This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/825,955, filed Apr. 15, 2004, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/553,785, filed Mar. 16, 2004. The entire content of both applications is incorporated herein by reference.
TECHNICAL FIELD The invention relates to medical devices and, more particularly, to medical devices that monitor physiological parameters.
BACKGROUND In some cases, an ailment may affect the quality of a patient's sleep and/or affect the patient's activity level. For example, chronic pain may cause a patient to have difficulty falling asleep, disturb the patient's sleep, e.g., cause the patient to wake, and prevent the patient from achieving deeper sleep states, such as one or more of the nonrapid eye movement (NREM) sleep states. Chronic pain may also cause a patient to avoid particular activities, or activity in general, where such activities increase the pain experienced by the patient. Other ailments that may negatively affect patient sleep quality and patient activity level include movement disorders, and congestive heart failure. In some cases, these ailments are treated via an implantable medical device (IMD), such as an implantable stimulator or drug delivery device.
Further, in some cases, poor sleep quality may increase the symptoms experienced by a patient due to an ailment. For example, poor sleep quality has been linked to increased pain symptoms in chronic pain patients. The link between poor sleep quality and increased symptoms is not limited to ailments that negatively impact sleep quality, such as those listed above. Nonetheless, the condition of a patient with such an ailment may progressively worsen when symptoms disturb sleep quality, which in turn increases the frequency and/or intensity of symptoms. The increased symptoms may, in turn, limit patient activity during the day, and further disturb sleep quality.
SUMMARY In general, the invention is directed to techniques for collecting information that relates to patient activity and the quality of patient sleep via a medical device, such as an implantable medical device (IMD). The medical device, or another device, determines whether to collect activity or sleep quality information by determining whether the patient is attempting to sleep. Activity and sleep quality information collected by the device may be presented to a user, such as a clinician, and used to, for example, evaluate the effectiveness of a therapy delivered to the patient by the medical device. For example, the activity and sleep quality information may be associated with different therapy parameter sets used by the medical device to deliver therapy to the patient, permitting a user to evaluate relative efficacy of the therapy parameter sets.
The device may determine that the patient is attempting to sleep in a variety of ways. For example, the device may receive an indication from the patient that the patient is trying to fall asleep, e.g., via a patient programming device in embodiments in which the medical device determines whether the patient is attempting to sleep and is an implantable medical device. In other embodiments, the device may monitor the activity level of the patient, and identify the time that the patient is attempting to sleep by determining whether the patient has remained inactive for a threshold period of time and identifying the time at which the patient became inactive. In still other embodiments, the device may monitor patient posture, and identify the time when the patient is recumbent, e.g., lying down, as the time when the patient is attempting to fall asleep. In these embodiments, the device may also monitor patient activity, and confirm that the patient is attempting to sleep based on the patient's activity level.
As another example, the device may determine the time at which the patient begins attempting to fall asleep based on the level of melatonin within one or more bodily fluids, such as the patient's blood, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), or interstitial fluid. The device may also determine a melatonin level based on metabolites of melatonin located in the saliva or urine of the patient. Melatonin is a hormone secreted by the pineal gland into the bloodstream and the CSF as a function of exposure of the optic nerve to light, which synchronizes the patient's circadian rhythm. In particular, increased levels of melatonin during evening hours may cause physiological changes in the patient, which, in turn, may cause the patient to attempt to fall asleep. The device may, for example, detect an increase in the level of melatonin, and estimate the time that the patient will attempt to fall asleep based on the detection.
When the device determines that the patient is attempting to sleep, the device may determine values for one or more metrics that indicate the quality of a patient's sleep based on at least one monitored physiological parameter of the patient. Example physiological parameters that the device may monitor to determine sleep quality metric values include activity level, posture, heart rate, electrocardiogram (ECG) morphology, respiration rate, respiratory volume, blood pressure, blood oxygen saturation, partial pressure of oxygen within blood, partial pressure of oxygen within cerebrospinal fluid, muscular activity and tone, core temperature, subcutaneous temperature, arterial blood flow, brain electrical activity, eye motion, and galvanic skin response. In order to monitor one or more of these parameters, the device may include, or be coupled to, one or more sensors, each of which generates a signal as a function of one or more of these physiological parameters. The device may determine a value of one or more sleep quality metrics based on the monitored physiological parameters, and/or the variability of one or more of the monitored physiological parameters.
Sleep efficiency and sleep latency are example sleep quality metrics for which a device may determine values. Sleep efficiency may be measured as the percentage of time while the patient is attempting to sleep that the patient is actually asleep, or actually within one of the different sleep states. Sleep latency may be measured as the amount of time between a first time when the patient begins attempting to fall asleep and a second time when the patient falls asleep, and thereby indicates how long a patient requires to fall asleep.
The time when the patient begins attempting to fall asleep may be determined in any of the variety of ways identified above. The time at which the patient has fallen asleep may be determined based on any one or more of the other physiological parameters that may be monitored by the medical device as indicated above. For example, a discemable change, e.g., a decrease, in one or more physiological parameters, or the variability of one or more physiological parameters, may indicate that the patient has fallen asleep. In some embodiments, the device determines a sleep probability metric value based on a value of a physiological parameter. In such embodiments, the device compares the sleep probability metric value to a threshold to identify when the patient has fallen asleep. In some embodiments, the medical device determines a plurality of sleep probability metric values based on a value of each of a plurality of physiological parameters, averages or otherwise combines the plurality of sleep probability metric values to provide an overall sleep probability metric value, and compares the overall sleep probability metric value to a threshold to identify the time that the patient falls asleep.
Other sleep quality metrics that the device may determine include total time sleeping per day, the amount or percentage of time sleeping during nighttime or daytime hours per day, and the number of apnea and/or arousal events per night. In some embodiments, the device may determine which sleep state the patient is in, e.g., rapid eye movement (REM), or one of the nonrapid eye movement (NREM) states (S1, S2, S3, S4) based on monitored physiological parameters, and the amount of time per day spent in these various sleep states may be determined by the medical device as a sleep quality metric. Because they provide the most “refreshing” type of sleep, the amount of time spent in one or both of the S3 and S4 sleep states, in particular, may be determined as a sleep quality metric. In some embodiments, the device may determine average or median values of one or more sleep quality metrics over greater periods of time, e.g., a week or a month, as the value of the sleep quality metric. Further, in embodiments in which values for a plurality of the sleep quality metrics are determined, the device may determine a value for an overall sleep quality metric based on the values for the plurality of individual sleep quality metrics.
When the device determines that the patient is not attempting to sleep, the device periodically determines activity levels of the patient. For example, the device may monitor a signal generated by an accelerometer, a bonded piezoelectric crystal, a mercury switch, or a gyro. In some embodiments, the device may monitor a signal that indicates a physiological parameter of the patient, which in turn varies as a function of patient activity. For example, the device may monitor a signal that indicates the heart rate, ECG morphology, respiration rate, respiratory volume, core temperature, subcutaneous temperature, or muscular activity level of the patient.
The device may periodically determine an activity level of the patient based on the one or more signals. In some embodiments, the device periodically determines a number of activity counts based on the one or more signals, and the number of activity counts is stored as the activity level. The number of activity counts may be a number of threshold crossings by a signal generated by an accelerometer or piezoelectric crystal during a sample period, or a number of switch contacts indicated by the signal generated by a mercury switch during a sample period.
In some embodiments, the device may periodically determine a heart rate, value of an ECG morphological feature, respiration rate, respiratory volume, and/or muscular activity level of the patient based on one or more signals. The determined values of these parameters may be mean or median values. The device may compare a determined value of such a physiological parameter to one or more thresholds to determine a number of activity counts, which may be stored as a determined activity level. In other embodiments, the device may store the determined physiological parameter value as a determined activity level.
The use of activity counts, however, may allow the device to determine an activity level based on a plurality of signals. For example, the device may determine a first number of activity counts based on a sample of an accelerometer signal and a second number of activity counts based on a heart rate determined at the time the accelerometer signal was sampled. The device may determine an activity level by calculating the sum or average, which may be a weighted sum or average, of first and second activity counts.
The device may determine a value of one or more activity metrics based on determined activity levels. An activity metric value may be, for example, a mean or median activity level, such as an average number of activity counts per unit time. In other embodiments, an activity metric value may be chosen from a predetermined scale of activity metric values based on comparison of a mean or median activity level to one or more threshold values. The scale may be numeric, such as activity metric values from 1-10, or qualitative, such as low, medium or high activity.
In some embodiments, a number of collected activity levels are compared with one or more thresholds, and percentages of time above and/or below the thresholds are determined as one or more activity metric values. In other embodiments, a number of collected activity levels are compared with one or more thresholds, and an average length of time that consecutively determined activity levels remain above the threshold is determined as an activity metric value.
