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US3911898A - Heart assist method and device - Google Patents

Heart assist method and device
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US3911898A
US3911898AUS520046AUS52004674AUS3911898AUS 3911898 AUS3911898 AUS 3911898AUS 520046 AUS520046 AUS 520046AUS 52004674 AUS52004674 AUS 52004674AUS 3911898 AUS3911898 AUS 3911898A
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heart
blood
waveform
pressure
pumping
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Jr Frank A Leachman
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Abstract

A heart assist device is controlled in a normal mode of operation to counterpulsate with the heart and produce a blood flow waveform corresponding to the flow waveform of the heart being assisted. A blood pump in the device is connected serially between the discharge of a heart ventricle and the vascular system, and during the normal mode of operation, the pump is operated to maintain a programmed pressure at the ventricle discharge during systolic cardiac pulsation. A pressure transducer detects the pressure at the ventricle discharge and a hydraulically powered, closed-loop servomechanism controls the displacement of a piston in an expansible chamber receiving the blood from the ventricle, in such a way that programmed pressure is maintained in the chamber. Means are provided for recording the piston displacement as a function of time during ventricular systole. During diastole, the piston motion is reversed, and servo-controlled to duplicate the recorded displacement waveform while the piston contracts the chamber volume and expels blood into the vascular system. In this way the output blood from waveform produced by the pump during diastole is the same as the output flow waveform produced by the ventricle during the previous systole. In the event that the heart beat stops or becomes severely arrhythmic, the device switches to an autonomous mode of operation and a waveform generator in the pump controls provides an ideal blood flow waveform independent of cardiac pulsations.

Description

United States Patent 1191 Leachman, Jr.
[ HEART ASSIST METHOD AND DEVICE [76] lnventor: Frank A. Leachman, Jr., 54 Sunset Drive, Bristol, Conn. 06010 22 Filedc Nov. 1,1974
[21] Appl.No.:520,046
Related U.S. Application Data [63] Continuation-impart of Ser. No. 458,535, April 5,
OTHER PUBLICATIONS Hiller et al., American Journal of Medical Electronics July-Sept. 1963, pp. 212-221.
Primary Examiner-William E. Kamm Attorney, Agent, or FirmMcCormick, Paulding & Huber [57] ABSTRACT A heart assist device is controlled in a normal mode of LEFT VENTRlCLE LIGATION 11 v 3,911,898 1 Oct. 14, 1975 operation to counterpulsate with the heart and produce a blood flow waveform corresponding to the flow waveform of the heart being assisted. A blood pump in the device is connected serially between the discharge of a heart ventricle and the vascular system, and during the normal mode of operation, the pump is operated to maintain a programmed pressure at the ventricle discharge during systolic cardiac pulsation. A pressure transducer detects the pressure at the ventricle discharge and a hydraulically powered, closed-loop servomechanism controls the displacement of a piston in an expansible chamber receiving the blood from the ventricle, in such a way that programmed pressure is maintained in the chamber. Means are provided for recording the piston displacement as a function of time during ventricular systole. During diastole, the piston motion is reversed, and servo-controlled to duplicate the recorded displacement waveform while the piston contracts the chamber volume and expels blood into the vascular system. In this way the output blood from wave-form produced by the pump during diastole is the same as the output flow waveform produced by the ventricle during the previous systole. ln the event that the heart beat stops or becomes severely arrhythmic, the device switches to an autonomous mode of operation and a waveform generator in the pump controls provides an ideal blood flow waveform independent of cardiac pulsations.
19 Claims, 3 Drawing Figures U.S. Patent Oct. 14, 1975 Sheet1of2 3,911,898
IOI2 50 LEFT VENTRICLE UGATION AORTA AORTIC VALVE 1 VOLTAGE-TO-FREQUENCY WAVEFORM CONVERTER GENERATOR FIGS PULSE 6| STRETCHER US. Patent Oct. 14, 1975 POSITION TRANSDUCER SAMPLE POSITION VOLTAGE & HOLD COMPARATOR Sheet 2 of 2 PRESSURE TRANSDUCER TORQUE MOTOR AMPLIFIER AMPLIFIER SIGNAL CONDITIONER PULSE WIDTH DISCRIMINATOR INPUT SWITCH LOGIC ALARM PRESSURE REFERENCE MANUAL DEFIBRILLATOR INPUT SIGNAL COMPARATOR TO HEART PACEMAKER PULSE STRETCHER FLOW WAVEFORM ERROR DETECTOR RESET RAMP QI E FUNCTION WAVEFORM RECORDER DIFFERENTIAL AMPLIFIER VOLTAGE-TO SAMPLE HOLD FIG.
FREQUENCY CONVERTER HEART ASSIST METHOD AND DEVICE CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION This application is a continuation-in-part of copending application Ser. No. 458,535, filed Apr. 5, 1974, entitled HEART ASSIST DEVICE.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates to prosthetic devices and, more particularly, is concerned with a heart assist device which can operate in counterpulsation with the heart or establish autonomous control of blood flow from the heart.
Several approaches to the problem of providing artificial assistance to a weak or diseased heart have been proposed or developed. A common approach involves the concept of counterpulsation in which a blood pump in series with the heart is operated in synchronism with ventricular contractions to receive blood from the ventricle at low pressure during the systolic phase of heart action, and to expel this blood at arterial pressure during the diastolic phase of heart action. Counterpulsation by itself, however, can be achieved in various manners and does not necessarily result in duplication of the heart pressures and flows that would normally be experienced from a healthy heart. It is desirable that the heart assist device produce a pulsatile flow which the vascular system is accustomed to and in this respect, the blood flow waveform during each pulsation should be such that there is no breakdown or damage to the blood or the vascular system.
