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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. A process for measuring a person's blood pressure, comprising the steps
of:
(a) temporarily blocking the flow of blood on an extremity of such person's
body by the application of astringent pressure;
(b) applying a photosensitive element to an illuminated skin area of said
extremity, downstream of the flow-blocking location, with a contact
pressure ranging between substantially 50 and 150 g/cm.sup.2 ;
(c) continuously measuring an output signal of said photosensitive element,
representative of the instantaneous transparency of said skin area, during
a period of progressive relaxation of said astringent pressure;
(d) averaging said output signal to obtain a mean-transparency curve
plotted against time;
(e) measuring several values of said astringent pressure at instants
corresponding to respective points of said mean-transparency curve; and
(f) calculating a predetermined fraction of the sum of said several values
as an indication of systolic blood pressure.
2. A process as defined in claim 1 wherein the values measured in step (e)
are a first value taken at an instant corresponding to an upper inflection
point of said curve, a second value taken at an instant corresponding to a
low point of said curve, and a third value taken at an instant
corresponding to a leveling-off point of said curve.
3. A process as defined in claim 2 wherein said fraction is calculated in
step (f) as one-half the sum of said first, second and third values.
4. A process as defined in claim 2 or 3, comprising the further step of
measuring an additional value of said astringent pressure at an instant
coinciding with a heartbeat immediately following said low point of said
curve as an indication of diastolic blood pressure.
5. A process as defined in claim 1, 2 or 3 wherein steps (a) and (b) are
performed on the person's finger.
6. An apparatus for measuring a person's blood pressure, comprising:
a cuff provided with an air-inflatable cushion applicable to an extremity
of a person's body for exerting an astringent pressure temporarily cutting
off the blood flow;
a detector including a light source and a photosensor positionable, with a
contact pressure ranging between substantially 50 and 150 g/cm.sup.2, on a
skin area of said extremity downstream of said cuff;
operating means connected with said cushion for inflating and controlledly
deflating same;
transducer means coupled with said operating means for converting measured
values of said astringent pressure into first electrical signals
representative of blood pressure;
circuit means connected to said detector for continuously converting output
signals of said photosensor into second electrical signals representative
of the mean transparency of said skin area; and
computer means connected to said circuit means and to said transducer means
for calculating a predetermined fraction of the sum of several values of
said first electrical signals, coinciding with predetermined points of a
mean-transparency curve derived from said second electrical signals, as an
indication of systolic blood pressure.
7. An apparatus as defined in claim 6, further comprising display means
connected to an output of said computer means.
8. An apparatus as defined in claim 6 or 7 wherein said circuit means
includes a differentiator deriving from said curve a high-frequency
component representative of the person's heartbeat rhythm for enabling the
calculation by said computer means of a further value of said first
electrical signals, following by one heartbeat a low point of said curve,
as an indication of diastolic blood pressure.
9. An apparatus as defined in claim 8 wherein said differentiator comprises
a high-pass filter.
10. An apparatus as defined in claim 6 or 7 wherein said cuff fits around a
person's finger, said detector comprising a cap accommodating a fingertip. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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FIELD OF THE INVENTION
My present invention relates to the measurement of blood pressure.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The method of measuring blood pressure that is most universally known
consists in compressing the arm of a person with an inflatable cushion
until the blood is interrupted, after which the pressure is progressively
decreased and the re-establishment of the blood circulation is detected
acoustically by means of the "Korotkoff noises" which are produced when
the pressure decreases from the systolic pressure to the diastolic
pressure. The "Korotkoff noises" are detected by means of a stethoscope
place between the inflatable cushion and the skin.
There has already been proposed an automation of this process for wider
public use by incorporating a microphone into the inflatable cushion and
by connecting it to an electronic circuit for automatically determining
the systolic and diastolic pressures. A drawback of such arrangements
arises mainly from the fact that it is not easy to wrap by oneself an
inflatable cushion around the arm and that it is necessary to remove any
clothing covering the arm. Although such constraints may be unimportant
within the frame of the medical profession, they constitute an impediment
to wide public utilization, especially when the pressure measurement is to
be made on a person's own body.
