
to temperature.
9. Apparatus according to claim 8 further comprising means for maintaining
the magnitude of said error signal as a function of the magnitude of a
characteristic of said temperature sensitive device signal.
10. Apparatus according to claim 9 further comprising means for maintaining
said function substantially linear over a temperature range including
thirty-five degrees centigrade.
11. Apparatus for measuring transcutaneous carbon dioxide comprising a
sensor including a pH electrode, a reference electrode, a carbon dioxide
dissolving solution in contact with said pH and reference electrodes, said
solution generating a voltage across said electrodes when carbon dioxide
is dissolved therein and means for engaging the skin surface of a person
whose carbon dioxide output is to be sensed, said engaging means having
one surface in contact with said solution, said engaging means being
permeable to carbon dioxide to permit the carbon dioxide to be sensed to
be dissolved in said solution,
temperature signal generating means mounted in said sensor and responsive
to the temperature of said sensor for producing an error signal
independent of the voltage across said reference and pH electrodes having
a characteristic with a magnitude dependent upon said temperature, and
means for combining said error signal with the voltage across said
reference and pH electrodes, said combining means having an output at
which there is produced a voltage having a characteristic with a magnitude
indicative of transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure at said skin surface.
12. Apparatus according to claim 11 wherein said temperature signal
generating means includes a temperature sensor having an output voltage
with a voltage temperature characteristic which is the same as the
voltage-temperature characteristic of the deviation voltage equal to the
difference between the voltage across the pH and reference electrodes at a
predetermined referenced temperature and the voltage across said
electrodes at the temperature of said sensor.
13. Apparatus according to claim 11 wherein said temperature signal
generating means includes a temperature sensor having an output voltage
with a voltage temperature characteristic which is the complement of the
voltage-temperature characteristic of the deviation voltage equal to the
difference between the voltage across the pH and reference electrodes at a
predetermined referenced temperature and the voltage across said
electrodes at the temperature of said sensor.
14. A method of correcting the output signal of a transcutaneous carbon
dioxide measuring apparatus having a skin engaging probe and means for
generating said output signal in response to transcutaneous carbon dioxide
gas pressure sensed by said probe to correct for deviations in temperature
from a predetermined reference temperature comprising
measuring the temperature of said probe,
generating an error signal independent of said output signal having a
characteristic with a magnitude dependent on said temperature, and
combining said error signal with said output signal to yield a corrected
signal.
15. A method according to claim 14 further comprising causing said error
signal characteristic to have a voltage-temperature relationship related
to that of the voltage-temperature characteristic of said probe.
16. A method according to claim 15 wherein said error signal characteristic
voltage-temperature relationship is related to the voltage-temperature
characteristic of said probe and the carbon dioxide pressure-skin
temperature gradient characteristic.
17. A method according to claim 14 further comprising causing said error
signal characteristic to have a voltage-temperature relationship
complementary to the voltage-temperature characteristic of said probe.
18. A method according to claim 14 further comprising causing said error
signal characteristic to have a voltage-temperature relationship
complementary to a function which combines the voltage-temperature
characteristic of said probe and the carbon dioxide pressure-skin
temperature gradient coefficient effect characteristic. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to the field of transcutaneous gas measuring
apparatus for non-invasive measurement of blood gases which are
transcutaneous through the skin of a living body. More specifically, the
invention concerns an apparatus and method for determining the amount of a
gas which is transcutaneous through the skin at a predetermined reference
temperature while permitting variations in temperature from the reference
temperature during the measurement and, hence, without need to heat or
otherwise control the temperature of the skin or measuring apparatus
during the measurement.
It is known in the medical art of non-invasive blood gas content monitoring
and measurement to apply to the surface of the skin of the person whose
blood gas content is to be monitored and measured, a probe having a
barrier permeable to the gas to be measured. The gas to be measured is
permitted to diffuse through the barrier which is normally a membrane
having specific diffusion properties and into a solution stored above the
membrane in which the gas is soluble. An electrode assembly in contact
with the solution is used to measure the effect of the dissolved gas on
the electrical properties of the solution to provide a quantitative
indication of the amount of gas emitted from the skin.
In the case of transcutaneous carbon dioxide measurement, a sensor is used
to measure the pressure of the carbon dioxide transcutaneous through the
skin at a region of the skin to which the membrane assembly of the
electrode is applied. The anode, which is referred to as the reference
electrode, and cathode, which is referred to as the pH electrode of the
transcutaneous carbon dioxide sensor, are in contact with an electrolytic
solution in which the carbon dioxide transcutaneous through the permeable
membrane is dissolved. As a result of the dissolving of the carbon dioxide
in the electrolytic solution, a voltage is induced between the reference
and pH electrodes which is proportional to the logarithm of the
transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure or tension at the skin surface.
