Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


US3348535A - Parturitive phone - Google Patents

Parturitive phone
Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3348535A
US3348535AUS415888AUS41588864AUS3348535AUS 3348535 AUS3348535 AUS 3348535AUS 415888 AUS415888 AUS 415888AUS 41588864 AUS41588864 AUS 41588864AUS 3348535 AUS3348535 AUS 3348535A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
heart beat
mothers
signal
fetal heart
signals
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US415888A
Inventor
Gregg David Paul
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by IndividualfiledCriticalIndividual
Priority to US415888ApriorityCriticalpatent/US3348535A/en
Application grantedgrantedCritical
Publication of US3348535ApublicationCriticalpatent/US3348535A/en
Anticipated expirationlegal-statusCritical
Expired - Lifetimelegal-statusCriticalCurrent

Links

Images

Classifications

Definitions

Landscapes

Description

Oct. 24, 1967 D. P. GREGG 3,348,535
PABTURITVE PHONE Filed Deo. 4, 1964 2 Sheets-Sheet l 1 fix/615% Oct. 24, 1967 Filed Dec. 4, 1964PARTURITIVE PHONE 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 United States Patent O 3,348,535 PARTURITIVE PHONE David Paul Gregg, 1936 Kelton Ave., Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 Filed Dec. 4, 1964, Ser. No. 415,888 4 Claims. (Cl. 12S-2.05)
Y The present invention relates to medical instruments and systems of the stethoscope type, and it relates more -particularly to an instrument for monitoring the fetal heart beat during parturition.
It is well known that during the birth of a child there is a likelihood of strangulation by the umbilical cord. The resulting cessation of the fetal heart beat can be fatal within three minutes unless a Caersarean section, or other drastic means, are immediately put into effect.
It is important, therefore, that the fetal heart beat be monitored during parturition. It is usual practice for the obstetrician to have a stethoscope-type of hearing device mounted on his head, so that from time to time he can apply it to the mothers abdomen and determine whether the babys heart is still beating. This, however, is an awklward procedure. Also, there is difficulty in separating the faint fetal heart beat from the dominant mothers heart beat when the usual stethoscopic type of instrument is used for this purpose.
An object of the present invention is to provide an improved medical instrument which serves to null out the mothers heart beat so that the infants heart beat can be easily monitored during parturition.
Another object of the invention is to provide such an improved instrument which is predicated on electronic principles, and which is constructed so that the fetal heart beat can be continuously monitored and reproduced as an aural or Visual signal.
In the embodiment to be described, two electro/ acoustical transducers in the form of microphones, for example, are provided. A first of these microphones is positioned on the mothers abdomen in the vicinity of the fetus, and the other is positioned an appreciable distance from the mothers heart.
The first microphone picks up the weak fetal heart beat accompanied by the mothers stronger heart beat. The second microphone may be positioned, for example,
on the mothers arm or in some other location on the mothers anatomy where her hea-rt beat may be lreceived with essentially the same intensity as at the first location,
but where the faint fetal heart beat is attenuated pracically to zero.
'The two microphones referred to in the preceding paragraph are connected to an electronic circuit which responds to the signals therefrom. The electronic circuit is constructed so that the signals representative of the mothers heart beat are essentially nulled out by a subtractive process, and the signal representative of the fetal heart beat is passed in amplified form. The latter signal may be converted into sound signals, for example, by means of a loud speaker. Moreover, the latter signal may be applied to an oscilloscope, or similar instrument, so as to provide a visual display.
Therefore, when the system of the invention is used during parturition, a positive and continuous monitoring of the fetal heart beat may be established.'The fetal heart beat may be reproduced aurally on a loud speaker to be readily heard, and it may also be reproduced visually, so as to provide an instant alert to the obstetrician, or other attendants, should the heart beat fail.
The features of the invention which are believed-to be new are set forth in the claims. The invention itself, however, together with other objects and advantages thereof, may best be understood by reference to the fol- 3,348,535 `Patented Oct. 24, 1967 ice ically the function of the electric circuitry used in thev embodiment to be described; A
FIGURE 3 is a more detailed diagram of the electrical and electronic circuitry; j
FIGURES 4 and 5 are circuit diagrams of various amplifier stages used in the circuit of FIGURE 3; and
FIGURE 6 is an acoustical embodiment of the invention.
As shown in FIGURE 1, the system and mechanism of the invention maybe encased in a housing 10. The housing 10 is equipped with aloud speaker 12, and it also includes ajack 14. An oscilloscope 16,-earphones, or other reproducing or display apparatus, maybe plugged into thejack 14, or other additional jacks may be provided.