The need for an optimum blood flow waveform is apparent from the physical characteristics of the heart and the vascular system into which it empties. The vascular system properly preforms its function only when it transports a needed amount of blood in a given time to the appropriate cells of the body. Examination of blood vessels at different locations in the vascular system reveals that the wall of each vessel has the minimum cellular structure required to withstand the most severe stresses imposed upon it by the circulatory system. Significantly, this minimum structure of the vessels is designed for the particular blood flow waveform produced by the heart. It can be demonstrated that other waveforms delivering the same average blood flow during a given ventricular contraction generate greater arterial wall stresses than the natural heart waveform. Greater stresses applied cyclically over long periods of time produce deleterious effects which the body may not be able to withstand.
A heart assist device which operates in copulsation with the natural heart to produce a blood flow waveform substantially the same as that of the natural heart is disclosed in my copending application Ser. No. 458,535 identified above. In the copulsation device, blood is expelled into the vascular system by the blood pump during systolic contractions of the heart. My present invention relates to a counterpulsation heart assist device which is capable of expelling blood into the vascular system with a blood flow waveform substantially the same as that produced by the heart.
It is, therefore, a general object of this invention to disclose a counterpulsation heart assist device which provides a blood flow waveform that duplicates closely the natural heart output.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The present invention resides in a heart assist method and device which operates in counterpulsation with the heart and duplicates the blood flow waveform of the natural heart, that is the blood flow versus time function during systolic contraction, as long as the heart beat is not severely arrhythmic.
The heart assist device includes blood pumping means connectible between a ventricle of the natural heart and the associated vascular system of the body, which may include the coronary arteries themselves, to produce a pulsatile blood flow. Pumping control means is connected with the heart and the pumping means for regulating the pumping means in counterpulsation with the heart. The pumping means includes an expansible and contractible pumping chamber connected with the ventricle, and a displaceable piston which controls chamber expansion and contraction is operated by the pumping control means to maintain a programmed systolic pressure or back pressure at the ventricle during systole. Means are provided in the pumping control means for detecting and recording or storing the expansion of the chamber as a function of time during ventricular systole. The stored expansion defines the blood flow waveform produced by the heart, and means for regulating the pumping means reproduces the flow waveform during ventricular diastole by controlling chamber contraction and blood expulsion into the vascular system in a proportional manner. Accordingly, during diastole, blood is expelled from the chamber .into the vascular system with a flow waveform which duplicates the flow waveform produced by the contracting ventricle during the previous systole.
By duplicating the blood flow waveform produced by the heart, the vascular system experiences the same stress that would ordinarily be produced by the healthy heart. At the same time, the heart is permitted to operate against a reduced load at the ventricle discharge. Thus, the counterpulsation heart assist device duplicates the flow characteristics of the heart while reducing the heart load.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. 1 schematically illustrates in cross-section the blood pump and the manner in which the pump is con nected into the vascular system adjacent to the heart.
FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram showing the controls which regulate the blood pump operation for both counterpulsation and autonomous operation.
FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram of a variable time-base, programmed pressure reference.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS FIG. 1 shows the blood pump, generally designated 10, of a heart assist device in one embodiment of the present invention. Thepump 10 is surgically connected to the aorta immediately adjacent the aortic valve in the left ventricle and preferably is installed within the body.
Thepump 10 includes a cylindrical expansible andcontractible pumping chamber 12 which is connected by means of a bloodcompatible inlet 14 to the aorta between the aortic valve at the left ventricle discharge and a ligation in the aorta a short distance from the discharge.Chamber 12 is fitted with acheck valve 42 at its discharge. and the downstream side of this valve is connected to the aorta at the opposite side of the ligation from thetube 14 by a bloodcompatible outlet tube 18. The coronary arteries (not shown) are preferably connected to the aorta at the same side of the ligation as thetube 18 discharging blood from thepump 10. With the surgical installation indicated, all blood leaving the left ventricle must pass serially from the heart through the pump and then into the aorta. The pump is operated as explained in greater detail below to maintain programmed pressure or back pressure at the ventricle discharge during systole, and to expel blood into the aorta during diastole with a flow waveform corresponding to that produced by the heart during the previous systolic contraction of the ventricle.
Since the major circulatory load of the heart is borne by the left ventricle, the heart assist device of the present invention is most commonly employed with that ventricle. However, the utility of the device is not so limited and it is also possible to connect the pump to the right ventricle to transmit the venous blood to the lungs through the pulmonary arteries. Within the scope of the present invention, the term vascular system is used generally to refer to the arterial system connected to the ventricle supported by the assist device.
Within the pump 10 a displaceable piston 20 is provided withpiston head 22 insidechamber 12. Thepiston head 22 is sealed at the cylindrical wall of thechamber 12 by means of aflexible diaphragm 26 which rolls back and forth along the walls of the chamber as the piston 20 is reciprocated. The piston 20 is mounted within acylinder 29 and together they form a hydraulic actuator in a servomechanism including aspool valve 30 and anelectrical torque motor 32. In conventional fashion, thetorque motor 32 receives electrical signals from a pump control and positions the spool valve to regulate the flow of hydraulic fluid between the hydraulic actuator and aninlet port 34 anddischarge port 36.