Hence, the induced voltage can be processed by suitable circuitry and then
displayed on a volt meter to give a direct reading of transcutaneous
carbon dioxide pressure or tension.
It is known in the art of medicine that transcutaneous carbon dioxide
pressure varies significantly with changes in temperature. In order to
make useful diagnoses of a patient's condition based on transcutaneous
carbon dioxide pressure, it has been found necessary to obtain all
transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure readings at a standard
predetermined reference temperature and to compare such measurements with
standards of what are normal and abnormal transcutaneous carbon dioxide
pressures developed for the same reference temperature.
Prior art transcutaneous carbon dioxide measurement devices have dealt with
the problem of temperature variation during transcutaneous carbon dioxide
measurements by employing means to stabilize the temperatures of the skin
and engaging measurement apparatus. Some transcutaneous blood gas
measuring systems employ probes which include electrical heaters that are
thermostatically controlled to maintain the probe and adjacent skin
temperatures as close as possible to the reference level. U.S. Pat. No.
3,659,586 to Johns et al for a Percutaneous Carbon Dioxide Sensor and
Process for Measuring Pulmonary Efficiency discloses a transcutaneous
carbon dioxide measuring probe which includes a lead baseplate to serve as
a thermal sink for minimizing temperature changes.
The approaches taken in the prior art to prevent temperature variations are
only partially effective as constantly changing environmental conditions
as well as metabolic conditions of the patient continuously cause
temperature variations and fluctuations all of which degrade the accuracy
of transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure measurements. Moreover, the
necessity for adding temperature stabilization devices to the gas
measuring probes, such as heaters and thermal sinks, increases the cost
and complexity of the probes, and can result in discomfort to the patient.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention overcomes the aforementioned problems of prior art
transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure measuring devices in providing a
transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure measuring apparatus and method
which permits probe and skin temperatures to vary from a predetermined
reference temperature, measures the temperature variation and compensates
the transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure reading of the measuring system
to compensate for the measured temperature variation. Specifically, the
present invention is directed to apparatus for correcting the output
signal of a transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure measurement probe to
compensate for deviations in the output signal due to temperature
variations including temperature sensor means for sensing the temperature
of the probe and providing an output signal having a characteristic with a
magnitude proportional to the probe temperature and an error signal
generating circuit including a function generating circuit which employs a
function which has a characteristic the same as or the complement of the
probe output voltage-temperature characteristic, and having an input
adapted to receive the temperature signal from the temperature sensor
means and an output at which an error signal is provided as a function of
the measured temperature, and means for combining the error signal with
the probe output signal to offset the deviation in the magnitude of the
probe output signal attributable to temperature variations thereby
providing a signal having a characteristic with a magnitude indicative of
transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure at the predetermined reference
temperature.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide an apparatus and
method for measuring transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure at the skin
surface of a patient at a predetermined reference temperature irrespective
of deviations in actual temperature from the reference temperature.
Another object of the invention is to provide for the measurement of
transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure without need to stabilize the
temperature of the measuring probe or skin surface to which the probe is
applied.
Still another object of the present invention is to provide for the
measurement of transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure at the skin surface
of a patient extrapolated to a predetermined reference temperature which
can be different from the actual temperature at the time of measurement.
A further object of the invention is to provide an apparatus and a method
for developing an error signal having a characteristic the same as or
complementary to the characteristic of transcutaneous carbon dioxide
pressure measurement signals attributable to deviations from a
predetermined reference temperature for offsetting the deviation portion
of such pressure measurement signals.
Other and further objects of the invention will be apparent from the
following drawings and description of a preferred embodiment of the
invention in which like reference numerals are used to indicate like parts
in the various views.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a sectional elevation view of a transcutaneous carbon dioxide
measuring probe used with the apparatus and method of the preferred
embodiment of the invention.
FIG. 2 is a schematic block diagram illustrating the circuitry of the
transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure measurement apparatus of the
preferred embodiment of the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring now to FIG. 1 of the drawings, there is shown a transcutaneous
carbon dioxide probe 1 according to the invention. The probe includes a
housing formed from an irregularly shaped cylindrical shell 3, having a
vertical axis in the view of FIG. 1, and further having an integrally
molded lateral extension 5 with a cylindrical bore having a horizontal
axis in the view of FIG. 1.