In the practice-of the invention, a first electro/acoustical transducer 18 is placed on the abdomen of the mother, for example, and it 4may be held in place by adhesive tape or other appropriate means. This first electro/ acoustical transducer is connected to the electric circuit in the housing 10. A second electro/acoustical transducer, in the form of amicrophone 20 is similarly strapped, or otherwise affixed to a portion of the rnother anatomydisplaced from themicrophone 18.
Themicrophone 20 may be positioned, for example, on the mothers arm, or on her leg (as shown as an alternate location in FIGURE l), or on any other appropriate part of the mothers anatomy. Thelatter microphone 20 is also connected to the electronic circuit in the housing 10. The circuit may be equipped with aphase adjustment 24, and with abalancing adjustment 26. i
As mentioned above, themicrophone 18 is placed on a location of the mothers anatomy such that it can` detect not only the mothers heart beat, but also the relatively faint fetal heart beat. Both these heart beats are converted into respective electrical signals by the microphone, and the signals are applied to the circuit in the housing 10.
Themicrophone 20, on the other hand, is preferably positioned on the mothers anatomy at a location such that itmay detect the mothers heart beat with essentially the same amplitude as detected by the microphone- 18,
lbut where the fetal heart beat is attenuated essentially to zero. Themicrophone 20 converts the mothers heat beat at the latter location into an electrical signal and applies it to the circuit in the housing 10.
As will be described, the aforesaid circuit in the housing 10 responds to the signals from the twomicrophones 18 and 20, and it passes the signals from one o`f themicrophones, for example, from t-hemicrophone 20 through an inverter4 amplifier, and passes the signals from themicrophone 18, for example, through a similar amplifier which does not invert the signals. l
The resulting signals are summed algebraically, and it will be apparent that the signals representative of the mothers heart beat will be essentially nulled out. However, the signal representative of the fetal heart beat will be amplified `and passed to thespeaker 12 and to the oscilloscope 16. Therefore, -an aural and a visual representation of the fetal heart beat is provided continuously during parturition, and any cessation of the fetal heart beat is instantly detected.
As shown in FIGURE 2, it-is assumed that themicrophone 18 picks up the mothers heart beat and transforms it into a signal (e1), and that it also picks up the fetal heart beat and transforms it into an electric signal (ef). Both these signals are applied to a directcurrent amplifier 100 which has a gain G. Therefore, the output from theamplifier 100 may be expressed as:
Themicrophone 20, on the other hand, produces a signal corresponding to the mothers heart beat which will be assumed to have the same amplitude `as the corresponding signal produced by themicrophone 18, and will also be referred to as (e1), and it also produces a signal corresponding to the fetal heart beat, the latter signal having essentially zero amplitude and will be expressed as (kef),
These latter signals are applied to a directcurrent amplifier 102 which, as mentioned, may perform a phase inversion on the signals. Of course, the microphone may be poled to provide opposite polarity signals, in which case theamplifier 102 need not perform a phase inversion. Therefore, in either case, theamplifier 102 produces an output which may be expressed as:
where: G is the gain of the amplifier 102 (assumed to be equal to the gain of the amplifier 100).
The signals from theamplifiers 100 and 102 are applied to asumming circuit 104 which may, for example, be in the form of a potentiometer or other resistance network. Thenetwork 104 algebraically sums the two outputs from theamplifiers 100 and 102, and it produces an As mentioned, the signal kef corresponding to the fetal heart beat at the second location is essentially zero, so that to all intents and purposes k can be considered as zero.
The output from thesumming network 104 is introduced to apower amplifier 106. The resulting output from lthe power amplifier represents a signal corresponding to the fetal yheart beat, and this signal may be expressed (efG). The latter amplified signal is applied to thespeaker 12 and to thejack 14, so that it may be reproduced as a sound signal, and so that it may also be visually displayed by the oscilloscope 16.
As shown in the circuit of FIGURE 3, the signals from themicrophones 18 and 20 may initially 'be passed through corresponding direct current pre-amplifiers 200 and 202. These pre-amplifiers may have adjustable gains, so that the signal amplitudes may be equalized. Themicrophones 18 and 20 are connected to the pre-amplifiers through `usual shieldedcables 204 and 206. Themicrophones 18 and 20 are shown as crystal microphones which include self-generating piezoelectric sensors. Appropriate acoustical cavities may be mounted on the microphones so as to provide optimum acoustical coupling between the microphones and the heart beat sources.