In some embodiments, the device that collects sleep quality and activity information is a medical device delivers a therapy to the patient. At any given time, the medical device delivers the therapy according to a current set of therapy parameters. For example, in embodiments in which the medical device is a neurostimulator, a therapy parameter set may include a pulse amplitude, a pulse width, a pulse rate, a duty cycle, and an indication of active electrodes. Different therapy parameter sets may be selected, e.g., by the patient via a programming device or a the medical device according to a schedule, and parameters of one or more therapy parameter sets may be adjusted by the patient to create new therapy parameter sets. In other words, over time, the medical device delivers the therapy according to a plurality of therapy parameter sets.
When the medical device determines a sleep quality metric value or an activity level, the medical device may identify the current therapy parameter set when the value or level is determined, and may associate that value or level with the therapy parameter set. For each available therapy parameter set, the medical device may store a representative value of each of one or more sleep quality metrics in a memory with an indication of the therapy parameter set with which that representative value is associated. A representative value of sleep quality metric for a therapy parameter set may be the mean or median of collected sleep quality metric values that have been associated with that therapy parameter set. For each available therapy parameter set, the medical device may also store one or more associated activity metric values that are determined based on activity levels associated with that therapy parameter set.
A programming device according to the invention may be capable of wireless communication with the medical device, and may receive from the medical device information identifying the therapy parameter set, representative sleep quality metric values associated with the plurality of therapy parameter sets, and activity metric values associated with the therapy parameter sets. The programming device may display a list of the therapy parameter sets, which may be ordered according to any of the associated representative sleep quality metric values or activity metric values. A user may select the metric by which the list is ordered. Such a list may be used by a clinician to, for example, identify effective or ineffective therapy parameter sets.
In some embodiments, the medical device does not determine whether the patient is attempting to sleep, determine values for sleep quality metrics, determine activity metric values, and/or periodically determine activity levels. Instead, in some embodiments, a computing device, such as a programming device performs one or more of these functions. For example, a programming device may be used to program a medical device, and also receive physiological parameter values, activity levels, and/or samples of an activity signal from the medical device, and determine activity metric values and sleep quality metric values based on the information received from the medical device using any of the techniques described herein with reference to a medical device.
In some embodiments, the medical device may associate recorded physiological parameter values, signal samples, and/or activity levels with a current therapy parameter set, and may provide information identifying a plurality of therapy parameter sets and collected information associated with the therapy parameter sets to a programming device or other computing device. In such embodiments, the programming device may determine representative sleep quality metric values and activity metric values associated with the various therapy parameter sets using any of techniques described herein with reference to a medical device. The programming device may receive such information from the medical device in real time, or may interrogate the medical device for information recorded by the medical device over a period of time.
In other embodiments, a system according to the invention does not include a programming device or other computing device. For example, an external medical device according to the invention may include a display, collect sleep quality and activity information as described herein, and display sleep quality and activity information to a user via the display.
In one embodiment, the invention is directed to a method in which a plurality of physiological parameters of a patient are monitored. The plurality of physiological parameters includes at least one physiological parameter indicative of patient physical activity. The method includes a determination of when the patient is attempting to sleep. Values of at least one metric that is indicative of sleep quality are determined based on at least one of the physiological parameters and a determination that the patient is attempting to sleep. An activity level of the patient is periodically determined based on at least one of the physiological parameters and a determination that the patient is not attempting to sleep.
In another embodiment, the invention is directed to a medical system including a device and a processor. The device monitors a plurality of physiological parameters of a patient, and the plurality of physiological parameters includes at least one physiological parameter indicative of patient physical activity. The processor determines when the patient is attempting to sleep, determines values of at least one metric that is indicative of sleep quality based on at least one of the physiological parameters and a determination that the patient is attempting to sleep, and periodically determines an activity level of the patient based on at least one of the physiological parameters and a determination that the patient is not attempting to sleep.
In another embodiment, the invention is directed to a medical system including means for monitoring a plurality of physiological parameters of a patient, wherein the plurality of physiological parameters includes at least one physiological parameter indicative of patient physical activity, means for determining when the patient is attempting to sleep, means for determining values of at least one metric that is indicative of sleep quality based on at least one of the physiological parameters and a determination that the patient is attempting to sleep, and means for periodically determining an activity level of the patient based on at least one of the physiological parameters and a determination that the patient is not attempting to sleep.
In another embodiment, the invention is directed to a medical system including an implantable medical device and an external programming device that includes a display. The implantable medical device delivers a therapy to a patient based on a plurality of therapy parameter sets, monitors a plurality of physiological parameters, of the patient including at least one physiological parameter indicative of patient physical activity, determines when the patient is attempting to sleep, determines values of at least one metric that is indicative of sleep quality based on at least one of the physiological parameters and a determination that the patient is attempting to sleep, periodically determines an activity level of the patient based on at least one of the physiological parameters and a determination that the patient is not attempting to sleep, associates each determined sleep quality metric value and each determined activity level with a current therapy parameter set, determines a representative value of each of the at least one sleep quality metrics for each of the plurality of therapy parameter sets based on the sleep quality metric values associated with the therapy parameter set, and determines at least one activity metric value for each of the plurality of therapy parameter sets based on the activity levels associated with the therapy parameter set. The external programming device receives information identifying the plurality of therapy parameter sets and the sleep quality metric values and activity metric values associated with the therapy parameter sets from the implantable medical device, and presents a list of the therapy parameter sets and the associated sleep quality metric values to a user.
In another embodiment, the invention is directed to a computer-readable medium comprising program instructions. The program instructions cause a programmable processor to monitor a plurality of physiological parameters of a patient, wherein the plurality of physiological parameters includes at least one physiological parameter indicative of patient physical activity, determine when the patient is attempting to sleep, determine values of at least one metric that is indicative of sleep quality based on at least one of the physiological parameters and a determination that the patient is attempting to sleep, and periodically determine an activity level of the patient based on at least one of the physiological parameters and a determination that the patient is not attempting to sleep.
The invention may be capable of providing one or more advantages. For example, by providing information related to patient activity and the quality of a patient's sleep to a clinician and/or the patient, a system according to the invention can improve the course of treatment of an ailment of the patient, such as chronic pain. For example, using activity and sleep quality information provided by the system, the clinician could evaluate a plurality of therapy parameter sets to identify those which are, or are not, efficacious.
The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGSFIG. 1 is a conceptual diagram illustrating an example system that includes an implantable medical device that collects sleep quality information and activity information according to the invention.
FIG. 2 is a block diagram further illustrating the example system and implantable medical device ofFIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a block diagram illustrating an example memory of the implantable medical device ofFIG. 1.
FIG. 4 is a flow diagram illustrating an example method for collecting sleep quality information and activity information that may be employed by an implantable medical device.
FIG. 5 is a flow diagram illustrating an example method for collecting sleep quality information that may be employed by an implantable medical device.
FIG. 6 is a flow diagram illustrating an example method for collecting activity information that may be employed by an implantable medical device.
FIG. 7 is a flow diagram illustrating an example method for associating sleep quality information and activity information with therapy parameter sets that may be employed by an implantable medical device.
FIG. 8 is a block diagram illustrating an example clinician programmer.
FIG. 9 illustrates an example list of therapy parameter sets and associated sleep quality information and activity information that may be presented by a clinician programmer.
FIG. 10 is a flow diagram illustrating an example method for displaying a list of therapy parameter sets and associated sleep quality information and activity information that may be employed by a clinician programmer.
FIG. 11 is a conceptual diagram illustrating a monitor that monitors values of one or more physiological parameters of the patient.
DETAILED DESCRIPTIONFIG. 1 is a conceptual diagram illustrating anexample system10 that includes an implantable medical device (IMD)14 that collects information relating to the quality of sleep experienced by apatient12 and the activity ofpatient12 according to the invention. Sleep quality information and activity information collected byIMD14 is provided to a user, such as a clinician or the patient. Using the sleep quality information and activity information collected byIMD14, a current course of therapy for an ailment ofpatient12 may be evaluated, and an improved course of therapy for the ailment may be identified.
In the illustratedexample system10,IMD14 takes the form of an implantable neurostimulator that delivers neurostimulation therapy in the form of electrical pulses topatient12. However, the invention is not limited to implementation via an implantable neurostimulator. For example, in some embodiments of the invention, an implantable pump or implantable cardiac rhythm management device, such as a pacemaker may collect sleep quality information and activity information. Further, the invention is not limited to implementation via an IMD. In other words, any implantable or external medical device may collect sleep quality and activity information according to the invention.
In the example ofFIG. 1,IMD14 delivers neurostimulation therapy topatient12 vialeads16A and16B (collectively “leads16”). Leads16 may, as shown inFIG. 1, be implanted proximate to thespinal cord18 ofpatient12, andIMD14 may deliver spinal cord stimulation (SCS) therapy topatient12 in order to, for example, reduce pain experienced bypatient12. However, the invention is not limited to the configuration of leads16 shown inFIG. 1 or the delivery of SCS therapy. For example, one or more leads16 may extend fromIMD14 to the brain (not shown) ofpatient12, andIMD14 may deliver deep brain stimulation (DBS) therapy topatient12 to, for example, treat tremor or epilepsy. As further examples, one or more leads16 may be implanted proximate to the pelvic nerves (not shown) or stomach (not shown), andIMD14 may deliver neurostimulation therapy to treat incontinence, sexual dysfunction or gastroparesis.
IMD14 delivers therapy according to a set of therapy parameters, i.e., a set of values for a number of parameters that define the therapy delivered according to that therapy parameter set. In embodiments whereIMD14 delivers neurostimulation therapy in the form of electrical pulses, the parameters for each therapy parameter set may include voltage or current pulse amplitudes, pulse widths, pulse rates, and the like. Further, each of leads16 includes electrodes (not shown inFIG. 1), and a therapy parameter set may include information identifying which electrodes have been selected for delivery of pulses, and the polarities of the selected electrodes. Therapy parameter sets used byIMD14 may include a number of parameter sets programmed by a clinician (not shown), and parameter sets representing adjustments made bypatient12 to these preprogrammed sets.
System10 also includes aclinician programmer20. A clinician (not shown) may useclinician programmer20 to program therapy forpatient12, e.g., specify a number of therapy parameter sets and provide the parameter sets toIMD14. The clinician may also useclinician programmer20 to retrieve information collected byIMD14. The clinician may useclinician programmer20 to communicate withIMD14 both during initial programming ofIMD14, and for collection of information and further programming during follow-up visits.
Clinician programmer20 may, as shown inFIG. 1, be a handheld computing device.Clinician programmer20 includes adisplay22, such as a LCD or LED display, to display information to a user.Clinician programmer20 may also include akeypad24, which may be used by a user to interact withclinician programmer20. In some embodiments,display22 may be a touch screen display, and a user may interact withclinician programmer20 viadisplay22. A user may also interact withclinician programmer20 using peripheral pointing devices, such as a stylus or mouse.Keypad24 may take the form of an alphanumeric keypad or a reduced set of keys associated with particular functions.
System10 also includes apatient programmer26, which also may, as shown inFIG. 1, be a handheld computing device.Patient12 may usepatient programmer26 to control the delivery of therapy byIMD14. For example, usingpatient programmer26,patient12 may select a current therapy parameter set from among the therapy parameter sets preprogrammed by the clinician, or may adjust one or more parameters of a preprogrammed therapy parameter set to arrive at the current therapy parameter set.
Patient programmer26 may include adisplay28 and akeypad30, to allowpatient12 to interact withpatient programmer26. In some embodiments,display28 may be a touch screen display, andpatient12 may interact withpatient programmer26 viadisplay28.Patient12 may also interact withpatient programmer26 using peripheral pointing devices, such as a stylus, mouse, or the like.
However, clinician andpatient programmers20,26 are not limited to the hand-held computer embodiments illustrated inFIG. 1.Programmers20,26 according to the invention may be any sort of computing device. For example, aprogrammer20,26 according to the invention may be a tablet-based computing device, a desktop computing device, or a workstation.
IMD14,clinician programmer20 andpatient programmer26 may, as shown inFIG. 1, communicate via wireless communication.Clinician programmer20 andpatient programmer26 may, for example, communicate via wireless communication withIMD14 using radio frequency (RF) or infrared telemetry techniques known in the art.Clinician programmer20 andpatient programmer26 may communicate with each other using any of a variety of local wireless communication techniques, such as RF communication according to the 802.11 or Bluetooth specification sets, infrared communication according to the IRDA specification set, or other standard or proprietary telemetry protocols.
Clinician programmer20 andpatient programmer26 need not communicate wirelessly, however. For example,programmers20 and26 may communicate via a wired connection, such as via a serial communication cable, or via exchange of removable media, such as magnetic or optical disks, or memory cards or sticks. Further,clinician programmer20 may communicate with one or both ofIMD14 andpatient programmer26 via remote telemetry techniques known in the art, communicating via a local area network (LAN), wide area network (WAN), public switched telephone network (PSTN), or cellular telephone network, for example.
As mentioned above,IMD14 collects information that relates to the quality of sleep experienced bypatient12 and the activity ofpatient12. In particular, as will be described in greater detail below,IMD14 determines whetherpatient12 is attempting to sleep, determines values for one or more sleep quality metrics whenpatient12 is attempting to sleep, and periodically determines activity levels ofpatient12 whenpatient12 is not attempting to sleep, i.e., is more likely to be active. In some embodiments,IMD14 determines values for one or more activity metrics based on the determined activity levels.IMD14 may include or be coupled to one or more sensors (not shown inFIG. 1), each of which generates a signal as a function of one or more of these physiological parameters, and may determine sleep quality metrics and activity levels based on the signals output by the sensors.
At any given time, as indicated above,IMD14 delivers the therapy according to a current set of therapy parameters. Different therapy parameter sets may be selected, e.g., bypatient12 viapatient programmer26 orIMD14 according to a schedule, and parameters of one or more therapy parameter sets may be adjusted bypatient12 viapatient programmer26 to create new therapy parameter sets. In other words, over time,IMD14 delivers the therapy according to a plurality of therapy parameter sets.
In some embodiments, as will be described in greater detail below,IMD14 identifies the therapy parameter set currently used to deliver therapy topatient12 when a value of a sleep quality metric or an activity level is determined, and may associate the determined values and levels with current therapy parameter sets. For each of the plurality of therapy parameter sets,IMD14 may store a representative value of each of one or more sleep quality metrics in a memory with an indication of the therapy parameter set with which that representative value is associated. A representative value of a sleep quality metric for a therapy parameter set may be the mean or median of collected sleep quality metric values that have been associated with that therapy parameter set. For each available therapy parameter set,IMD14 may also store one or more associated activity metric values that are determined based on activity levels associated with that therapy parameter set.
A programming or other computing device, such asclinician programmer20, may receive information identifying the therapy parameter set, representative sleep quality metric values associated with the plurality of therapy parameter sets, and activity metric values associated with the therapy parameter sets fromIMD14.Clinician programmer20 may display a list of the therapy parameter sets, which may be ordered according to any of the associated representative sleep quality metric values or activity metric values. A clinician may select the metric by which the list is ordered. Such a list may be used by the clinician to, for example, identify effective or ineffective therapy parameter sets.
FIG. 2 is a block diagram further illustratingsystem10. In particular,FIG. 2 illustrates an example configuration ofIMD14 and leads16A and16B.FIG. 2 also illustratessensors40A and40B (collectively “sensors40”) that generate signals as a function of one or more physiological parameters ofpatient12. As will be described in greater detail below,IMD14 monitors at least some of the signals to determine values for one or more metrics that are indicative of sleep quality when the patient is attempting to sleep, and monitors at least some of the signals to determine activity levels ofpatient12 when the patient is not attempting to sleep.
IMD14 may deliver neurostimulation therapy viaelectrodes42A-D oflead16A andelectrodes42E-H oflead16B (collectively “electrodes42”). Electrodes42 may be ring electrodes. The configuration, type and number of electrodes42 illustrated inFIG. 2 are merely exemplary. For example, leads16A and16B may each include eight electrodes42, and the electrodes42 need not be arranged linearly on each of leads16A and16B.
Electrodes42 are electrically coupled to atherapy delivery module44 vialeads16A and16B.Therapy delivery module44 may, for example, include an output pulse generator coupled to a power source such as a battery.Therapy delivery module44 may deliver electrical pulses topatient12 via at least some of electrodes42 under the control of aprocessor46, which controlstherapy delivery module44 to deliver neurostimulation therapy according to to a current therapy parameter set. However, the invention is not limited to implantable neurostimulator embodiments or even to IMDs that deliver electrical stimulation. For example, in some embodiments, atherapy delivery module44 of an IMD may include a pump, circuitry to control the pump, and a reservoir to store a therapeutic agent for delivery via the pump.
Processor46 may include a microprocessor, a controller, a digital signal processor (DSP), an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), a field-programmable gate array (FPGA), discrete logic circuitry, or the like.Memory48 may include any volatile, non-volatile, magnetic, optical, or electrical media, such as a random access memory (RAM), read-only memory (ROM), non-volatile RAM (NVRAM), electrically-erasable programmable ROM (EEPROM), flash memory, and the like. In some embodiments,memory48 stores program instructions that, when executed byprocessor46,cause IMD14 andprocessor46 to perform the functions attributed to them herein.
Each of sensors40 generates a signal as a function of one or more physiological parameters ofpatient12.IMD14 may include circuitry (not shown) that conditions the signals generated by sensors40 such that they may be analyzed byprocessor46. For example,IMD14 may include one or more analog to digital converters to convert analog signals generated by sensors40 into digital signals usable byprocessor46, as well as suitable filter and amplifier circuitry. Although shown as including two sensors40,system10 may include any number of sensors.
Further, as illustrated inFIG. 2, sensors40 may be included as part ofIMD14, or coupled toIMD14 via leads16. Sensors40 may be coupled toIMD14 via therapy leads16A and16B, or via other leads16, such aslead16C depicted inFIG. 2. In some embodiments, a sensor40 located outside ofIMD14 may be in wireless communication withprocessor46. Wireless communication between sensors40 andIMD14 may, as examples, include RF communication or communication via electrical signals conducted through the tissue and/or fluid ofpatient12.