The shell 3 has a radially inwardly directed bottom defining a circular
shoulder 7 in the interior of its bore. The shell 3 is provided on its
exterior with threads 8 adapted to mate with a removable fixation ring 10
having complementary threads on its exterior.
Mounted within the shell 3 is a substantially cylindrical mass 9 of a
conductive metal which in the preferred embodiment of the invention is
silver. Silver is chosen as a result of its superior electrical and heat
conducting properties but other conductors, e.g., copper, having similar
properties, can be employed with acceptable results. The silver mass 9
serves as the reference electrode for the probe 1 and has a constant outer
diameter for the major portion of its length and a smaller diameter
portion at one end thereby forming a circular shoulder to mate with the
shoulder 7 of the shell 3 so that silver mass 9 can be supported within
the shell 3 with its lowermost surface in the view of FIG. 1 substantially
in the same plane as the lowermost surface of the shell 3. A circular
cover member 11 is fitted on top of the shell 3 after insertion of the
silver mass 9. The cover 11 may be welded in place or firmly secured by
use of a known adhesive or a forced fit or a combination of the foregoing.
The cylindrical silver mass 9 as an axial bore 13 throughout its length,
with an axis common to the axes of the cylindrical mass 9 and the shell 3.
In addition, there is another axial bore 15 having an axis parallel to and
radially displaced from the common axis of the central bore 13,
cylindrical silver mass 9 and shell 3. The bore 15 partially penetrates
the depth of the cylindrical mass 9, as can clearly be seen in FIG. 1. The
bore 15 is partially filled with a thermal compound in which there is
supported a temperature sensor 19 which includes a field effect transistor
which when energized provides an output voltage having a magnitude
proportional to the temperatures of the electrolyte solution and the
silver reference electrode 9, as the temperature sensor 19 is in intimate
thermal contact with the silver reference electrode 9. A pair of leads
extends from the temperature sensor 19 for applying the temperature
indicating voltage output of the sensor 19 to electrical circuitry which
will be subsequently described with reference to FIG. 2.
A silver wire 21 coated with a layer of silver chloride is disposed on the
axis of the central bore 13 and is suspended in an electrolytic solution
containing a mixture of sodium bicarbonate and sodium chloride to provide
chloride ions. The electrolytic solution is contained within a glass tube
23 which is snuggly received in the bore 13 within the silver reference
electrode 9. The end of the wire 21 opposite the end disposed in the
electrolytic solution is connected to a cable which extends from the probe
through the horizontal bore in the lateral section 5 of the shell 3. The
wire 21, glass tube 23 and the electrolyte solution therein, form the pH
electrode of the sensor 1. A wire 25 is connected to the mass 9 and is
also extended through the horizontal bore in the lateral section 5 of the
shell 3.
The fixation ring 10 has stretched across its circular opening a barrier
including an upper membrane 27 and a lower membrane 29. The membranes 27
and 29 are held in place by a single O-ring or snap ring 31. A circular
cover ring 33 also supports the membranes 27 and 29 on the fixation ring
10. The cover ring 33 can be provided with a layer of an adhesive material
35 on its lowermost surface to insure adherence of the probe to the skin
of the person whose carbon dioxide blood content is being measured or
monitored. In use, the membranes 27 and 29 are tightly stretched over the
bottom of the reference electrode 9 and the pH electrode 23. The membranes
are shown somewhat separated in the drawing of FIG. 1 for ease of
understanding their disposition on the probe.
The upper membrane 27 is absorbent and acts as a spacer between the lower
membrane 29 and an electrolytic solution 37, disposed between the upper
surface of the membrane 27 and the lower surface of the reference
electrode silver mass 9. The upper membrane 27 is preferably made from a
cellulose material which wil absorb the electrolyte and the lower membrane
29 is made of a carbon dioxide permeable material which in the preferred
embodiment of the invention is teflon. The electrolyte 37 can be the same
sodium bicarbonate sodium chloride solution used within the glass envelope
23 of the pH electrode.