Ahigh frequency filter 208 is interposed between the pre-amplifier 200 and the directcurrent amplifier 100. A similarhigh frequency filter 210 is interposed between the pre-amplifier 202 and the direct-current amplifier 102.
As shown in FIGURE 3, the balancing potentiometer controlled :by theknob 26 in FIGURE l may serve as the summingnetwork 104. An appropriate phase shift network (not shown) may Ibe included in the circuit of either of the microphones, to be controlled by theknob 24, for example, so as to bring the appropriate signals into phase, so that optimum nulling may be achieved.
Thepre-amplifiers 200 and 202 may, of course, be of any appropriate construction. A typical circuit for thepre-amplifier 200, for example, is shown in FIGURE 4. The direct-current pre-amplifier 202 may be similarly connected. l t .v
Thecable 204 in the circuit of FIGURE 4 is connected to the gate electrode of afield effect transistor 300, and to a groundedresistor 302. This resistor, for example, may have a resistance of 300 megohms; The `field effect transistor 300 is used, forexarnple, because. it exhibits Vthe desired high impedance input characteristics. The input impedance of the circuit is limited to V300 megohms by theresistor 302.
The source electrode of thefield effect transistor 300 is connected through again control potentiometer 304 and through a resistor 306- to the negative terminal of a 9-volt direct-current exciting source Ec. Thepotentiometer 304 may have a resistance of kilo-ohms, and it provides for the desired gain adjustment. Theresistor 306 may have a resistance of 40 kilo-ohms. The drain electrode of the field effect transistor is connected directly to the positive terminal of the source Ec.
The source electrode of the field effect transistor is also connected to the base of anNPN transistor 310. The NPN transistor is connected as an emitter follower, and its emitter is coupled through anappropriate coupling capacitor 312 to the output terminal. Thecapacitor 312 may have a capacitance of microfarads. The collector of thetransistor 310 is connected directly to the positive terminal of the aforesaid source, and the emitter is connected through aresistor 314 to the negative terminal. Theresistor 314 may have a resistance of 10 kilo-ohms.
Likewise, the direct-current amplifiers 100y and 102 may have any suitable circuit configuration. An appropriate circuit for the direct-current amplifier 100 is shown in FIGURE 5. `It is to be understood, of course, that the direct-current amplifier 102 may be similarly constructed.
The output from thefilter 208 is applied to the base of anNPN transistor 400. This transistor is connected as a voltage amplifier, and its collector is connected through a resistor `402 to the positive terminal of the directcurrent source, whereas its emitter is connected through aresistor 404, through apotentiometer 406, and through aresistor 408 to the negative terminal.
The junction of theresistors 404 and 406 is connected to a groundedcapacitor 410, the capacitor being shunted by adiode 412. The emitter of thetransistor 400 is also connected to a -resistor 413. The resistor 402 may have a resistance of 10 kilo-ohms; theresistor 404 may have a resistance of 300 ohms; thepotentiometer 406 may have a resistance of 50 kilo-ohms; theresistor 408 may have a resistance of l0 kilo-ohms; thecapacitor 410 may have a capacity of 1000 microfarads; and theresistor 413 may have a resistance of 50 kilo-ohms.
The collector of thetransistor 400 is also connected to the base of atransistor 414. Thetransistor 414 is connected to a complementary pair ofemitter follower transistors 416 and 418. Thetransistor 414 and thetransistor 418 are PNP transistors, whereas thetransistor 416 is an NPN transistor.
The emitter of thetransistor 414 is connected through a diode 420 to the positive terminal |Ec of the directcurrent source, whereas the collector of thetransistor 416 is connected to that terminal through a diode 422. The output signal from the circuit is derived at the junction of a pair ofresistors 428 and 430, which connect the emitters of thetransistors 416 and 418; the junction also being connected to theresistor 413. A pair ofresistors 424 and 426 connect the collector of thetransistor 414 to the negative terminal (-Ec) of the direct-current source; and the junction of theresistors 426 and 428 is connected to the base of thetransistor 418. The collector of thetransistor 418 is directly connected to the negative terminal (-Ec) of the direct-current source.
Theresistors 424 and 426 may each have a resistance of 390 ohms; and theresistors 428 and 430 may each have a resistance of 47 ohms.
The parturitive phone shown in FIGURE 6 shows the manner in which the objectives of the invention are obtained on a purely acoustical basis. The parturitive phone of FIGURE 6 includes a pair of stethoscope-likebody contact pieces 500 and 502.
The assembly of FIGURE 6 also includes adifferential diaphragm changer 504. Adiaphragm 506 is mount- .ed in thechamber 504. Thebody contact pieces 500 and 502 are coupled to thechamber 504 bytubes 508 and 510, on opposite sides of the diaphragm.-
The parturitive phone includes ear-pieces 510 which are coupled to the chamber S04 by way of atube 512.