French Pat. No. 1,334,572 describes an apparatus for measuring blood
pressure by the detection of light-absorption variations through a portion
of the ear lobe subjected to a variable pressure. Thus, the application of
such pressure drives the blood of this portion from the ear lobe and the
detecting device will measure the volume of remaining blood. The measured
value, of course, varies with the same frequency as the heartbeat. For
drawing a curve of the transparency variations, it is necessary to measure
the maximum values and to calculate the curve from these values, after
which the systolic and diastolic pressures are deduced from some specific
values of this curve on the basis of particular relations existing between
these values and the systolic and diastolic pressures.
The calculation of the curve of pressure variations requires the use of a
relatively complex electronic circuit which results in a rather expensive
system not suitable for making an apparatus intended for wide public use.
Moverover, the transparency measurement which is contemplated in the
French patent can only be made on the ear lobe which is not an ideal
measuring spot for an apparatus designed for use by the general public and
not reserved exclusively to doctors.
French Pat. No. 2,052,617 and U.S. Pat. No. 3,412,729 concern oxymeters
from which the blood pressure can be obtained indirectly. This measurement
is based on the absorption of infrared light by tissues which varies in
inverse proportion to the amount of blood, the latter varying in turn
according to the blood pressure. The signal given by this measurement is
alternating which makes the determination of the diastolic and systolic
pressures relatively difficult to perform. Such devices are generally
intended for hospitals and are not suited for being sold outside the
specialists' field .
U.S. Pat. No. 3,698,382 concerns a device for driving the blood from the
area underneath a portion of skin by pressure application and for
measuring the blood-return rate in such area which is a function of the
blood pressure. Such a device is, however, not adapted for measuring
systolic and diastolic pressures.
It has already been proposed to measure the blood pressure from a finger.
In such a case, the blood stream can be detected optically by means of a
photoplethysmograph which measures the light transmission through the skin
varying in accordance with the heartbeat. Consequently, when the blood
circulation is stopped, the signal from the photoplethysmograph is
essentially constant; it becomes again variable when the circulation is
re-established.
This process enables a general measurement of the systolic pressure, with
extremely questionable reliability. A measurement of diastolic pressure by
this process has no practical significance since large variations occur
from one measurement to the next.
The difficulties result from several factors, including the pressure
difference between the arm and the fingers where the arteries have a much
smaller diameter. Even if the pressure is measured correctly, the result
will be different from the value obtained on the arm which constitutes a
unviersal standard. Moveover, the pressure measured in this manner can
vary under the influence of other factors so that it is difficult to set
up comparisons between several measurements on the same person, owning to
the vaso-constrictive automatic control of the quantity of blood that
circulates in the extremities (hands and feet) as a function of the energy
requirements of other parts of the body. Thus, the amount of blood in the
fingers is smaller during digestion or when the weather is cold, which is
an additional factor that may alter the pressure difference between the
arm and the fingers and may also cause discrepancies between two
measurements done on a finger when the intervening time is significant.
Thus, not only is the finger measurement not comparable to the arm
measurement, but two successive finger measurements done under different
conditions are frequently divergent.
OBJECT OF THE INVENTION
My invention, therefore, aims at providing a method of and means for
remedying, at least in part, the above-mentioned drawbacks.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In accordance with my present invention, the flow of blood is detected
optically by means of a photoelectric sensor that measures the
transparency of a skin area situated downstream of an anatomical part on
which the blood circulation has been stopped by the application of
external astringent pressure. This process comprises the steps of applying
the photosensitive element to that area with a contact pressure ranging
between 50 and 150 g/cm.sup.2, plotting a continuous curve of the average
transparency as a function of time, and measuring a certain number of
pressure values at three or four instants corresponding to characteristic
points of the transparency curve while the applied astringent pressure is
progressively decreased. I have found that a predetermined fraction of the
sum of these pressure values will give a good approximation of the
systolic blood pressure; more particularly, half the sum of three values
respectively corresponding to an upper inflection point, a low point and a
leveling-off point of the mean-transparency curve will give optimum
results. A fourth value, measured at an instant which coincides with a
heartbeat immediately following the aforementioned low point, is
representative of diastolic blood pressure.
My improved process enables the direct and continuous measurement of the
blood pressure at a location different from that where the external
pressure is exerted; the photoelectric sensor is applied to the measuring
area with a contact pressure sufficiently weak so as not to interfere with
the astringent pressure exerted upstream of this measuring area. This
enables a considerable simplification of the electronic circuit for
processing the measured signals.