Referring now to FIG. 2 of the drawings, there is shown a schematic diagram
of an electrical circuit used to measure and monitor blood carbon dioxide
content with the aid of the probe illustrated in FIG. 1. The pH electrode
of the probe 1 is connected to the positive input of a unity gain
amplifier 40 having a feedback loop from its output to its inverting
input. The resultant signal at the output of the amplifier 40 is a voltage
having a magnitude proportional to the logarithm of the transcutaneous
carbon dioxide pressure or tension measured at the region of probe contact
with the skin surface. The voltage output of the amplifier 40 is applied
through a resistor 80 to one input of an amplifier 42 which can be a
differential amplifier or a summing amplifier depending on the selected
circuit design as will subsequently be explained.
The temperature sensor 19 which includes a temperature dependent field
effect transistor (FET) energized by a power supply (not shown), provides
a current output having a magnitude proportional to the temperature of the
sensor which, due to the high conductivity of the silver reference
electrode, is continuously maintained within one tenth of one degree
centrigrade of the temperature of the pH electrode. A signal derived from
the current output of the temperature sensor 19 is developed and applied
to the other input of the amplifier 42 to provide at the corresponding
input of the amplifier 42 a voltage having a magnitude proportional to the
temperature of the sensor 19.
The current output of the temperature sensor element 19 is applied to a
resistor 43 to develop a voltage having a magnitude proportional to the
temperature. In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the resistor 43
has a nominal value of 10,000 ohms. The voltage across resistor 43 is
applied to an amplifier 67, the output of which is connected to a feedback
amplifier 69 where the correct amount of feedback is applied for
compensation to restore the signal to its proper level.
The compensated output of amplifier 69 is then applied to the other input
of the amplifier 42 where the signals having voltages with magnitudes
respectively proportional to carbon dioxide tension and sensor temperature
are combined. The carbon dioxide signal voltage input to the amplifier 42
is connected to the wiper of a potentiometer 79 which is connected to a
source of positive voltage for nulling the output of the transcutaneous
carbon dioxide probe 1.
When the temperature of the probe deviates from the nominal temperature to
which measurements are to be normalized, the temperature input signal is
combined with the carbon dioxide signal in the amplifier 42 so as to
offset the change in the carbon dioxide voltage due to temperature effect
on the probe and on the patient. The temperature sensor 19 and associated
circuitry, including resistor 43, amplifiers 67 and 69, and potentiometer
79 act as a function generator to provide an output voltage dependent on
the sensed temperature according to a function which is the same as the
voltage versus temperature characteristic of the voltage deviation by
which the output voltage of the amplifier 40 at a given temperature
deviates from the voltage which would be present at the predetermined
reference temperature to which measurements are to be normalized. The FET
can be selected to have the desired current versus temperature
characteristic or separate function generator circuitry, known to the art,
can be used to convert the FET current output to a signal with a current
or voltage magnitude which varies with the temperature of the FET
according to the desired voltage-temperature characteristic.
The deviation voltage is due to variations in the pH electrode temperature
from the reference temperature. Ideally, measurements are made at a pH
electrode reference temperature of approximately 35 degrees centigrade.
The inner body temperature of the patient will normally be approximately
37 degrees centrigrade and a two degree temperature drop can be expected
at the interface of the skin surface and pH electrode due to typical
ambient environmental conditions.
The output voltage of the probe 1 as measured at the output of the
amplifier 40, has been found to be susceptible to two phenomenon which
occur upon temperature variation from the reference temperature. The first
source of voltage error is attributable to the temperature coefficient of
the electrode which has been found to be on the order to -1.2 millivolts
per degree centrigrade. The voltage deviation resulting from changes in
the electrical characteristics of the electrode caused by temperature
fluctuations is substantially negatively linear over a temperature range
encompassing 35 degrees centrigrade.