In the latter embodiment, the body contact piece 500 may be placed on the mother in position to pick up -both the mothers heart beat and the fetal heart beat; and thebody contact piece 502 may be placed in position to pick up the mothers heat beat. Then the differential action of thediaphragm 506 in thechamber 504 causes only the fetal heart beat to be transmitted to the ear-piece 510.
The invention provides, therefore, an improved parturitive phone which functions to separate the fetal heart beat from the dominant mothers heart beat, and to provide a continuous and positive indication of the fetal heart beat during the entire parturitive process.
While particular embodiments of the invention have been described, modifications may be made. It is intended to cover all such modifications in the appended claims.
What is claimed is:
1. Apparatus for detecting fetal heart beats during parturition, including: first electro-acoustical transducer means for sensing a mothers heart beat and the fetal heart beat and for producing respective first and second electrical signals in response thereto each with particular amplitude; second electro/ acoustical transducer means for sensing the mothers heart beat to the substantial eX- clusion of the fetal heart beat and for producing a third signal in response to the mothers heart beat with a particular amplitude; circuit means coupled to said first and second transducer means and responsive to said electrical signals from said first and second transducer means for substantially nulling out said first and third electrical signals and for passing said second electrical signal; and reproducing means coupled to said circuit means for reproducing said second electrical signal.
2. Apparatus defined in claim 1 in Which said circuit means includes a first amplifier for amplifying said first and second signals without phase inversion, and a second amplifier for amplifying said third and fourth signals with 180 phase inversion, and summing means coupled to said first and second amplifiers for algebraically adding said first signal to said third signal and said second signal to said fourth signal.
3. Apparatus for detecting fetal heart beats during parturition, including: first electro/acoustical transducer means adapted to be positioned on the mother in a location Where the mothers heart beat and the fetal heart beat can be detected, each with a particular amplitude, said first transducer means developing a first electrical signal corresponding to the mothers heart beat and a second electrical signal corresponding to the fetal heart beat; second electro/acoustical transducer means adapted to be positioned on the mother in a location Where the mothers heart beat can be detected with essentially the same amplitude as said particular amplitude and where the fetal heart beat is attenuated essentially to a zero amplitude, said second transducer means developing a third electrical signal corresponding to the mothers heart beat; circuit means coupled to said first and second transducer means and responsive to the signals from said first and second transducer means for nulling out said first and third signals and for amplifying said second signal; and reproducing means coupled to said circuit means for reproducing the second signal as amplified -by said circuit means.
4. Apparatus for detecting fetal heart beats during parturition, including: first acoustical body-contact piece for detecting the mothers heart beat and the fetal heart beat at a particular location on the mothers anatomy; a second acoustical body-contact piece for detecting the mothers heart beat at a different location on the mothers anatomy; means coupled to said first and second body-contact pieces for nulling out the mothers heart beat as detected inthe aforesaid two locations and for passing an ac-oustical signal representative of the fetal heart beat, said nulling means including -a chamber and a diaphragm mounted in said chamber to respond differentially to acoustical signals derived from said first and second bodycontact pieces; and further means coupled to said nulling means for reproducing said acoustical signal.
References Cited 1009 of British Medical Journal for October 25, 1958.
RICHARD A. GAUDET, Primary Examiner. SIMON BRODER, Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. APPARATUS FOR DETECTING FETAL HEART BEATS DURING PARTURITION, INCLUDING: FIRST ELECTRO-ACOUSTICAL TRANSDUCER MEANS FOR SENSING A MOTHER''S HEART BEAT AND THE FETAL HEART BEAT AND FOR PRODUCING RESPECTIVE FIRST AND SECOND ELECTRICAL SIGNALS IN RESPONSE THERETO EACH WITH PARTICULAR AMPLITUDE; SECOND ELECTRO/ACOUSTICAL TRANSDUCER MEANS FOR SENSING THE MOTHER''S HEART BEAT TO THE SUBSTANTIAL EXCLUSION OF THE FETAL HEART BEAT AND FOR PRODUCING A THIRD SIGNAL IN RESPONSE TO THE MOTHER''S HEART BEAT WITH A PARTICULAR AMPLITUDE; CIRCUIT MEANS COUPLED TO SAID FIRST AND SECOND TRANSDUCER MEANS AND RESPONSIVE TO SAID ELECTRICAL SIGNALS FROM SAID FIRST AND SECOND TRANSDUCER MEANS FOR SUBSTANTIALLY NULLING OUT SAID FIRST AND THIRD ELECTRICAL SIGNALS AND FOR PASSING SAID SECOND ELECTRICAL SIGNAL; AND REPRODUCING MEANS COUPLED TO SAID CIRCUIT MEANS FOR REPRODUCING SAID SECOND ELECTRICAL SIGNAL.
US415888A1964-12-041964-12-04Parturitive phoneExpired - LifetimeUS3348535A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
US415888AUS3348535A (en)1964-12-041964-12-04Parturitive phone