During ventricular contraction,piston head 22 moves from top to bottom in FIG. 1, ingesting blood intochamber 12. During diastole, the aortic valve of the ventricle closes, preventing back-flow of blood, and thepiston head 22 moves from bottom to top in FIG. 1, expelling blood through thecheck valve 42 into the vascular system.
Hydraulic fluid used to operate the actuator including the piston 20 may be derived from a self-contained and battery-operated power source installed within the body of the heart assist recipient or carried externally of the body.
FIG. 2 illustrates the pump control which regulates the blood pump in FIG. 1 to achieve either counterpulsation of the pump and left ventricle or autonomous operation of the pump.
A principal operation of the heart assist device is counterpulsation of the heart ventricle and pump 10 in a manner which causes the blood flow waveform emanating from thepump 10 to duplicate the flow waveform from the ventricle during systolic contractions. The counterpulsation operation of the heart assist device is a cyclic operation synchronized with the heart and it will be assumed that the beginning of each cycle corresponds with the beginning of each heart beat when the ventricle is filled with blood and about to begin a systolic contraction. The first portion of the cycle is substantially coextensive with a systole and during this portion the displacement of the piston 20 is regulated by a closed-loop servomechanism in the pump control to maintain a programmed pressure at the ventricle discharge. Piston displacement is recorded or memorized as a function of time during systole and the recorded displacement accordingly represents the blood flow waveform produced by the ventricle. The other portion of the counterpulsation cycle is coextensive with the ventricular diastole and during this portion the recorded piston displacement is supplied as an input to the pump control to regulate piston displacement and the expulsion of blood from thechamber 12 with a flow waveform that is a duplicate of that produced by the heart during the previous systole. The recorded piston displacement, therefore, represents a reference waveform that the pump duplicates during diastole.
During the first portion of a counterpulsation operation cycle the piston 20 is controlled to maintain a programmed pressure at the ventricle discharge. A pressure sensor ortransducer 50 supplies electrical signals as feedback in the closed-loop servomechanism including thetorque motor 32 located in thepump 10 but illustrated separately in FIG. 2. Thetransducer 50 must be located in a position to detect the blood pressure at the discharge of the left ventricle and in one form of the invention, the transducer is located in thechamber 12 of thepump 10 as illustrated in FIG. 1.
As the systolic contraction begins, pressure at the discharge of the ventricle, and correspondingly in thechamber 12, begins to rise, and an electrical signal from thetransducer 50 passes to aninput amplifier 52 in FIG. 2 where it is amplified to a maximum level of several volts. The electrical signal produced by the transducer is proportional to the pressure in the chamber and hence, represents an analogue pressure signal. The amplified signal passes through a shaping network orsignal conditioner 54, which filters out unwanted noise, and then through anelectronic switch 56 into aninput signal comparator 58 and a double pole/double throwelectronic switch 60. Theelectronic switch 56 serves as a gate transmitting the analogue pressure signal during the systolic period if the heart is beating properly as explained in greater detail below.
In thesignal comparator 58, the analogue pressure signal is compared with an electrical, programmed pressure level signal determined by the setting of thepressure reference 62 which, for example, may be an adjustable potentiometer. The programmed pressure reference signal represents a desired pressure to be maintained at the discharge of the left ventricle and can be adjusted to increase or decrease the load against which the ventricle operates during the systolic period.
If the input pressure detected by thetransducer 50 is greater than the programmed reference pressure, the output of thecomparator 58 is turned on, and when the input pressure again drops below the reference pressure the output is turned off. Hence, thecomparator 58 normally produces a control pulse in synchronism with the coextensive with the systolic period of the left ventricle. This control pulse is used as a mode signal for controlling the servomechanism.
To insure that perturbations of the pressure signal detected by thetransducer 50 do not prematurely cut off the mode signal, the control pulse is transmitted through apulse stretcher 61 which effectively delays the trailing edge of the pulse a few. milliseconds to insure that the systolic contraction has in fact ended. The control pulse of thepulse stretcher 61 is transmitted to theelectronic switch 60 and a single pole/double throwelectronic switch 63 to pull in and set these switches in the positions opposite the deactivated positions illustrated.
The analogue pressure signal from theelectronic switch 56 and the pressure reference signal from thereference 62 are then transmitted through parallel circuits in theswitch 60 to thedifferential error detector 64 which produces an error signal representative of the difference between the two signals. That error signal is transmitted through theelectronic switch 63, arectifier 66 and a servo-amplifier 68 to drive thetorque motor 32 and piston 20.
Therectifier 66 prevents the servo-amplifier 68 andtorque motor 32 from responding to negative error signals which are generated when the pressure sensed by thetransducer 50 drops below the reference pressure. Such negative error signals occur, for example, at the end of each systole during the several milliseconds that the control pulse fromcomparator 58 is extended by thepulse stretcher 61. The error signal during this period could rapidly reverse the movement of the pump piston 20 and interfere with the programmed return of the piston described below.
Control of the piston 20 during systolic contraction displaces thepiston head 22 downward in FIG. 1, and increases the volume ofchamber 12 at the same instantaneous rate that the volume of the ventricle is decreasing. Aposition transducer 80, mounted in thepump 10 and cooperating with thepiston head 22, produces an electrical piston position signal that represents the ventricle output volume as a function of time. This signal is fed into awaveform recorder 84, which is turned on at the start of systole by the leading edge of the control pulse frompulse stretcher 61. The waveform recorder consists of an analog-to-digital converter, a random access memory (preferably a state-of-the-art semiconductor memory), timing and control circuits for storing and retreiving information from the memory, and a digital-toanalog converter. As thepiston head 22 moves during systole, the output from theposition transducer 80 is sampled and digitized at closely spaced intervals of time by the analog-to-digital converter within thewaveform recorder 84. The digitally encoded data is sequentially addressed and stored in the semiconductor memory by the internal timing and control circuits. Since this data is read in at a constant clock rate, as described below, the information stored in the memory represents the displacement waveform ofpiston head 22, and hence the volume output waveform of the heart ventricle.
During systole therefore, thetorque motor 32 is in a closed servo loop which attempts to hold the ventricle discharge pressure at the level of the reference pressure and causes the piston 20 in thepump 10 to move from top to bottom in FIG. 1 as long as the pressure sensed by thetransducer 50, that is the systolic pressure of the left ventricle, does not drop below the programmed pressure established by thereference 62. At the same time, thechamber 12 receives a quantity of blood equal to the quantity expelled from the left ventricle, and as long as the servomechanism including thepiston head 22 holds the systolic pressure near its reference value with small error signals, the displacement signals produced by theposition transducer 80 and stored in thewaveform recorder 84 will represent the blood flow waveform produced by the ventricle during the systolic period.
The foregoing description of the pump control which causes blood to be ingested intochamber 12 entails a pressure mode of operation which mode is coextensive with the systolic period of the ventricle. During the diastolic period of the ventricle, blood then fillingchamber 12 is expelled through thecheck valve 42 into the aorta. To accomplish this return, the pump control switches to a position mode of operation.
Since it is an object of this invention to supply the vascular system with a blood flow waveform which duplicates the flow waveform produced by the heart ventricle, thepiston head 22 in thepump 10 is controlled during its return by the displacement waveform stored in thewaveform recorder 84. In pumping, thepiston head 22 must displace a volume of blood in each successive time increment of its return stroke equal to that ingested during a corresponding time increment of the previous ingesting stroke when the piston head followed the volume output waveforrn of the ventricle. This process and the apparatus regulating thepump 10 generate a blood flow waveform in the aorta that duplicates the flow waveform produced by the ventricle during the previous systolic period. The durations of the systole and diastole of the natural heart, of course, vary with physiological demand, but within the range of heart beats that is expected of a recipient of the heart assist device, the systole is shorter than the succeeding diastole so that there is always adequate time to duplicate the blood flow waveform of the previous systole during a diastole. The vascular system, therefore, receives a quantity of blood matching the ventricle output during each systole and experiences a pressure waveform which should be easily tolerated without deleterious effects since the pressure waveform is generated as the vascular system response to a flow waveform produced by the heart. At the same time, the load or pressure against which the left ventricle operates is reduced to a level determined by thepressure reference 62. It is contemplated that the pressure reference may be adjusted upwardly during a recuperative period to permit a damaged or diseased heart to eventually reach a functional level approximating that of a healthy heart.
At the end of a systolic contraction and the beginning of the diastole, the pressure inchamber 12 falls below its reference value and causes thecomparator 58 andpulse stretcher 61 outputs to turn off. This pulse transition causes the timing and control circuits in thewave form recorder 84 to retrieve the information stored in its memory, on a first-in-first-out basis. The sequentially addressed digital data is processed by the digitalto-analog converter withinwaveform recorder 84 and generates a series of output voltage levels which closely approximate the waveform recorded.
Because the semiconductor memory in thewaveform recorder 84 can store a limited number of digital words, and the size and cost of the memory increase with increasing word storage capacity, the minimum word capacity required for adequate waveform amplitude resolution should be used. Although the memory must have a capacity capable of storing the number of words necessary to digitize the entire stroke of piston 20 to the required amplitude resolution (even though the full stroke may not be utilized during each beat),
excess memory capacity would be required if a constant clock frequency were used. This is because the heart beat rate and the period of systolic contraction vary widely to meet various physiological demands. If a constant clock rate were used, a digital word would be recorded with each clock pulse after a constant delay between clock pulses had elapsed. The clock rate would be that required to achieve the necessary amplitude resolution for the shortest expected systolic period. If this same clock rate were used while digitizing the waveform with the longest expected period, however, the clock would produce several digital words for each amplitude resolution level selected for the faster waveform. These redundant digital words would waste memory space.
To avoid this, an adjustable clock rate based on the previous systolic period is utilized. A fast clock rate is used for the shortest waveform duration, and this rate is proportionally lowered as the systolic period increases. This assures a more uniform amplitude increment for each clock pulse, so that memory capacity is dictated mostly by amplitude resolution considerations.
The clock rate is derived by sampling and storing a voltage proportional to the previous systolic period, and using this stored voltage as the input to a voltageto-frequency converter circuit.
To this end, areset time delay 130 is triggered at the beginning of a systolic period by the leading edge of the control pulse frompulse stretcher 61. After a delay of only several milliseconds, delay 130 triggers aramp function generator 120 to reset to its initial value, and to begin generating a ramp voltage. This ramp voltage decreases lineraly with time and reaches a minimum value only at the end of the longest systole. At the end of a systole, the trailing edge of the control pulse from thepulse stretcher 61 causes thegenerator 120 to stop and hold its last ramp voltage. At the beginning of the following systole, the leading edge of the control pulse fromstretcher 61 triggers a single-pulse generator 124, generating an output pulse that is shorter than the delay generated bycircuit 130. A sample-and-hold circuit 122 responds to the pulse from thepulse generator 124, forming a sample time aperture coextensive with the duration of this pulse, and during which thecircuit 122 stores the voltage of theramp generator 120 representing the length of the previous systolic period. It should be noted that the stored voltage representing the systolic period is smaller if the period is longer.
A voltage-to-frequency converter 126 is connected to the output of the sample-and-hold circuit 122, and produces an output pulse train having a pulse rate proportional to its input voltage. This pulse train determines the clock rate for reading and recording information in thewaveform recorder 84. Note that although the clock rate is adjusted from heart beat to heart beat on the basis of the previous systolic period, it remains constant during each heart cycle of one systole and diastole, assuring that the waveform is read into and out of the memory at the same rate. Theramp function generator 120, the sample-and-hold circuit 122, theconverter 126 and associated control components therefore form an adjustable clock for controlling the read and record rate for the memory in thewaveform recorder 84.
During its return stroke, piston is regulated in a closed loop by the pump control to reproduce the position waveform stored inrecorder 84. To do this, the
output of the position transducer is compared with the waveform output ofrecorder 84 and hydraulic control is exercised to minimize the error between these signals. When the position signal is fed intorecorder 84, however, thetransducer 80 output begins at a zero level when the piston 20 is in its extreme top position, and increases as the piston travels downward in FIG. 1. When the waveform is read out of the memory, however the piston must travel in the opposite direction, that is from bottom to top in FIG. 1. This means that theposition transducer 80 output signal cannot be directly compared with thewaveform recorder 84 output during the piston return stroke. To be compared with thetransducer 80 output, thewaveform recorder 84 signal must be substracted from a constant representing thetransducer 80 voltage output when it begins its return stroke.
To achieve this, the trailing edge of the control pulse from thepulse stretcher 61 causes a sample-and-hold circuit 82 to hold thelast transducer 80 voltage occurring at the end of systole. This voltage is fed into adifferential amplifier 92. Another input of this amplifier receives the output signal from thewaveform recorder 84 during diastole.Differential amplifier 92 generates a signal representing the difference between these signals. This difference signal is then compared directly with theposition transducer 80 output signal during the piston 20 return stroke, allowing reproduction of the volume displacement waveform, and hence the blood flow waveform produced by the ventricle during systolic contractions. In particular, the output signal from thedifferential amplifier 92 is applied to an input of theelectronic switch 60. Also, the output of theposition transducer 80 representing actual piston position is fed back to another input of theelectronic switch 60. The two position signals are transmitted through the switch when the trailing edge of the control pulse frompulse stretcher 61 deenergizes the switch and the switch assumes the position illustrated schematically. Theerror detector 64 compares the position signals and produces a position error signal. At the same time, theelectronic switch 63 is de-energized so that the position error signal is applied through theelectronic switch 63 to theservoamplifier 68 andtorque motor 32 which drives the piston 20 upwardly to the starting position in accordance with the stored waveform inrecorder 84.
Accordingly, the servomechanism assumes a position mode of operation in response to the trailing edge of the control pulse from thepulse stretcher 61 and the piston 20 is returned to its starting position by the servomechanism under closed-loop control.
As long as the heart continues to beat in a regular manner, the pump control illustrated in FIG. 2 continues to switch between the pressure and position modes of operation in synchronism with the systolic and diastolic periods of the left ventricle. This synchronism is maintained by utilizing the systolic pressure pulse detected by thetransducer 50 as the synchronizing signal.
Since it is the systolic pressure pulse of the ventricle which switches the servomechanism, or more specifically theelectronic switches 60 and 63, between the pressure and the position modes of operation, the pressure pulse generated by the piston 20 during its return stroke will also be detected by thetransducer 50, and could inadvertently switch the servomechanism into the pressure mode of operation. To prevent inadvertent mode switching in this fashion, theelectronic switch 56 serving as a control gate for the pressure signal remains open during diastole and is closed only if the piston is in its starting (extreme top in FIG. 1) position. Furthermore, the switch remains closed thereafter only if a control pulse from thestretcher 61 is present. In other words, theelectronic switch 56 is held closed only if the piston is at its extreme top position or if the piston is moving from top to bottom during a systolic contraction of the left ventricle.
To this end, alogic circuit 100 controls theelectronic switch 56 in response to signals received from aposition voltage comparator 102 and thepulse stretcher 61. Thevoltage comparator 102 receives information from theposition transducer 80 and produces an output to the logic circuit only when the piston 20 is in the starting position. If the logic circuit receives a signal from either thevoltage comparator 102 or thepulse stretcher 61, and as long as an additional signal from apulse discriminator 104 described in greater detail below is absent, thelogic circuit 100 closes theelectronic switch 56 and analogue pressure signals will pass to thesignal comparator 58 and theelectronic switch 60.
At the end of a systolic pressure pulse, thelogic circuit 100 opens and disables theelectronic switch 56 and further pressure pulses sensed bytransducer 50 during the return stroke of the piston do not cause theswitches 60 or 63 to be positioned in the pressure mode condition.
Thepump 10 continues cyclic operation in counterpulsation with the left ventricle as long as a regular heart beat persists. If, however, the heart beat should cease or become severly arrhythmic, that is either too long in the case of severe bradycardia or too short indicating ventricular tachycardia or fibrillation, the pump control switches to an autonomous operation in which .the pulsation rates are no longer controlled by the heart. The control for the pump as disclosed includes a secondary control system that automatically provides an artificially generated blood flow waveform from the pump to establish blood circulation completely independent of the natural heart.