A second source of voltage error at the output of amplifier 40 has been
found to be attributable to variations in the transcutaneous carbon
dioxide pressure or tension at the skin surface which occur with
temperature changes. It has been found that when the skin temperature
deviates from the reference temperature, the resulting temperature
gradient across the skin increases the carbon dioxide pressure at about 2%
per degree centrigrade. The latter phenomenon is herein referred to as
carbon dioxide pressure-skin temperature gradient coefficient effect and
causes voltage to vary positively and linearly with skin temperature
gradient, that is, with the absolute value of the difference between the
skin and reference temperatures. The negative change in voltage at the
output of the amplifier 40 due to temperature-voltage coefficient effect
is greater than the positive change in voltage due to the carbon dioxide
pressure-skin temperature gradient coefficient effect. As a result, the
net change in voltage at the output of amplifier 40 due to changes in
temperature is inverse with respect to temperature. That is, as
temperature increases, the output voltage decreases and as temperature
decreases, the output voltage increases. Hence, the characteristic of the
deviation voltage, that is, the difference between the output voltage
actually measured at the output of amplifier 40 and the voltage which
would be measured under conditions where the skin surface and pH electrode
were at the reference temperature, is a linear function of temperature
having a negative slope. A complementary error signal function having a
positive slope equal in magnitude to the magnitude of the negative slope
of the deviation voltage can be developed such that when the complementary
or error signal function is combined with the deviation voltage function,
the net result is zero. That is, the complementary error signal function
voltage cancels the deviation voltage. Whether the error signal has a
characteristic the same as or the complement of the deviation voltage
depends on whether the signals at the inputs of the amplifier 42 are added
together or subtracted, one from the other. The magnitude of the error
signal voltage is substantially equal to the magnitude of the deviation
voltage portion of the voltage at the output of the amplifier 42 at every
temperature within the expected range of temperature deviation from 35
degrees centrigrade. The sign of the error signal voltage is the same as
the sign of the deviation voltage portion if the amplifier 42 is a
differential amplifier. If the amplifier 42 is a summing amplifier, then
the complementary error signal having a slope with a sign opposite to that
of the deviation voltage slope is used.
Hence, the temperature sensor 19 and its output processing circuitry are
designed to yield an output voltage versus temperature characteristic
which is the same as or the complement of the deviation voltage
characteristic due to the voltage-temperature coefficient effect combined
with the carbon dioxide pressure-skin temperature gradient coefficient
effect. In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the FET included in
the temperature sensor 19 gives an output of 1 microampere per degree
centigrade. The output voltage of the amplifier 40 is summed with the
error signal voltage output of the temperature sensor 19, when the error
signal voltage is the complement of the deviation voltage portion of the
amplifier 40 output voltage, in the amplifier 42 if it is a summing
amplifier so that the voltage at the output of the summing amplifier 42
has a magnitude indicative of the voltage output of the probe 1 which
would obtain in the absence of temperature variation from the reference
temperature. If the amplifier 42 is a differential amplifier, the function
generator of the temperature sensor 19 is selected to provide a voltage
output variable with temperature which has the same characteristic as the
deviation voltage versus temperature characteristic instead of the
complement.
The temperature compensated output signal of amplifier 42 is applied to the
input of a high gain amplifier 71 which in the preferred embodiment of the
invention has a gain of 50. The increased gain allows use of less
sensitive signal measurement circuitry than would otherwise be required.
For patient safety, the output of the high gain amplifier 71 is applied to
the input of an isolation amplifier 44 having unity gain and a very high
input impedance. The isolation amplifier 44 prevents any dangerous voltage
condition existing at the output of the amplifier 44 from effecting the
probe 1 which is attached to the skin of the patient.
The output of the isolation amplifier 44 is connected to the input of a
calibration amplifier 46 which includes a first potentiometer control 48
for adjusting the voltage output of the amplifier 46 so that when the
probe 1 is in an environment of 5% carbon dioxide, the voltage output of
the amplifier 46 has a magnitude of -0.1 v. A second potentiometer control
50 is used to adjust the range of the output voltage of the amplifier 46
so that after the low adjustment has been made, the probe can be placed in
an environment of 10% carbon dioxide pressure or tension and the amplifier
46 adjusted to provide an output voltage with a magnitude porportional to
the logarithm of the known carbon dioxide pressure, that is, -0.085 in the
preferred embodiment of the invention.
The output of the amplifier 46 is applied to the input of an antilog
function generator 52. The output of the function generator circuit 52 is
a voltage having a magnitude equal to the antilog of the magnitude of the
input voltage applied to the function generator 52. Hence, the magnitude
of the output voltage of the antilog function generator 52 is numerically
equal to the transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure sought to be measured.
The output of the antilog function generator 52 is applied to the input of
a digital volt meter 54 which displays in digital form the converted
transcutaneous carbon dioxide pressure measurement on a seven segment
display employing light emitting diodes, liquid crystals or similar
devices.
The amplifiers 40, 67, 69, 42, 71, 44 and 46, the antilog function
generator 52 and the digital volt meter 54 are all known elements which
are commercially available as will be known to those skilled in the art of
electronic circuit design.
Instead of using a digital volt meter 54 to display the transcutaneous
carbon dioxide measurement, other known display devices can be used,
including chart recorders and alphanumeric printers.
It is to be appreciated that the foregoing description is of a preferred
embodiment of the invention which may be altered or modified without
departing from the spirit and scope of the invention which is defined in
the following claims.
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