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
US415888AUS3348535A (en)1964-12-041964-12-04Parturitive phone

Publications (1)

Publication NumberPublication Date
US3348535Atrue US3348535A (en)1967-10-24

Family

ID=23647631

Family Applications (1)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US415888AExpired - LifetimeUS3348535A (en)1964-12-041964-12-04Parturitive phone

Country Status (1)

CountryLink
US (1)US3348535A (en)

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US3409737A (en)*1965-06-241968-11-05Settler MorrisFoetal monitor
US3517664A (en)*1968-03-191970-06-30Minnesota Mining & MfgConstant stethoscopic monitoring system
US3693611A (en)*1970-02-241972-09-26Minnesota Mining & MfgValve for stethoscopic monitoring
US3846585A (en)*1972-09-211974-11-05Plastics Dev Corp Of AmericaRecording stethoscope
US3867925A (en)*1971-02-171975-02-25Med General IncExpendable stethoscope
US4428380A (en)1980-09-111984-01-31Hughes Aircraft CompanyMethod and improved apparatus for analyzing activity
US4458693A (en)*1981-03-131984-07-10Medtronic, Inc.Monitoring system
US4628939A (en)*1980-09-111986-12-16Hughes Aircraft CompanyMethod and improved apparatus for analyzing heart activity
US4898179A (en)*1985-06-171990-02-06Vladimir SirotaDevice for detecting, monitoring, displaying and recording of material and fetal vital signs and permitting communication between a woman and her fetus
US4951678A (en)*1988-05-231990-08-28Thomas Jefferson UniversityMethods and apparatus for monitoring vital signs
US5467775A (en)*1995-03-171995-11-21University Research Engineers & AssociatesModular auscultation sensor and telemetry system
US6210344B1 (en)1999-03-242001-04-03Umm Electronics, Inc.Method and apparatus for passive heart rate detection
US6766145B2 (en)2001-10-262004-07-20Mattel, Inc.Prenatal-to-infant monitoring device
EP2019618A4 (en)*2006-05-022012-06-27Lono Medical Systems LlcPassive phonography heart monitor