In the preferred embodiment described hereinafter, the measuring area is
the tip of a person's finger and the astringent pressure is applied to
that finger ahead of its first joint.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
The above and other features of my invention will now be described in
detail with reference to the accompanying drawing in which:
FIG. 1 is a schematic view of a measuring element used in blood-pressure
measurements according to my invention;
FIG. 2 is a block diagram of an apparatus for carrying out the present
process; and
FIG. 3 is a set of graphs pertaining to this process.
SPECIFIC DESCRIPTION
As briefly discussed above, the photoelectric sensing of the transparency
of superficial tissues enables the detection of an alternating signal
whose frequency corresponds to that of the heartbeat rhythm. This
measuring can be done with a photoplethysmograph which comprises a cell 1
with a transparent contact surface, the cell being divided into two parts
by a partition. One of the parts carries a light source, e.g. an infrared
lamp, while the other contains a photoelectric detector. A cell of this
character, serving for the detection of objects by reflection, is
commercially available under the mark "OPTRON", Type OPB-730. The cell is
enclosed in a cap 2 having a recess 3 fitting around the tip of the finger
of a patient whose blood pressure is to be tested. This cap is provided
inside with a pad 4 of resiliently compressible material such as foam
plastic for ensuring proper contact of the cell with the finger and
accommodates, to a certain extent, variations of finger size. A cuff 5
with an air cushion 17 for blocking the arterial blood flow is placed
around the same finger ahead of its first joint and thus upstream of cap
2.
Systematic transparency measurements, carried out downstream of a portion
of a finger in which blood flow has been stopped by such a cuff, have
shown that, when the blood circulation is restored, a mean-transparency
curve B represented in FIG. 3 drops suddenly to reach a minimum value
after which it progressively rises again to finally get stabilized at a
practically constant level. It should be noted that this curve, which is
the same for any individual, can be plotted only if the contact pressure
between the photoplethysmograph and the skin lies between well-defined
limits ranging from about 50 g/cm.sup.2 to 150 g/cm.sup.2. My experiments
were performed with a pressure of about 100 g/cm.sup.2. I have found,
indeed, that if the pressure is too low or too high one still obtains an
alternating electrical signal as a function of the cardiac rhythm,
represented by a curve A in FIG. 3, but not the mean-transparency curve B.
Now, the usefulness of this curve B resides in the fact that it is a
characteristic of the blood circulation following the release of the
astringent pressure of the flow-blocking cuff. Moreover, this curve B has
some inflection points which constitute markers that are particularly well
suited for electronic processing. It is, however, not possible to
establish a direct relationship between this curve B and the "Korotkoff
noises". Thus, this curve does not yield directly the systolic and
diastolic pressures, especially if one desires that such pressures be
comparable to the corresponding pressures measured on the arm and be
relatively independent of the physiological conditions under which the
measurements are undertaken.
Consequently, the measured pressures must be processed for enabling an
evaluation of the systolic and diastolic pressures.
This treatment involves a standardization of the process and of the
equipment for carrying it out. For achieving such standardization, there
were undertaken a series of measurements on a sample group of persons,
systematically correlating the mesurements on the arm with those on the
finger. By this means I was able to statistically establish a correlation
between the pressures measured on the arm, considered as reference
pressures, and those read at various significant points of curve B. I have
found that there are three characteristic pressure values P.sub.1, P.sub.2
and P.sub.3 correlated with as many significant points. Value P.sub.1
corresponds to the characteristic pressure at a first, upper inflection
point of curve B, i.e. a point of incipient descent which coincides with
beginning restoration of the blood circulation and theoretically
corresponds to the systolic pressure in the finger but is poorly
reproducible for the reasons previously explained and can differ
significantly from the reference pressure. Value P.sub.2 corresponds to
the characteristic pressure at a low point of curve B whereas value
P.sub.3 corresponds to the characteristic pressure at a location where the
curve levels off after rising from that low point and becomes
substantially flat, albeit with a slight ripple as shown. These pressures
are measured by correlating the curve B with a curve C that corresponds to
the progressively decreasing astringent pressure applied to the air
cushion 17 of cuff 5.
A good approximation of the conventionally determined systolic reference
pressure, on the average with .+-.5%, is achieved by a mathematical
evaluation of the measured values according to the following equation:
P.sub.s .congruent.(P.sub.1 +P.sub.2 +P.sub.3)/2
This calibration corresponds to an approximation based on the
aforementioned sample group of persons and is statistically valid for a
larger population. However, such calibration does not take into account
some individuals with pathological disorders of the blood stream. Although
a possibility of individual calibration does exist, it should be borne in
mind that the process and apparatus according to my invention are not
intended to replace the existing sphygmomanometers used by medical
practitioners but offer a simple means enabling anyone to measure his or
her own blood pressure and giving a result comparable to the pressure
measured on the arm.
By the same statistical measurements I have been able to define a
calibration serving to evaluate the diastolic pressure with the aid of the
present apparatus in a manner comparable to the pressure measured on the
arm. The pulsating curve A of FIG. 3 corresponds to a high-frequency
component of the variation of the transparency of the finger whose average
level is given by curve B, these pulsations occurring in the rhythm of the
heartbeat. A statistically good approximation of the reference diastolic
pressure can be obtained by measuring a pressure P.sub.4 at an instant
following by one heartbeat the low point of curve B coinciding with
pressure P.sub.2. Hence, it is sufficient to identify on curve A the beat
that follows the lower inflection point of curve B and to check at this
moment the pressure value P.sub.4 on curve C to obtain an approximation of
the diastolic reference pressure.
The apparatus shown in FIG. 2 includes the cuff 5 whose inflatable cushion
17 is connected to a pressure source comprising a ball-shaped pumping
element 6 and a check valve 7 overlying an air inlet 8 of a plenum chamber
18. A spring-loaded safety valve 9 enables air to escape from that chamber
when the pressure therein exceeds a given limit. A manually controlled
venting valve 10 serves for progressively reducing the pressure in the
cuff 5 to restore the blood flow. This air-pressure generator is connected
to a pressure transducer 11 whose output is connected to a
signal-processing circuit 12.
The air pressure prevailing in plenum chamber 18, corresponding to the
astringent pressure exerted upon the patient's finger by cushion 17, is
converted by transducer 11 into a first electrical signal appearing on an
input lead 19 of processing ciruit 12; this signal is fed to an amplifier
119. Another input lead 20 of circuit 12, originating at cell 1, carries a
second electrical signal emitted by its photosensor whose time constant is
so chosen that the high-frequency fluctuations of the returning blood
circulation are almost totally suppressed in the mean-transparency curve B
which is representative of that signal as it appears in the output of an
amplifier 120. The signal on lead 20 is also delivered to an amplifier 121
via a circuit branch in parallel with amplifier 120, that branch including
a high-pass filter 21 which suppresses the d-c component of the signal and
emphasizes its alternating component at the frequency of the heartbeat;
the result is the curve A of FIG. 3 which, it should be noted, has a zero
level different from that of curves B and C. Filter 21 may also be
regarded as a differentiator deriving the curve A from the residual
ripples of curve B. It is, of course, also possible to operate with a
smaller time constant of the photosensor and to insert a low-pass filter
or integrator in series with amplifier 120.
The outputs of amplifiers 119, 120 and 121 are connected to an
analog/digital converter 13 working into a microcomputer 14 which
calculates the systolic pressure P.sub.s from values P.sub.1, P.sub.2,
P.sub.3 according to the foregoing equation and also determines the
diastolic pressure from the value of curve C appearing with a delay of one
cycle of curve A after the low point of curve B corresponding to pressure
P.sub.2. The calculated systolic and diastolic pressures appear on the
screen of a display device 15 connected to microcomputer 14. A power
supply 16 energizes the elements of circuit 12, the converter 13, the
microcomputer 14 and the display 15 as well as the constituents of cell 1.
While the formula for the systolic pressure P.sub.s based on the measured
values P.sub.1, P.sub.2 and P.sub.3 is strictly empirical, its accuracy
has been confirmed by the aforementioned tests carried out at different
times with several tens of persons. Each test was preceded by conventional
measurements of the reference pressure on the arm of the subject. The
tests showed that the calculated pressure P.sub.s approximates more
closely the reference value than does the pressure P.sub.1 measured at the
instant of beginning restoration of blood circulation. The value P.sub.s
has also proven more readily reproducible than the value P.sub.1, being
less dependent on physiological factors tending to vitiate the result. The
value P.sub.4 found in each instance for the calculated diastolic pressure
also corresponded rather closely to that measured conventionally; this can
be considered a significant improvement over prior attempts to determine
the diastolic pressure by observing the optical equivalent of the
disappearance of the "Korotkoff noises".
The disclosed apparatus is simple, easy to operate, and practical as a
means enabling the general public to carry out blood-pressure measurements
compatible with those obtainable with the sphygmomanometers commonly used
in the medical profession.
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