Exemplary physiological parameters ofpatient12 that may be monitored byIMD14 include activity, posture, heart rate, ECG morphology, respiration rate, respiratory volume, blood pressure, blood oxygen saturation, partial pressure of oxygen within blood, partial pressure of oxygen within cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), muscular activity and tone, core temperature, subcutaneous temperature, arterial blood flow, the level of melatonin within one or more bodily fluids, brain electrical activity, and eye motion. Further, as discussed above, in some external medical device embodiments of the invention, galvanic skin response may additionally or alternatively be monitored. Sensors40 may be of any type known in the art capable of generating a signal as a function of one or more of these parameters.
Processor46 may identify whenpatient12 is attempting to sleep in a variety of ways. For example,processor46 may identify the time that patient begins attempting to fall asleep based on an indication received frompatient12, e.g., viaclinician programmer20 and atelemetry circuit50. In other embodiments,processor46 identifies the time thatpatient12 begins attempting to fall asleep based on the activity level ofpatient12.
In such embodiments,IMD14 may include one or more sensors40 that generate a signal as a function of patient activity. For example, sensors40 may include one or more accelerometers, gyros, mercury switches, or bonded piezoelectric crystals that generates a signal as a function of patient activity, e.g., body motion, footfalls or other impact events, and the like. Additionally or alternatively, sensors40 may include one or more electrodes that generate an electromyogram (EMG) signal as a function of muscle electrical activity, which may indicate the activity level of a patient. The electrodes may be, for example, located in the legs, abdomen, chest, back or buttocks ofpatient12 to detect muscle activity associated with walking, running, or the like. The electrodes may be coupled toIMD14 wirelessly or by leads16 or, ifIMD14 is implanted in these locations, integrated with a housing ofIMD14.
However, bonded piezoelectric crystals located in these areas generate signals as a function of muscle contraction in addition to body motion, footfalls or other impact events. Consequently, use of bonded piezoelectric crystals to detect activity ofpatient12 may be preferred in some embodiments in which it is desired to detect muscle activity in addition to body motion, footfalls, or other impact events. Bonded piezoelectric crystals may be coupled toIMD14 wirelessly or via leads16, or piezoelectric crystals may be bonded to the can ofIMD14 when the IMD is implanted in these areas, e.g., in the back, chest, buttocks or abdomen ofpatient12.
Processor46 may identify a time when the activity level ofpatient12 falls below a threshold activity level value stored inmemory48, and may determine whether the activity level remains substantially below the threshold activity level value for a threshold amount of time stored inmemory48. In other words,patient12 remaining inactive for a sufficient period of time may indicate thatpatient12 is attempting to fall asleep. Ifprocessor46 determines that the threshold amount of time is exceeded,processor46 may identify the time at which the activity level fell below the threshold activity level value as the time thatpatient12 began attempting to fall asleep.
In some embodiments,processor46 determines whetherpatient12 is attempting to fall asleep based on whetherpatient12 is or is not recumbent, e.g., lying down. In such embodiments, sensors40 may include a plurality of accelerometers, gyros, or magnetometers oriented orthogonally that generate signals which indicate the posture ofpatient12. In addition to being oriented orthogonally with respect to each other, each of sensors40 used to detect the posture ofpatient12 may be generally aligned with an axis of the body ofpatient12. In exemplary embodiments,IMD14 includes three orthogonally oriented posture sensors40.
When sensors40 include accelerometers, for example, that are aligned in this manner,processor46 may monitor the magnitude and polarity of DC components of the signals generated by the accelerometers to determine the orientation ofpatient12 relative to the Earth's gravity, e.g., the posture ofpatient12. In particular, theprocessor46 may compare the DC components of the signals to respective threshold values stored inmemory48 to determine whetherpatient12 is or is not recumbent. Further information regarding use of orthogonally aligned accelerometers to determine patient posture may be found in a commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 5,593,431, which issued to Todd J. Sheldon.
Other sensors40 that may generate a signal that indicates the posture ofpatient12 include electrodes that generate an electromyogram (EMG) signal, or bonded piezoelectric crystals that generate a signal as a function of contraction of muscles. Such sensors40 may be implanted in the legs, buttocks, abdomen, or back ofpatient12, as described above. The signals generated by such sensors when implanted in these locations may vary based on the posture ofpatient12, e.g., may vary based on whether the patient is standing, sitting, or laying down.
Further, the posture ofpatient12 may affect the thoracic impedance of the patient. Consequently, sensors40 may include an electrode pair, including one electrode integrated with the housing ofIMD14 and one of electrodes42, that generates a signal as a function of the thoracic impedance ofpatient12, andprocessor46 may detect the posture or posture changes ofpatient12 based on the signal. The electrodes of the pair may be located on opposite sides of the patient's thorax. For example, the electrode pair may include one of electrodes42 located proximate to the spine of a patient for delivery of SCS therapy, andIMD14 with an electrode integrated in its housing may be implanted in the abdomen ofpatient12.
Additionally, changes of the posture ofpatient12 may cause pressure changes with the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of the patient. Consequently, sensors40 may include pressure sensors coupled to one or more intrathecal or intracerebroventricular catheters, or pressure sensors coupled toIMD14 wirelessly or via lead16. CSF pressure changes associated with posture changes may be particularly evident within the brain of the patient, e.g., may be particularly apparent in an intracranial pressure (ICP) waveform.
In some embodiments,processor46 considers both the posture and the activity level ofpatient12 when determining whetherpatient12 is attempting to fall asleep. For example,processor46 may determine whetherpatient12 is attempting to fall asleep based on a sufficiently long period of sub-threshold activity, as described above, and may identify the time that patient began attempting to fall asleep as the time whenpatient12 became recumbent. Any of a variety of combinations or variations of these techniques may be used to determine whenpatient12 is attempting to fall asleep, and a specific one or more techniques may be selected based on the sleeping and activity habits of a particular patient.
In other embodiments,processor46 determines whenpatient12 is attempting to fall asleep based on the level of melatonin in a bodily fluid. In such embodiments, a sensor40 may take the form of a chemical sensor that is sensitive to the level of melatonin or a metabolite of melatonin in the bodily fluid, and estimate the time thatpatient12 will attempt to fall asleep based on the detection. For example,processor46 may compare the melatonin level or rate of change in the melatonin level to a threshold level stored inmemory48, and identify the time that threshold value is exceeded.Processor46 may identify the time thatpatient12 is attempting to fall asleep as the time that the threshold is exceeded, or some amount of time after the threshold is exceeded. Any of a variety of combinations or variations of the above-described techniques may be used to determine whenpatient12 is attempting to fall asleep, and a specific one or more techniques may be selected based on the sleeping and activity habits of a particular patient.
WhenIMD14 determines thatpatient12 is attempting to sleep,IMD14 may determine values for one or more metrics that indicate the quality of a patient's sleep based on at least one of the above-identified physiological parameters of the patient. In particular, in order to determine values for some sleep quality metrics,IMD14 determines whenpatient12 is asleep, e.g., identify the times thatpatient12 falls asleep and wakes up, in addition to whenpatient12 is attempting to fall asleep. The detected values of physiological parameters ofpatient12, such as activity level, heart rate, ECG morphological features, respiration rate, respiratory volume, blood pressure, blood oxygen saturation, partial pressure of oxygen within blood, partial pressure of oxygen within cerebrospinal fluid, muscular activity and tone, core temperature, subcutaneous temperature, arterial blood flow, brain electrical activity, eye motion, and galvanic skin response may discernibly change when patient12 falls asleep or awakes. Some of these physiological parameters may be at low values whenpatient12 is asleep. Further, the variability of at least some of these parameters, such as heart rate and respiration rate, may be at a low value when the patient is asleep.
Consequently, in order to detect when patient12 falls asleep and wakes up,processor46 may monitor one or more of these physiological parameters, or the variability of these physiological parameters, and detect the discemable changes in their values associated with a transition between a sleeping state and an awake state. In some embodiments,processor46 may determine a mean or median value for a parameter based on values of a signal over time, and determine whetherpatient12 is asleep or awake based on the mean or median value.Processor46 may compare one or more parameter or parameter variability values to thresholds stored inmemory48 to detect when patient12 falls asleep or awakes. The thresholds may be absolute values of a physiological parameter, or time rate of change values for the physiological parameter, e.g., to detect sudden changes in the value of a parameter or parameter variability. In some embodiments, a threshold used byprocessor46 to determine whetherpatient12 is asleep may include a time component. For example, a threshold may require that a physiological parameter be above or below a threshold value for a period of time beforeprocessor46 determines that patient is awake or asleep.
In some embodiments, in order to determine whetherpatient12 is asleep,processor46 monitors a plurality of physiological parameters, and determines a value of a metric that indicates the probability thatpatient12 is asleep for each of the parameters based on a value of the parameter. In particular, theprocessor46 may apply a function or look-up table to the current, mean or median value, and/or the variability of each of a plurality of physiological parameters to determine a sleep probability metric for each of the plurality of physiological parameters. A sleep probability metric value may be a numeric value, and in some embodiments may be a probability value, e.g., a number within the range from 0 to 1, or a percentage value.
Processor46 may average or otherwise combine the plurality of sleep probability metric values to provide an overall sleep probability metric value. In some embodiments,processor46 may apply a weighting factor to one or more of the sleep probability metric values prior to combination.Processor46 may compare the overall sleep probability metric value to one or more threshold values stored inmemory48 to determine when patient12 falls asleep or awakes. Use of sleep probability metric values to determine when a patient is asleep based on a plurality of monitored physiological parameters is described in greater detail in a commonly-assigned and copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. __________ by Ken Heruth and Keith Miesel, entitled “DETECTING SLEEP,” bearing Attorney Docket No. 1023-360US02 and filed on Mar. 16, 2005, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
To enableprocessor46 to determine whenpatient12 is asleep or awake, sensors40 may include, for example, activity sensors as described above. In some embodiments, the activity sensors may include electrodes or bonded piezoelectric crystals, which may be implanted in the back, chest, buttocks, or abdomen ofpatient12 as described above. In such embodiments,processor46 may detect the electrical activation and contractions of muscles associated with gross motor activity of the patient, e.g., walking,.running or the like via the signals generated by such sensors.Processor46 may also detect spasmodic or pain related muscle activation via the signals generated by such sensors. Spasmodic or pain related muscle activation may indicate thatpatient12 is not sleeping, e.g., unable to sleep, or ifpatient12 is sleeping, may indicate a lower level of sleep quality.
As another example, sensors40 may include electrodes located on leads or integrated as part of the housing ofIMD14 that generate an electrogram signal as a function of electrical activity of the heart ofpatient12, andprocessor46 may monitor the heart rate ofpatient12 based on the electrogram signal. In other embodiments, a sensor may include an acoustic sensor withinIMD14, a pressure or flow sensor within the bloodstream or cerebrospinal fluid ofpatient12, or a temperature sensor located within the bloodstream ofpatient12. The signals generated by such sensors may vary as a function of contraction of the heart ofpatient12, and can be used byIMD14 to monitor the heart rate ofpatient12.
In some embodiments,processor46 may detect, and measure values for one or more ECG morphological features within an electrogram generated by electrodes as described above. ECG morphological features may vary in a manner that indicates whetherpatient12 is asleep or awake. For example, the amplitude of the ST segment of the ECG may decrease whenpatient12 is asleep. Further, the amplitude of QRS complex or T-wave may decrease, and the widths of the QRS complex and T-wave may increase whenpatient12 is asleep. The QT interval and the latency of an evoked response may increase whenpatient12 is asleep, and the amplitude of the evoked response may decrease whenpatient12 is asleep.
In some embodiments, sensors40 may include an electrode pair, including one electrode integrated with the housing ofIMD14 and one of electrodes42, that generates a signal as a function of the thoracic impedance ofpatient12, as described above, which varies as a function of respiration bypatient12. In other embodiments, sensors40 may include a strain gauge, bonded piezoelectric element, or pressure sensor within the blood or cerebrospinal fluid that generates a signal that varies based on patient respiration. An electrogram generated by electrodes as discussed above may also be modulated by patient respiration, and may be used as an indirect representation of respiration rate.
Sensors40 may include electrodes that generate an electromyogram (EMG) signal as a function of muscle electrical activity, as described above, or may include any of a variety of known temperature sensors to generate a signal as a function of a core or subcutaneous temperature ofpatient12. Such electrodes and temperature sensors may be incorporated within the housing ofIMD14, or coupled toIMD14 wirelessly or via leads. Sensors40 may also include a pressure sensor within, or in contact with, a blood vessel. The pressure sensor may generate a signal as a function of the a blood pressure ofpatient12, and may, for example, comprise a Chronicle Hemodynamic Monitor™ commercially available from Medtronic, Inc. of Minneapolis, Minnesota. Further, certain muscles ofpatient12, such as the muscles of the patient's neck, may discernibly relax whenpatient12 is asleep or within certain sleep states. Consequently, sensors40 may include strain gauges or EMG electrodes implanted in such locations that generate a signal as a function of muscle tone.
Sensors40 may also include optical pulse oximetry sensors or Clark dissolved oxygen sensors located within, as part of a housing of, or outside ofIMD14, which generate signals as a function of blood oxygen saturation and blood oxygen partial pressure respectively. In some embodiments,system10 may include a catheter with a distal portion located within the cerebrospinal fluid ofpatient12, and the distal end may include a Clark dissolved oxygen sensor to generate a signal as a function of the partial pressure of oxygen within the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Embodiments in which an IMD comprises an implantable pump, for example, may include a catheter with a distal portion located in the cerebrospinal fluid.
In some embodiments, sensors40 may include one or more intraluminal, extraluminal, or external flow sensors positioned to generate a signal as a function of arterial blood flow. A flow sensor may be, for example, an electromagnetic, thermal convection, ultrasonic-Doppler, or laser-Doppler flow sensor. Further, in some external medical device embodiments of the invention, sensors40 may include one or more electrodes positioned on the skin ofpatient12 to generate a signal as a function of galvanic skin response.
Additionally, in some embodiments, sensors40 may include one or more electrodes positioned within or proximate to the brain of patient, which detect electrical activity of the brain. For example, in embodiments in whichIMD14 delivers stimulation or other therapy to the brain,processor46 may be coupled to electrodes implanted on or within the brain via a lead16. In other embodiments,processor46 may be wirelessly coupled to electrodes that detect brain electrical activity.
For example, one or more modules may be implanted beneath the scalp of the patient, each module including a housing, one or more electrodes, and circuitry to wirelessly transmit the signals detected by the one or more electrodes toIMD14. In other embodiments, the electrodes may be applied to the patient's scalp, and electrically coupled to a module that includes circuitry for wirelessly transmitting the signals detected by the electrodes toIMD14. The electrodes may be glued to the patient's scalp, or a head band, hair net, cap, or the like may incorporate the electrodes and the module, and may be worn bypatient12 to apply the electrodes to the patient's scalp when, for example, the patient is attempting to sleep. The signals detected by the electrodes and transmitted toIMD14 may be electroencephalogram (EEG) signals, andprocessor46 may process the EEG signals to detect whenpatient12 is asleep using any of a variety of known techniques, such as techniques that identify whether a patient is asleep based on the amplitude and/or frequency of the EEG signals.
Also, the motion of the eyes ofpatient12 may vary depending on whether the patient is sleeping and which sleep state the patient is in. Consequently, sensors40 may include electrodes place proximate to the eyes ofpatient12 to detect electrical activity associated with motion of the eyes, e.g., to generate an electro-oculography (EOG) signal. Such electrodes may be coupled toIMD14 via one or more leads16, or may be included within modules that include circuitry to wirelessly transmit detected signals toIMD14. Wirelessly coupled modules incorporating electrodes to detect eye motion may be worn externally bypatient12, e.g., attached to the skin ofpatient12 proximate to the eyes by an adhesive when the patient is attempting to sleep.
Processor46 may also detect arousals and/or apneas that occur whenpatient12 is asleep based on one or more of the above-identified physiological parameters. For example,processor46 may detect an arousal based on an increase or sudden increase in one or more of heart rate, heart rate variability, respiration rate, respiration rate variability, blood pressure, or muscular activity as the occurrence of an arousal.Processor46 may detect an apnea based on a disturbance in the respiration rate ofpatient12, e.g., a period with no respiration.
Processor46 may also detect arousals or apneas based on sudden changes in one or more of the ECG morphological features identified above. For example, a sudden elevation of the ST segment within the ECG may indicate an arousal or an apnea. Further, sudden changes in the amplitude or frequency of an EEG signal, EOG signal, or muscle tone signal may indicate an apnea or arousal.Memory48 may store thresholds used byprocessor46 to detect arousals and apneas.Processor46 may determine, as a sleep quality metric value, the number of apnea events and/or arousals during a night.
Further, in some embodiments,processor46 may determine which sleepstate patient12 is in during sleep, e.g., REM, S1, S2, S3, or S4, based on one or more of the monitored physiological parameters. In some embodiments,memory48 may store one or more thresholds for each of sleep states, andprocessor46 may compare physiological parameter or sleep probability metric values to the thresholds to determine which sleepstate patient12 is currently in. Further, in some embodiments,processor46 may use any of a variety of known techniques for determining which sleep state patient is in based on an EEG signal, whichprocessor46 may receive via electrodes as described above, such as techniques that identify sleep state based on the amplitude and/or frequency of the EEG signals. In some embodiments,processor46 may also determine which sleep state patient is in based on an EOG signal, whichprocessor46 may receive via electrodes as described above, either alone or in combination with an EEG signal, using any of a variety of techniques known in the art.Processor46 may determine, as sleep quality metric values, the amounts of time per night spent in the various sleep states.
The S3 and S4 sleep states may be of particular importance to the quality of sleep experienced bypatient12. Interruption from reaching these states, or inadequate time per night spent in these states, may causepatient12 to not feel rested. For this reason, the S3 and S4 sleep states are believed to provide the “refreshing” part of sleep.
In some cases, interruption from reaching the S3 and S4 sleep states, or inadequate time per night spent in these states has been demonstrated to cause normal subjects to exhibit some symptoms of fibromyalgia. Also, subjects with fibromyalgia usually do not reach these sleep states. For these reasons, in some embodiments,IMD14 may determine an amount or percentage of time spent in one or both of the S3 and S4 sleep states as a sleep quality metric.
Whenprocessor46 determines thatpatient12 is not attempting to sleep,processor46 periodically determines activity levels of the patient. For example, a sensor40 may be an accelerometer, a bonded piezoelectric crystal, a mercury switch, or a gyro, andprocessor46 may determine an activity level based on a signal generated by one of these types of sensors40 by sampling the signal and determining a number of activity counts during the sample period.Processor46 may then store the determined number of activity counts inmemory48 as an activity level.
For example,processor46 may compare the sample of a signal generated by an accelerometer or piezoelectric crystal to one or more amplitude thresholds stored withinmemory48.Processor46 may identify each threshold crossing as an activity count. Whereprocessor46 compares the sample to multiple thresholds with varying amplitudes,processor46 may identify crossing of higher amplitude thresholds as multiple activity counts. Using multiple thresholds to identify activity counts,processor46 may be able to more accurately determine the extent of patient activity for both high impact, low frequency and low impact, high frequency activities. In embodiments in which a sensor40 takes the form of a mercury switch,processor46 may identify the number of switch contacts indicated during the sample period as the number of activity counts.
In embodiments in which a sensor40 comprises an accelerometer or piezoelectric crystal,IMD14 may include a filter (not shown), orprocessor46 may apply a digital filter, that passes a band from approximately 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz. The filter may reduce noise in the signal, and pass the portion of the signal that reflects patient activity.
In some embodiments, theprocessor46 may monitor a signal that indicates a physiological parameter ofpatient12, which in turn varies as a function of patient activity. For example, in some embodiments, sensors40 may includes one or more sensors that generate a signal that indicates the heart rate, ECG morphology, respiration rate, respiratory volume, or muscular activity of the patient, as described above. In such embodiments,processor46 may periodically determine the heart rate, values of ECG morphological features, respiration rate, respiratory volume, or muscular activity level ofpatient12 based on the signal. The determined values of these parameters may be mean or median values.
In some embodiments,processor46 compares a determined value of such a physiological parameter to one or more thresholds or a look-up table stored in memory to determine a number of activity counts, and stores the determined number of activity counts inmemory48 as a determined activity level. In other embodiments,processor46 may store the determined physiological parameter value as a determined activity level. The use of activity counts, however, may allowprocessor46 to determine an activity level based on a plurality of signals generated by a plurality of sensors40. For example,processor46 may determine a first number of activity counts based on a sample of an accelerometer signal and a second number of activity counts based on a heart rate determined from an electrogram signal at the time the accelerometer signal was sampled.Processor46 may determine an activity level by calculating the sum or average, which may be a weighted sum or average, of first and second activity counts.
Processor46 may record activity levels continuously or periodically, e.g., one sample every minute or continuously for ten minutes each hour.Further processor46 need not determine sleep quality metrics eachtime patient12 attempts to sleep, or record activity levels eachtime patient12 is not attempting to sleep. In some embodiments,processor46 may record activity levels and determine sleep quality metric values in response to receiving an indication frompatient12 viapatient programmer26.Patient12 may provide the indication by depressing a button or otherwise manipulating user input media onprogrammer26. For example,processor46 may record activity levels and sleep quality metrics during times whenpatient12 believes the therapy delivered byIMD14 is ineffective and/or the symptoms experienced bypatient12 have worsened. In this manner,processor46 may limit data collection to periods in which more probative data is likely to be collected, and thereby conserve a battery and/or storage space withinmemory48.
In some embodiments,processor46 determines a value of one or more activity metrics based on determined activity levels and stores the activity metric values withinmemory48. For example,processor46 may determine a mean or median of activity levels, and store the mean or median activity level as an activity metric value. In embodiments in which activity levels comprise activity counts,processor46 may store, for example, an average number of activity counts per unit time as an activity metric value.
In other embodiments,processor46 may compare a mean or median activity level to one or more threshold values, and may select an activity metric value from a predetermined scale of activity metric values based on the comparison. The scale may be numeric, such as activity metric values from 1-10, or qualitative, such as low, medium or high activity. The scale of activity metric values may be, for example, stored as a look-up table withinmemory48.Processor46 stores the activity metric value selected from the scale withinmemory48.
In some embodiments,processor46 compares a number of activity levels to one or more threshold values. Based on the comparison,processor46 may determine percentages of time above and/or below the thresholds, or within threshold ranges.Processor46 may store the determined percentages withinmemory48 as one or more activity metric values. In other embodiments,processor46 compares a number of activity levels to a threshold value, and determines an average length of time that consecutively recorded activity levels remained above the threshold as an activity metric value.
FIG. 3 further illustratesmemory48 ofIMD14. As illustrated inFIG. 3,memory48 stores information describing a plurality of therapy parameter sets60. Therapy parameter sets60 may include parameter sets specified by a clinician usingclinician programmer20. Therapy parameter sets60 may also include parameter sets that are the result ofpatient12 changing one or more parameters of one of the preprogrammed therapy parameter sets.
Memory48 also stores theactivity levels62, sleep qualitymetric values66, and activitymetric values68 determined byprocessor46, as described herein, andthreshold values64 used byprocessor46 to determineactivity levels62, sleep qualitymetric values66, and activitymetric values68, as described herein. In some embodiments,memory48 also stores one or more functions or look-up tables (not shown) used byprocessor46 to determine sleep probability metric values,activity levels62, sleep qualitymetric values66, and activitymetric values68, as described herein.
Processor46 may store each sleep quality metric value determined withinmemory48 as a sleep qualitymetric value66, or may store mean or median sleep quality metric values over periods of time such as days, weeks or months as sleep quality metric values66. Further,processor46 may apply a function or look-up table to a plurality of sleep quality metric values to determine overall sleep quality metric value, and may store the overall sleep quality metric values withinmemory48. The application of a function or look-up table byprocessor46 for this purpose may involve the use or weighting factors for one or more of the individual sleep quality metric values.
Similarly, in some embodiments,processor46 determines a plurality of activity metric values, and determines an overall activity metric value for a parameter set based on the values of the individual activity metrics for that parameter set. For example,processor46 may use the plurality of individual activity metric values as indices to identify an overall activity metric value from a look-up table stored inmemory48.Processor46 may select the overall metric value from a predetermined scale of activity metric values, which may be numeric, such as activity metric values from 1-10, or qualitative, such as low, medium or high activity.
In some embodiments,processor46 identifies which of therapy parameter sets60 is currently selected for use in delivering therapy topatient12 when anactivity level62 or sleep qualitymetric value66 is collected, and may associate that value or level with the current therapy parameter set. For example, for each of the plurality of therapy parameter sets60,processor46 may store a representative value of each of one or more sleep quality metrics withinmemory48 as a sleep qualitymetric value66 with an indication of the therapy parameter set with which that representative value is associated. A representative value of sleep quality metric for a therapy parameter set may be the mean or median of collected sleep quality metric values that have been associated with that therapy parameter set. Further,processor46 may determine a value of one or more activity metrics for each of therapy parameter sets60 based onactivity levels62 associated with that therapy parameter set, and may store the associated activitymetric values68 withinmemory48.
As shown inFIG. 2,IMD14 also includes atelemetry circuit50 that allowsprocessor46 to communicate withclinician programmer20 andpatient programmer26.Processor46 may receive information identifying therapy parameter sets60 preprogrammed by the clinician andthreshold values64 fromclinician programmer20 viatelemetry circuit50 for storage inmemory48.Processor46 may receive an indication of the therapy parameter set60 selected bypatient12 for delivery of therapy, or adjustments to one or more of therapy parameter sets60 made bypatient12, frompatient programmer26 viatelemetry circuit50.Programmers20,26 may receive sleep qualitymetric values66 and activitymetric values68 fromprocessor46 viatelemetry circuit50.
FIG. 4 is a flow diagram illustrating an example method for collecting sleep quality information and activity information that may be employed byIMD14.IMD14 monitors the posture, activity level, and/or melatonin level ofpatient12, or monitors for an indication frompatient12, e.g., via patient programmer26 (70), and determines whetherpatient12 is attempting to fall asleep based on the posture, activity level, and/or a patient indication, as described above (72). WhenIMD14 determines thatpatient12 is not attempting to fall asleep,IMD14 collects activity information, e.g., periodically determines activity levels62 (74). WhenIMD14 determines thatpatient12 is attempting to fall asleep,IMD14 collects sleep quality information, e.g., determines sleep quality metric values, untilpatient12 is determined to be awake (76).
As discussed above,IMD14 need not collect sleep information eachtime patient12 attempts to sleep, or record activity levels eachtime patient12 is not attempting to sleep. In some embodiments,IMD14 may record activity levels and determine sleep quality metric values in response to receiving an indication frompatient12 viapatient programmer26. For example,IMD14 may record activity levels and sleep quality metrics during times whenpatient12 believes the therapy delivered byIMD14 is ineffective and/or the symptoms experienced bypatient12 have worsened. In this manner,IMD14 may limit data collection to periods in which more probative data is likely to be collected, and thereby conserve a battery and/or storage space withinmemory48.