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US2409749A (en)*1943-11-201946-10-22Du PontIndicating system
US2658505A (en)*1949-03-081953-11-10Sheer CharlesArterial pulse wave velocity meter
US2669986A (en)*1950-02-011954-02-23James B CrawleyApparatus for electronically locating nerve irritations
US2827040A (en)*1954-09-301958-03-18Saul R GilfordAutomatic sphygmomanometer
US3052756A (en)*1962-09-04Phonocardiography apparatus
US3171892A (en)*1961-06-271965-03-02Pantle Jorge OltvaniElectronic apparatus for the observation of signals of biological origin

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US3052756A (en)*1962-09-04Phonocardiography apparatus
US2409749A (en)*1943-11-201946-10-22Du PontIndicating system
US2658505A (en)*1949-03-081953-11-10Sheer CharlesArterial pulse wave velocity meter
US2669986A (en)*1950-02-011954-02-23James B CrawleyApparatus for electronically locating nerve irritations
US2827040A (en)*1954-09-301958-03-18Saul R GilfordAutomatic sphygmomanometer
US3171892A (en)*1961-06-271965-03-02Pantle Jorge OltvaniElectronic apparatus for the observation of signals of biological origin

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US3409737A (en)*1965-06-241968-11-05Settler MorrisFoetal monitor
US3517664A (en)*1968-03-191970-06-30Minnesota Mining & MfgConstant stethoscopic monitoring system
US3693611A (en)*1970-02-241972-09-26Minnesota Mining & MfgValve for stethoscopic monitoring
US3867925A (en)*1971-02-171975-02-25Med General IncExpendable stethoscope
US3846585A (en)*1972-09-211974-11-05Plastics Dev Corp Of AmericaRecording stethoscope
US4628939A (en)*1980-09-111986-12-16Hughes Aircraft CompanyMethod and improved apparatus for analyzing heart activity
US4428380A (en)1980-09-111984-01-31Hughes Aircraft CompanyMethod and improved apparatus for analyzing activity
US4458693A (en)*1981-03-131984-07-10Medtronic, Inc.Monitoring system
US4898179A (en)*1985-06-171990-02-06Vladimir SirotaDevice for detecting, monitoring, displaying and recording of material and fetal vital signs and permitting communication between a woman and her fetus
US4951678A (en)*1988-05-231990-08-28Thomas Jefferson UniversityMethods and apparatus for monitoring vital signs
US5467775A (en)*1995-03-171995-11-21University Research Engineers & AssociatesModular auscultation sensor and telemetry system
US6210344B1 (en)1999-03-242001-04-03Umm Electronics, Inc.Method and apparatus for passive heart rate detection
US6766145B2 (en)2001-10-262004-07-20Mattel, Inc.Prenatal-to-infant monitoring device
EP2019618A4 (en)*2006-05-022012-06-27Lono Medical Systems LlcPassive phonography heart monitor

Similar Documents

PublicationPublication DateTitle
US3348535A (en)Parturitive phone
US4878501A (en)Electronic stethoscopic apparatus
US4438772A (en)Differential stethoscope
US4672977A (en)Lung sound cancellation method and apparatus
US5074309A (en)Device for monitoring cardiovascular signals and fiber optic coupler phonocardio sensor therefor
US4226248A (en)Phonocephalographic device
US3989895A (en)Stethoscope transducer
US4803996A (en)Cardiovascular monitor
ATE165962T1 (en) ELECTRONIC STETHOSCOPE
US3830227A (en)Hand-held cardiac sound tone diagnostic device and method
US4577638A (en)Esophageal stethoscope
US5832093A (en)Universal stethoscope amplifier with graphic equalization and teaching and learning ports
US4086917A (en)Fetal heart rate monitoring system
US3846585A (en)Recording stethoscope
US3052756A (en)Phonocardiography apparatus
JPH0371893B2 (en)
US4484583A (en)Esophageal stethoscope
US5548651A (en)Stereophonic stethoscope
EP0295318B1 (en)Electronic stethoscopic apparatus
US5076284A (en)Fluidic heart-sound monitor and esophageal stethoscope
Dunn et al.Short distance radio telemetering of physiological information
US3562428A (en)Arrangements for use in the examination of sound wave patterns
Kastor et al.Air leaks as a source of distortion in apexcardiography
RU2062047C1 (en)Auscultation device
GB2147475A (en)Differential stethoscope

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp