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| United States Patent | 4986281 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4986281.html |
| Inventor(s) | Preves; David A. (Edina, MN);
Rosengren; Brian P. (Eden Prairie, MN);
Holte; James E. (Minneapolis, MN);
Leonard; Myer S. (Golden Valley, MN) |
| Abstract | A non-invasive, non-ionizing, reproducible method and apparatus for
analyzing the normal and abnormal function of human and animal joints is
presented. The method includes passing vibrations through the joint to be
analyzed and measuring the modulation of the amplitude and the phase
characteristics of the vibrations caused by movement of the joint through
a predetermined cycle. More specifically, the method includes transmitting
a sinusoidal vibratory signal through a joint structure to be analyzed and
measuring the amplitude and phase of the signal received on the opposite
side of the joint during a prescribed movement of the joint both with and
without the application of external mechanical forces, and comparing the
profile of the modulated signal to the profiles obtained from reference
joints. The apparatus includes a piezoelectric or magnetic transducer
adapted to be positioned on one side of a joint to be analyzed to provide
the vibrational signal and one or more receiving transducers placed on the
other side of the joint to detect the modulated vibratory signal produced
by the associated joint structure. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4986281 |
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Method for obtaining a signal for analyzing human and animal joint
functions |
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| Publication Date |
January 22, 1991 |
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| Filing Date |
January 12, 1990 |
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| Parent Case |
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 643,848, filed Aug. 23, 1984
and now abandoned. |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A non-invasive method for obtaining a signal to be used for analyzing
functions of human and animal joints which comprises:
producing a sinusoidal vibrational first signal having a signal
predetermined frequency with measurable phase and amplitude
characteristics,
transmitting the first signal through the joint to be analyzed,
moving the joint through a series of positions during such transmission to
produce a modulated signal,
detecting at least one of the characteristics of the modulated signal after
the transmitted signal has passed through the joint during opening and
closing thereof,
presenting for analysis the detected modulated signal,
and detecting the transmitted signal without passing the same through the
articulated joint and differencing the second detected signal from the
first detected signal to produce a resultant signal modulated solely by
the transmission of the signal through the articulated joint.
2. The method set forth in claim 1 wherein the characteristic of the
modulated signal being detected constitutes the amplitude characteristic
of the signal passing through the joint.
3. The method set forth in claim 1 wherein the characteristic of the
modulated signal being detected constitutes the phase characteristic of
the signal passing through the joint.
4. The method set forth in claim 1 wherein the characteristic of the
modulated signal being detected constitutes both the phase and amplitude
characteristic of the signal passing through the joint. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In the past, various methods have been used for studying bones and joints.
The closest prior art work appears to be that in which sound transmission
through the teeth of a closed jaw was used to measure the occlusal force
produced during chewing and swallowing. None of the prior art shows any
method or apparatus for using the modulation of the amplitude and/or the
phase of a sound signal as a means for studying bone and joint
characteristics of a human or animal joint.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The method and apparatus embodying this invention is designed to determine
the tissue and morphologic properties of human or other animal joint
structures as these properties change in time due to a predetermined,
programmed movement of the joint structure. This determination is obtained
by studying the effects of resiliency, inertial and energy loss
characteristics of the joint structure on an acoustic signal during
articulation and/or stressing of that joint.
The method embodies passing a series of sinusoidal vibrations or a
combination of sinusoidal vibrations through the joint to be analyzed and
measuring the modulation of the amplitude and/or the phase of the
vibrations caused by movement of the joint through a predetermined opening
and closing and comparing the amplitude and/or phase modulations with the
modulations characteristic of a reference joint function. These magnitude
and phase measurements are carried out both with the joint moving freely,
as well as with external mechanical forces applied to the joint. For
example, hip and knee joints give different signatures when body weight is
applied to the joint and when it is not.
The apparatus which has been found to be satisfactory includes an
acoustical signal source designed to transmit sinusoidal vibrations having
a frequency of approximately 1,200 Hz into a predetermined transmission
location with respect to the joint to be studied. The signal is
transmitted through the flexing joint structure and is picked up by a
receiver, compared with the input signal to determine amplitude and/or
phase modulations introduced by the flexing joint, and thereafter
categorized with signal modulations obtained from a clinical population of
normal and abnormal joints.
The apparatus includes a bone vibrator, a number of which are well known in
the prior art, together with conventional receiving transducers which are
combined with associated circuitry, as shown. The components of the
electronic circuit subtract the output signal received through the joint
from the input signal being transmitted into the joint to produce a
resultant signal which represents the amplitude and phase of the signal
transfer function of the joint being examined.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of apparatus embodying the invention;
FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic view of the human temporomandibular joint with the
mandible in the fully closed position (sagittal plane);
FIG. 3 is a similar view with the mandible in the open position;
FIG. 4 is a circuit diagram of apparatus embodying the invention;
FIGS. 5a, b, and c are a composite diagrammatic view showing exaggerated
modulated signals of the phase and amplitude characteristics of the signal
passed through a joint as compared with an input sine wave signal.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION
FIG. 1 shows the clinical configuration for the application of the
instrument in a human temporomandibular joint analysis. In the form shown,
two transducers, A and B, are illustrated. Transducer A serves as the
source of the acoustic sinusoidal signal. Transducer B receives the
acoustic signal. Transducers A and B are respectively positioned at
predetermined landmarks on the two bones comprising the joint to be
studied. The center line of primary pathway of the signal through the
joint is illustrated by the dashed line E in FIG. 1.
The circuit diagram in FIG. 4 shows a signal-producing oscillator 100 which
in the form shown, is designed to produce a sinusoidal signal of
approximately 1200 Hz. The signal passes through a power amplifier
component 101 to transmitter A. As shown in FIG. 1, transmitter A is
placed on the corner of the jaw (at the angle of the mandible) and
transducer B is located on the cheekbone (at the zygomatic arch) as shown.
The acoustic signal is transmitted through the bone and associated soft
tissues of the joint. The signal received by transducer B (as modulated by
the joint structure) is fed through series of components designated as
Channel I which includes a variable gain preamplifier 102 followed by a
high pass filter 103 to minimize any power line interference. The filtered
signal is then input to a measure amplifier 104 which is a combination of
a logarithmic amplifier and automatic gain control loop which divides the
signal into two separate outputs; one is a normalized AC output of a given
level regardless of input level, and other is the envelope of the joint
modulation imposed on the 1200 Hz input signal picked up by transducer B.
A second channel may be provided such as Channel II which includes
circuitry similar to the Channel I circuit just described. Channel II is
provided to process either the signal produced by the oscillator 100 as
shown in the diagram in FIG. 4 or to provide a comparison modulation
signal, either of which may be input to the subtractor 105. The circuitry
of Channel II includes a variable gain preamplifier 102a, a high pass
filter 103a and a measure amplifier 104a which are respectively similar to
the corresponding components previously described for Channel I. A switch
106 controls the input to Channel II and permits the operator to select a
comparison signal that is input to a subtractor 105, which subtracts the
signal delivered from measure amplifier 104a from the modulated signal 104
to produce an amplitude output which represents the amplitude modulation
imposed by the joint structure on the 1200 Hz input signal. This
configuration allows the modulated signal received by transducer B to be
compared either with the output from oscillation 100 or with another
modulation signal produced by a second receiver C positioned at a second
receiving location which is selected to emphasize certain desired
characteristics of the joint transmission.
It will be apparent from FIG. 1 that sending transducer A produces a sound
path directly through the mandible jaw bone section to the receiving
transducer C and that this signal can then be compared to the signal
through the mandible joint to the receiving transducer B, as indicated in
the block circuit diagram (FIG. 4). Any modulation produced by variations
in the contact between driver A and the jaw will be present int he signal
received at B as well as at C and therefore, can be cancelled out when the
two signals at B and C are differenced. This results in a signal which
reflects only the modulation produced by the joint. Since the solid bone
structure does not produce modulation of the signal, the two signals
received at B and C will be affected similarly, thus resulting in a signal
which reflects only the modulation produced by the joint structure.
The determination of the phase of the received signal relative to the
transmitted signal may also be accomplished with the circuitry illustrated
in FIG. 4. Such determination of phase modulation presents characteristics
of the joint structure that in some cases are more important than the
amplitude modulation determination described earlier.
The normalized AC outputs from the measure amplifiers 104 and 104a pass
through phase offset generators 110 and 110a which allow for the
introduction of a variable phase calibration signal. Clippers 111 and 111a
preserve the zero crossing information associated with the two channels.
The squarer-divider circuits 112 and 112a together with the relative phase
detector 114 and integrator 115 produce a signal proportional to the phase
difference between the signals input to Channel I and Channel II biased by
any offset introduced at generators 110 and 110a. This detection is
accomplished by using the integrator to convert the pulse-width voltage
from the relative phase detector 114 into a voltage which represents the
modulation of the phase of the input signal from transducer A produced by
the opening and closing of the joint as received by transducer C. Panel
level indicator lights are provided for Channels I and II by light panels
120 and 121 shown in FIG. 4.
The modulated amplitude signal from subtractor 105 may be recorded on any
conventional X-Y strip recorder 130, such as is manufactured by Bruel &
Kjaer, Model 2307, manufactured in Denmark, and may also be delivered to a
voltage controlled oscillator 131, a voltage controlled power amplifier
132, and to a head phone set 133 and/or a speaker 134 as shown in FIG. 4
to permit the operator to listen to the received modulated signal from
either Channel I or Channel II.
Similarly, the phase output signal from integrator 115 may be delivered to
the conventional X-Y recorder 130 or to the head phones 133 and speaker
134 through the VCO 131 and VCA 132.
FIGS. 5a, b and c respectively illustrate diagrammatically an input signal,
and exaggerated modulated signals representing the phase and amplitude
characteristic signals compared at corresponding time reference points
through 41/2 cycles. FIG. 5b shows an exaggerated phase characteristic
output signal and depicts the phase modulation of the input signal
produced by the joint structure being studied. FIG. 5c depicts an
exaggerated amplitude characteristic output signal as modulated by a joint
structure being studied. The dotted line in FIG. 5c represents the
envelope of the modulated amplitude characteristic signal illustrated.
Variations in these modulated signals will permit the clinician to
determine the structural characteristics of the bone and tissue structures
of the joint being studied and facilitate diagnosis of irregularities in
the joint.
It will be seen that this invention provides method and apparatus for
analyzing human and animal joint function to provide diagnostic assistance
of the bone and tissue joint structure.
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