FIG. 5 is a flow diagram illustrating an example method for collecting sleep quality information that may be employed byIMD14. WhenIMD14 determines thatpatient12 is attempting to fall asleep (FIG. 4),IMD14 identifies the time thatpatient12 began attempting to fall asleep using any of the techniques described above (80), and monitors one or more of the various physiological parameters ofpatient12 discussed above to determine whetherpatient12 is asleep (82,84).
In some embodiments,IMD14 compares parameter values or parameter variability values to one or more threshold values64 to determine whetherpatient12 is asleep. In other embodiments,IMD14 applies one or more functions or look-up tables to determine one or more sleep probability metric values based on the physiological parameter values, and compares the sleep probability metric values to one or more threshold values64 to determine whetherpatient12 is asleep. While monitoring physiological parameters (82) to determine whetherpatient12 is asleep (84),IMD14 may continue to monitor the posture and/or activity level ofpatient12 to confirm thatpatient12 is still attempting to fall asleep.
WhenIMD14 determines thatpatient12 is asleep, e.g., by analysis of the various parameters contemplated herein,IMD14 will identify the time thatpatient12 fell asleep (86). Whilepatient12 is sleeping,IMD14 will continue to monitor physiological parameters of patient12 (88). As discussed above,IMD14 may identify the occurrence of arousals and/or apneas based on the monitored physiological parameters (90). Further,IMD14 may identify the time that transitions between sleep states, e.g., REM, S1, S2, S3, and S4, occur based on the monitored physiological parameters (90).
Additionally, whilepatient12 is sleeping,IMD14 monitors physiological parameters of patient12 (88) to determine whetherpatient12 has woken up (92). WhenIMD14 determines thatpatient12 is awake,IMD14 identifies the time thatpatient12 awoke (94), and determines sleep quality metric values based on the information collected whilepatient12 was asleep (96).
For example, one sleep qualitymetric value IMD14 may calculate is sleep efficiency, whichIMD14 may calculate as a percentage of time during whichpatient12 is attempting to sleep thatpatient12 is actually asleep.IMD14 may determine a first amount of time between thetime IMD14 identified thatpatient12 fell asleep and thetime IMD14 identified thatpatient12 awoke. IMD may also determine a second amount of time between thetime IMD14 identified thatpatient12 began attempting to fall asleep and thetime IMD14 identified thatpatient12 awoke. To calculate the sleep efficiency,IMD14 may divide the first time by the second time.
Another sleep quality metric value that IMD14 may calculate is sleep latency, whichIMD14 may calculate as the amount of time between thetime IMD14 identified thatpatient12 was attempting to fall asleep and thetime IMD14 identified thatpatient12 fell asleep. Other sleep quality metrics with values determined byIMD14 based on the information collected byIMD14 in the illustrated example include: total time sleeping per day, at night, and during daytime hours; number of apnea and arousal events per occurrence of sleep; and amount of time spent in the various sleep states, e.g., the S3 and S4 sleep states.IMD14 may store the determined values as sleep qualitymetric values66 withinmemory48.
FIG. 6 is a flow diagram illustrating an example method for collecting activity information that may be employed byIMD14.IMD14 monitors one or more signals that reflect patient activity generated by sensors40 (100). For example,IMD14 may monitor a signal generated by an accelerometer or piezoelectric crystal, and/or a signal that indicates a physiological parameter that varies as a function of patient activity, such as heart rate, ECG morphology, respiration rate, respiratory volume, or muscle activity.
IMD14 determines an activity level62 (102) based on the one or more signals. For example,IMD14 may determine a number of activity counts based on the one or more signals, as described above.IMD14 may then update one or more activitymetric values66 based on the determined activity level (104).
IMD14 may periodically perform the method illustrated inFIG. 6, i.e., periodically determineactivity levels62.IMD14 need not update activitymetric values66 each time anactivity level62 is determined. In some embodiments, for example,IMD14 may storeactivity levels62 within memory, and may determine the activitymetric values66 upon receiving a request for the values fromclinician programmer20.
FIG. 7 is a flow diagram illustrating an example method for associating sleep quality information and activity information with therapy parameter sets that may be employed byIMD14.IMD14 determines avalue66 of a sleep quality metric or anactivity level62 according to any of the techniques described above (110).IMD14 also identifies the current therapy parameter set60, e.g., the therapy parameter set60 used byIMD14 to control delivery of therapy whenpatient12 was asleep or when the activity level was determined (112), and associates the newly determined level or value with the current therapy parameter set60.
Among sleep qualitymetric values66 withinmemory48,IMD14 stores a representative value of the sleep quality metric, e.g., a mean or median value, for each of the plurality of therapy parameter sets60. WhenIMD14 determines a new sleep quality metric value,IMD14 updates the representative values for the current therapy parameter set based on the newly determined sleep quality metric value (114). For example, a newly determined sleep efficiency value may be used to determine a new average sleep efficiency value for the current therapy parameter set60. Similarly, among the activitymetric values68 withinmemory48,IMD14 stores an associated activity metric value. WhenIMD14 determines anew activity level62,IMD14 updates the activitymetric value68 the current therapy parameter set based on the newly determined activity level.
FIG. 8 is a block diagram further illustratingclinician programmer20. A clinician may interact with aprocessor120 via a user interface122 in order to program therapy forpatient12, e.g., specify therapy parameter sets.Processor120 may provide the specified therapy parameter sets toIMD14 viatelemetry circuit124.
At another time, e.g., during a follow up visit,processor120 may receiveactivity levels62, sleep qualitymetric values66, and/or activitymetric values68 fromIMD14 via atelemetry circuit124, and may generate sleep quality information or activity information for presentation to the clinician via user interface122. For example,processor120 may present a trend diagram ofactivity levels62 or sleep qualitymetric values66 over time, or a histogram, pie chart, or other illustration of percentages of time thatactivity levels62 or sleep qualitymetric values66 were within certain ranges.Processor120 may generate such charts or diagrams usingactivity levels62 and sleep qualitymetric values66 associated with a particular one of the therapy parameter sets60, or all of theactivity levels62 and sleep qualitymetric values66 recorded byIMD14.
Processor120 may also receive information identifying a plurality of therapy parameter sets60, and representative sleep qualitymetric values66 and activity metric values associated with the therapy parameter sets60, fromIMD14 viatelemetry circuit124. The therapy parameter sets60 may include the originally specified parameter sets, and parameter sets resulting from manipulation of one or more therapy parameters bypatient12 usingpatient programmer26. After receiving this information,processor120 generates a list of the therapy parameter sets60 and associated sleep qualitymetric values66 and activitymetric values68, and presents the list to the clinician via user interface122.
User interface112 may includedisplay22 andkeypad24, and may also include a touch screen or peripheral pointing devices as described above.Processor110 may include a microprocessor, a controller, a DSP, an ASIC, an FPGA, discrete logic circuitry, or the like.Clinician programmer20 also includes a memory116. Memory116 may include program instructions that, when executed byprocessor110,cause clinician programmer20 to perform the functions ascribed toclinician programmer20 herein. Memory116 may include any volatile, non-volatile, fixed, removable, magnetic, optical, or electrical media, such as a RAM, ROM, CD-ROM, hard disk, removable magnetic disk, memory cards or sticks, NVRAM, EEPROM, flash memory, and the like.
FIG. 9 illustrates anexample list130 of therapy parameter sets60, associated sleep qualitymetric values66, and associated activitymetric values68 that may be presented to a clinician byclinician programmer20. Each row ofexample list130 includes an identification of one of therapy parameter sets60, the parameters of the set, a representative value for one or more sleep quality metrics associated with the identified therapy parameter set, and an associated value of at least one activity metric.
List130 may include values for any number of sleep quality metrics and activity metrics. The illustratedexample list130 includes sleep efficiency, sleep latency and a percentage of time active.IMD14 may determine the percentage of time active for one of parameter sets60 by, for example, comparing eachactivity level62 associated with the parameter set to an “active” threshold, i.e., a threshold indicative of significant physical activity, and determining the percentage ofactivity levels62 above the threshold. As illustrated inFIG. 9,IMD14 may also compare each activity level for the therapy parameter set to an additional, “high activity” threshold, and determine a percentage ofactivity levels62 above that threshold.
FIG. 10 is a flow diagram illustrating an example method for displaying alist130 of therapy parameter sets and associated sleep quality and activity information that may be employed byclinician programmer20. According to the example method,clinician programmer20 receives information identifying the plurality of therapy parameter sets60 stored inmemory48 ofIMD14, one or more representative sleep quality metric values associated with each of the therapy parameter sets, and one or more activity metric values associated with each of the activity sets (140).Clinician programmer20 generates alist130 of the therapy parameter sets60, any associated representative sleep quality metric values, and any associated activity metric values (142), and orders the list according to a selected one of the sleep quality metrics or activity metrics (144). For example, in theexample list130 illustrated inFIG. 9, the clinician may select whetherlist130 should be ordered according to sleep efficiency, sleep latency, or percentage of time active via user interface122 ofclinician programmer20.
Various embodiments of the invention have been described. However, one skilled in the art will recognize that various modifications may be made to the described embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention. For example, a patient programming device, such aspatient programmer26, may additionally or alternatively receive sleep quality metric values and/or activity metric values fromIMD14, and may provide sleep quality or activity information to a user based on the sleep quality or activity metric values. Further details regarding provision of sleep quality information to a patient via a patient programming device may be found in a commonly-assigned and copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. _______ by Ken Heruth and Keith Miesel, entitled “COLLECTING SLEEP QUALITY INFORMATION VIA A MEDICAL DEVICE,” bearing Attorney Docket No. 1023-350US02 and filed on Mar. 16, 2005, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
As another example, although described herein primarily in the context of treatment of pain with an implantable neurostimulator, the invention is not so limited. The invention may be embodied in any implantable medical device, such as a cardiac pacemaker, an implantable pump, or an implantable monitor that does not itself deliver a therapy to the patient. Further, the invention may be implemented via an external, e.g., non-implantable, medical device.
Additionally, the invention is not limited to embodiments in which a programming device receives information from the medical device, or presents information to a user. Other computing devices, such as handheld computers, desktop computers, workstations, or servers may receive information from the medical device and present information to a user as described herein with reference toprogrammers20,26. A computing device, such as a server, may receive information from the medical device and present information to a user via a network, such as a local area network (LAN), wide area network (WAN), or the Internet. Further, in some embodiments, the medical device is an external medical device, and may itself include user interface and display to present activity information to a user, such as a clinician or patient, for evaluation of therapy parameter sets.
As another example, the invention may be embodied in a trial neurostimulator, which is coupled to percutaneous leads implanted within the patient to determine whether the patient is a candidate for neurostimulation, and to evaluate prospective neurostimulation therapy parameter sets. Similarly, the invention may be embodied in a trial drug pump, which is coupled to a percutaneous catheter implanted within the patient to determine whether the patient is a candidate for an implantable pump, and to evaluate prospective therapeutic agent delivery parameter sets. Sleep quality metric values and activity metric values collected during use of the trial neurostimulator or pump may be used by a clinician to evaluate the prospective therapy parameter sets, and select parameter sets for use by the later implanted non-trial neurostimulator or pump. For example, a trial neurostimulator or pump may determine representative values of one or more sleep quality metrics and activity metric values for each of a plurality of prospective therapy parameter sets, and a clinician programmer may present a list of prospective parameter sets and associated representative values to a clinician. The clinician may use the list to identify potentially efficacious parameter sets, and may program a permanent implantable neurostimulator or pump for the patient with the identified parameter sets.
In some embodiments, a therapy delivering implantable or external medical device does not determine whether the patient is attempting to sleep, determine values for sleep quality metrics, determine activity metric values, and/or periodically determine activity levels. Instead, in some embodiments, a computing device, such as one ofprogramming devices20,26, or the other types of computing devices identified above, performs one or more of these functions. For example, a programming device, and more particularly a processor of the programming device, e.g.,processor120, may receive physiological parameter values, activity levels, and/or samples of an activity signal from a medical device, and determine activity metric values and sleep quality metric values based on the information received from the medical device using any of the techniques described herein with reference to a medical device.
In some embodiments, the medical device may associate recorded physiological parameter values, signal samples, and/or activity levels with a current therapy parameter set, and may provide information identifying and plurality of therapy parameter sets and collected information associated with the therapy parameter sets to the programming device or other computing device. In such embodiments, the programming device may determine representative sleep quality metric values and activity metric values associated with the various therapy parameter sets using any of techniques described herein with reference to a medical device. The programming device may receive such information from the medical device in real time, or may interrogate the medical device for information recorded by the medical device over a period of time.
Additionally, the invention is not limited to embodiments in which the therapy delivering medical device monitors the physiological parameters of the patient described herein. In some embodiments, a separate monitoring device monitors values of one or more physiological parameters of the patient instead of, or in addition to, a therapy delivering medical device. The monitor may include aprocessor46 andmemory48, and may be coupled to or include sensors40, as illustrated above with reference toIMD14 andFIGS. 2 and 3. The monitor may determine whether the patient is attempting to sleep, determine values for sleep quality metrics, determine activity metric values, and/or periodically determine activity levels based on the values of the monitored physiological parameter values, or may transmit activity levels or the physiological parameter values to a computing device for determination of whether the patient is attempting to sleep, values for sleep quality metrics, and/or activity metric values.
In embodiments in which the medical device determines sleep quality and activity metric values, the medical device may identify the current therapy parameter set when a value of one or more sleep quality or activity metrics is collected, and may associate that value with the therapy parameter set. In embodiments in which a programming device or other computing device determines activity levels, or activity or sleep quality metric values, the medical device may associate recorded physiological parameter values or activity levels with the current therapy parameter set in the memory. Further, in embodiments in which a separate monitoring device records physiological parameter values, determines activity levels, or determines activity or sleep quality metric values, the monitoring device may mark recorded physiological parameter values, activity levels, or activity or sleep quality metric values with a current time in a memory, and the medical device may store an indication of a current therapy parameter set and time in a memory. A programming device of other computing device may receive indications of the physiological parameter values, activity levels, or activity or sleep quality metric values and associated times from the monitoring device, and indications of the therapy parameter sets and associated times from the medical device, and may associate the physiological parameter values, activity levels, or activity or sleep quality metric values with the therapy parameter set that was delivered by the medical device when the values or levels were recorded.
FIG. 11 is a conceptual diagram illustrating amonitor150 that monitors values of one or more physiological parameters of the patient instead of, or in addition to, a therapy delivering medical device. In the illustrated example, monitor150 is configured to be attached to or otherwise carried by abelt152, and may thereby be worn bypatient12.FIG. 11 also illustrates various sensors40 that may be coupled to monitor150 by leads, wires, cables, or wireless connections, such asEEG electrodes154A-C placed on the scalp ofpatient12, a plurality ofEOG electrodes156A and156B placed proximate to the eyes ofpatient12, and one ormore EMG electrodes158 placed on the chin or jaw the patient. The number and positions ofelectrodes154,156 and158 illustrated inFIG. 11 are merely exemplary. For example, although only three EEG electrodes154 are illustrated inFIG. 1, an array of between16 and25EEG electrodes114 may be placed on the scalp ofpatient12, as is known in the art. EEG electrodes154 may be individually placed onpatient12, or integrated within a cap or hair net worn by the patient.
In the illustrated example,patient12 wears anECG belt160.ECG belt160 incorporates a plurality of electrodes for sensing the electrical activity of the heart ofpatient12. The heart rate and, in some embodiments, ECG morphology ofpatient12 may monitored bymonitor150 based on the signal provided byECG belt160. Examples ofsuitable belts160 for sensing the heart rate ofpatient12 are the “M” and “F” heart rate monitor models commercially available from Polar Electro. In some embodiments, instead ofbelt160,patient12 may wear of plurality of ECG electrodes attached, e.g., via adhesive patches, at various locations on the chest of the patient, as is known in the art. An ECG signal derived from the signals sensed by such an array of electrodes may enable both heart rate and ECG morphology monitoring, as is known in the art.
As shown inFIG. 11,patient12 may also wear arespiration belt162 that outputs a signal that varies as a function of respiration of the patient.Respiration belt162 may be a plethysmograpy belt, and the signal output byrespiration belt162 may vary as a function of the changes is the thoracic or abdominal circumference ofpatient12 that accompany breathing by the patient. An example of asuitable belt162 is the TSD201 Respiratory Effort Transducer commercially available from Biopac Systems, Inc. Alternatively,respiration belt162 may incorporate or be replaced by a plurality of electrodes that direct an electrical signal through the thorax of the patient, and circuitry to sense the impedance of the thorax, which varies as a function of respiration of the patient, based on the signal. In some embodiments, ECG andrespiration belts160 and162 may be a common belt worn bypatient12, and the relative locations ofbelts160 and162 depicted inFIG. 11 are merely exemplary.
In the example illustrated byFIG. 11,patient12 also wears atransducer164 that outputs a signal as a function of the oxygen saturation of the blood ofpatient12.Transducer164 may be an infrared transducer.Transducer164 may be located on one of the fingers or earlobes ofpatient12.Monitor150 may additionally or alternatively include or be coupled to any of the variety of sensors40 described above with reference toFIGS. 2 and 3, which output signals which vary as a function of any one or more of activity level, posture, heart rate, ECG morphology, respiration rate, respiratory volume, blood pressure, blood oxygen saturation, partial pressure of oxygen within blood, partial pressure of oxygen within cerebrospinal fluid, muscular activity and tone, core temperature, subcutaneous temperature, arterial blood flow, brain electrical activity, eye motion, and galvanic skin response, as described above.
The invention may also be embodied as a computer-readable medium that includes instructions to cause a processor to perform any of the methods described herein. These and other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.