The secondary control system includes apulse width discriminator 104 which monitors the delay between the control pulses received from thepulse stretcher 61. The discriminator produces two delay periods in response to the trailing edge of each pulse, the delay periods representing the maximum and minimum delay periods considered acceptable for the heart. if the leading edge of the subsequent control pulse occurs either before the minimum delay period has elapsed or after the maximum delay period has elapsed, the discriminator produces a latched output signal. This discriminator signal is applied to thelogic circuit 100 to disable theelectronic switch 56 and prevent further signals from passing through it. These signals could trigger thesignal comparator 58 and pull theelectronic switches 60 and 63 into the pressure mode positions. The discriminator signal is also transmitted to aflow waveform generator 106 which produces a time-voltage waveform representing the piston position signals that would be generated by thetransducer 80 during a normal ventricular contraction and dilation. This waveform signal is applied as the input to theelectronic switch 60 along with the feedback signal from theposition transducer 80 and is repeated continuously as long as the input from thepulse discriminator 104 is present.
During autonomous operation of thepump 10 the servomechanism drives the piston 20 in a closed-loop positioning mode of operation in accordance with thewaveform generator 106. To prevent the output of the sample-and-hold circuit 82 from interfering with the position commands from the waveform generator106, the signal from thediscriminator 104 is applied through a blocking diode of the rectifier in the same manner as the control pulse from thestretcher 61. The sampleand-hold circuit 82 is therefore placed in the sample mode of operation with zero output. A separate input from thepulse width discriminator 104 resets and holds thewaveform recorder 84 at zero output. The only signals then received at the operative inputs of theelectronic switch 60 are the voltage waveform produced by thegenerator 106 and the position feedback signal from theposition transducer 80. Accordingly, the closed-loop positioning control of the piston 20 continues as long as the discriminator output persists.
The blocking diodes ofisolation rectifier 70 prevent the signal from the pulse width discriminator from reaching theelectronic switches 60 and 63 during autonomous operation of the pump control and prevent the control pulses from thepulse stretcher 61 from reaching the logic circuit and other components connected withdiscriminator 104. Since the discriminator signal and control pulses have contradictory effects, the isolation provided by therectifier 70 is needed.
To warn the individual wearing the heart assist device that the pump control is operating autonomously, the signal from thediscriminator 104 is also applied to an .alarm 108.
Theflow waveform generator 106 can also produce a timing pulse to trigger apacemaker 110 and cause the heart to receive a mild electrical shock in synchronism with the leading edge of the fiow waveform. In this manner, normal contraction may be reinduced in the heart in synchronism with the autonomous operation of thepump 10.
Thepulse width discriminator 104 may be manually reset by the user. If the heart has recovered and assumed normal contractions, thealarm 108 remains off and the entire pump control system reverts to counterpulsation rather than autonomous operation. If the alarm turns back on immediately after manual resetting of thediscriminator 104, the individual will know that normal heart action has not been resumed. At this point he has the option of remaining on autonomous operation or utilizing themanual defibrillator 112 which raises a single pacemaker pulse to the level of defibrillator action and administers a severe electrical shock to a fibrillating heart in order to return to normal operation. If he elects to utililze the defibrillator, he can again determine whether it has been successful by resetting thepulse width discriminator 104 and listening for the alarm signal. Although the programmed systolic pressure or backpressure established by thepressure reference 62 has been described above as being constant throughout systole, it is contemplated that the pressure reference may also generate a variable, programmed analog pressure signal during each ventricular contraction. FIG. 3 discloses one form of thepressure reference 62 and associated components described above that are capable of producing a variable, programmed pressure waveform with an adjustable time base. The time base is derived from the previous systolic period.
The output of the voltage-to-frequency converter 126 is a pulse train having a pulse rate proportional to the input or stored voltage incircuit 122, which in turn is proportional to the previous systolic period. These pulses are applied as an input to thewaveform generator 128 in FIG. 3, and serve as clockpulses for reading a pressure program memory. Thewaveform generator 128 is basically a read-only memory having analogue pressure voltages or signals stored as digital words at sequentially addressed memory sites. The clock pulses cause sequential reading of these digital words. An internal digital-to-analog converter processes these digital words into a sequence of analog voltages, producing a desired systolic pressure or backpressure waveform that becomes the variable pressure program to be maintained by the blood pump during each systole.
Since the frequency of the clock pulses from theconverter 126 determines the rate at which the pressure waveform is produced by the generator, and since the frequency depends upon the voltage stored in the sample-and-hold circuit 122, the pressure waveform is produced in a period of time related to the last preceding systolic period. By setting the slope of the ramp produced by thegenerator 120 in conjunction with theconverter 126, the programmed pressure waveform from thegenerator 128 can be produced in a period of time equal to the last preceding systolic period.
Thewaveform generator 128 is turned on by the leading edge of the control pulse frompulse stretcher 61, and is reset to the initial value by its trailing edge.
Accordingly, the components producing the pulse train input for thewaveform generator 128 form an adjustable time-base generator which derives its time base fromuthe previous systolic period. Either the variable pressure program or the constant pressure program produced by a potentiometer may be selected to most advantageously serve the recipient of the heart assist device.
While the present invention has been described in several embodiments, it will be understood that numer- .ous modifications and substitutions can be had, without departing from the spirit of the invention. Many of the I components described and illustrated in the pump control of FIG. 2 may be replaced by other components performing equivalent functions. Thewaveform recorder 84 may include random or controlled access memory devices which store the ingested blood flow waveform in either analog or digital form. Theramp function generator 120, the sample-and-hold circuits .82 and 122, theflow waveform generator 106 and other components may be digital'or analog devices. The specific blood pump shown and described is not the onlydesign available for counterpulsation, and suitable modifications of the servomechanism driving the disclosed pump or other pumps can be made as long as the blood flow waveform produced by the ventricle is matched at the pump output. Accordingly, the present invention has been described in a preferred embodiment by way of illustration rather than limitation.
I claim: 1. A counterpulsation heart assist device comprising: blood pumping means connectible between a ventricle of the natural heart and the associated vascular system of the body, and including an expansible and contractible pumping chamber for ingesting blood from the ventricle and expelling blood into the associated vascular system; and
pumping control means connected with the heart and the pumping means for regulating the pumping means in counterpulsation with the heart and including means for detecting and storing'the blood flow waveform produced by the heart during systolic ventricle contractions and means for regulating the expulsion of blood from the pumping chamber to duplicate the stored flow waveform. 2. The heart assist device of claim 1 wherein: the blood pumping means has a displaceable piston associated with the pumping chamber for expanding and contracting the chamber volume and correspondingly causing blood to be ingested and expelled; and the pumping control means includes driving means for regulating the piston displacement. 3. A heart assist device as in claim 2 wherein: the means for detecting and storing is connected to the displaceable piston. 4. A heart assist device as defined in claim 3 wherein: the means for detecting and storing includes a piston position transducer and waveform recorder connected with the transducer for recording piston displacement. 5. A heart assist device as in claim 4 wherein: the waveform recorder has a memory programmed on a first-in-first-out basis. 6. A heart assist device as in claim 5 wherein: the waveform recorder includes a clock-controlled,
sequentially addressed memory; and the pumping control also includes an adjustable clock connected to the memory for adjusting the memory access rate. 7. A heart assist device as defined in claiml wherein the pumping control means includes:
pressure responsive means for controlling the expansion of the pumping chamber at a rate establishing a programmed pressure at the ventricle discharge during systole; and the means for detecting and storing includes memory means for recording the chamber expansion as a function of time. 8L A heart assist device as in claim 7 wherein: the blood pumping means includes a displaceable pistonconnected with the pump chamber for causing chamber expansion and contraction; the pressure responsive means comprises a closed loop servomechanism connected with the piston to control the piston displacement; and the means for detecting and storing includes a pressure transducer sensing ventricle discharge pressure and providing a pressure signal as an input to the servomechanism. 9. A heart assist device as in claim 7 wherein: the means for regulating the expulsion of blood from .the pumping chamber also includes the closed loop servomechanism connected with the piston in the pumping means. 10. A heart assist device as defined in claim 9 wherein: i
the control means includes switching means operated in synchronism with the heart cycle for connecting the input of the servomechanism alternately to re ceive as inputs the pressure transducer signal and the stored blood flow waveform. l l. A heart assist as defined in claim 1 further including in the pumping control means;
an autonomous pump control having a waveform generator providing a predetermined flow waveform for regulating the puming means independently of the heart pulsations; and discriminator means responsive to systolic pressure for energizing the autonomous pump control in the presence of severely arrhythmic heart pulsations. 12. A heart assist device as defined in claim 1 wherein:
the pump control means includes programmed means defining the programmed systolic pressure as a constant pressure level throughout the systolic period. 13. A heart assist device as defined in claim 1 wherein:
the pump control means includes programmed means defining the programmed systolic pressure as a variable pressure waveform during thesystolic period. 14. A heart assist device as defined in claim 13 wherein:
the programmed means includes an adjustable timebase generator responsive to a heart function for producing the variable pressure waveform in periods of time dependent upon the heart function. 15. A method of assisting the heart to produce pulsatile blood flow in the vascular system of the body with the blood flow waveform duplicating that of theheart comprising:
maintaining a programmed pressure at the ventricle discharge of the heart during systole;
detecting the blood flow waveform from the heart while the programmed pressure is maintained; recording the blood flow waveform from the heart as the waveform is detected; and pumping blood into the vascular system in a controlled manner to duplicate the recorded blood flow waveform. 16. The method of assisting the heart as in claim 15 wherein:
the step of pumping includes the steps of retrieving the recorded flow waveform and driving a blood pump in accordance with the retrieved waveform. 17. The method of assisting the heart as in claim 15 wherein:
the detecting step includes receiving a volume of blood equal to that discharged by the ventricle during systole in a chamber and wherein, the step of pumping comprises expelling the received volume of blood from the chamber during diastole. 18. The method of assisting the heart as defined in claim 15 wherein:
the step of pumping is performed during the diastole immediately following the systole in which the blood flow waveform was detected. 19. The method of assisting the heart as defined in claim 15 including the step of:
synchronizing the step of pumping with the systolic and diastolic periods of the heart by sensing the blood pressure emanating from the ventricle.

Claims (19)

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US4143425A (en)*1977-10-271979-03-13Runge Thomas MLeft atrial to descending thoracic aorta left ventricular assist device
US4369530A (en)*1981-05-191983-01-25Foxcroft AssociatesHydraulically actuated cardiac prosthesis and method of actuation
US4376312A (en)*1981-05-191983-03-15Foxcroft AssociatesHydraulically actuated cardiac prosthesis
US4838889A (en)*1981-09-011989-06-13University Of Utah Research FoundationVentricular assist device and method of manufacture
US4427470A (en)1981-09-011984-01-24University Of UtahVacuum molding technique for manufacturing a ventricular assist device
US4397049A (en)*1981-09-151983-08-09Foxcroft AssociatesHydraulically actuated cardiac prosthesis with three-way ventricular valving
US4389737A (en)*1981-09-151983-06-28Foxcroft AssociatesHydraulically actuated cardiac prosthesis with three-way ventricular valving
US4381567A (en)*1981-09-151983-05-03Foxcroft AssociatesHydraulically actuated total cardiac prosthesis with reversible pump and three-way ventricular valving
US4473423A (en)1982-05-031984-09-25University Of UtahArtificial heart valve made by vacuum forming technique
US4648384A (en)*1984-11-211987-03-10Schmukler Robert ERetrograde coronary sinus perfusion device and method
US4756302A (en)*1986-11-201988-07-12Novacor Medical CorporationBlood pumping system and method
US4938766A (en)*1987-08-281990-07-03Jarvik Robert KProsthetic compliance devices
US5092879A (en)*1988-02-171992-03-03Jarvik Robert KIntraventricular artificial hearts and methods of their surgical implantation and use
US4994078A (en)*1988-02-171991-02-19Jarvik Robert KIntraventricular artificial hearts and methods of their surgical implantation and use
US5326706A (en)*1989-07-171994-07-05Research Foundation Of State University Of New YorkHomeostatic organ preservation system
US5305982A (en)*1989-09-221994-04-26Yehuda TamariAdjustable static pressure regulator
US5267940A (en)*1989-11-291993-12-07The Administrators Of The Tulane Educational FundCardiovascular flow enhancer and method of operation
US5352180A (en)*1990-02-091994-10-04Societe TeracorMethod and apparatus for regulating the flow rate of a periodic flow heart prosthesis
US5676651A (en)*1992-08-061997-10-14Electric Boat CorporationSurgically implantable pump arrangement and method for pumping body fluids
US5879375A (en)*1992-08-061999-03-09Electric Boat CorporationImplantable device monitoring arrangement and method
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US5758666A (en)*1992-08-061998-06-02Electric Boat CorporationReciprocating pump with imperforate piston
US5843129A (en)*1992-08-061998-12-01Electric Boat CorporationElectrical circuit for equipment requiring redundant flow paths and method of use
US5676162A (en)*1992-08-061997-10-14Electric Boat CorporationReciprocating pump and linear motor arrangement
US5947892A (en)*1993-11-101999-09-07Micromed Technology, Inc.Rotary blood pump
FR2766373A1 (en)*1997-07-241999-01-29Commissariat Energie Atomique VENTRICULAR COUNTER-PULSE HEART ASSISTANCE DEVICE
WO1999004833A1 (en)*1997-07-241999-02-04Commissariat A L'energie AtomiqueVentricular cardiac aid device with counter-pulsation
US8900115B2 (en)*1997-10-092014-12-02Thoratec CorporationImplantable heart assist system and method of applying same
US20120004495A1 (en)*1997-10-092012-01-05Thoratec CorporationImplantable heart assist system and method of applying same
US6832982B1 (en)1999-08-202004-12-21Coral Licensing International Ltd.Method of treating a living organism to achieve a heart load reduction, and apparatus for carrying out the method
US20050090867A1 (en)*1999-08-202005-04-28Coral Licensing International Ltd.Method of treating a living organism to achieve a heart load reduction, and apparatus for carrying out the method
US6450942B1 (en)1999-08-202002-09-17Cardiorest International Ltd.Method for reducing heart loads in mammals
US7481760B2 (en)*2000-03-282009-01-27Pptt LlcImplantable counterpulsation cardiac assist device
US20040236171A1 (en)*2000-03-282004-11-25Rastegar Jahangir S.Implantable counterpulsation cardiac assist device
US6632169B2 (en)2001-03-132003-10-14Ltk Enterprises, L.L.C.Optimized pulsatile-flow ventricular-assist device and total artificial heart
US20040097782A1 (en)*2001-03-132004-05-20Theodosios KorakianitisOptimized pulsatile-flow ventricular-assist device and total artificial heart
US7029433B2 (en)*2002-03-162006-04-18Chang Sheldon SDevice for cardiac restoration
US20030187481A1 (en)*2002-03-162003-10-02Chang Sheldon S.Device for cardiac restoration
US20060034943A1 (en)*2003-10-312006-02-16Technology Innovations LlcProcess for treating a biological organism
US7066874B2 (en)2004-01-062006-06-27Bay Innovation Group, LlcDevices and methods for blood flow assistance
US20050148810A1 (en)*2004-01-062005-07-07Riebman Jerome B.Devices and methods for blood flow assistance
US20110124951A1 (en)*2004-03-022011-05-26Peter William WalshVessel or sac wall treatment and a cardiac assist device
US7590445B1 (en)*2005-02-012009-09-15Pacesetter, Inc.Indirect mechanical medical therapy system
US7756577B1 (en)2006-04-212010-07-13Pacesetter, Inc.Multi-modal medical therapy system
EP1889634A1 (en)*2006-08-182008-02-20NewCorTec S.p.A.A ventricular assist device and related computer program product
US20080045779A1 (en)*2006-08-182008-02-21Newcortec S.R.L.Ventricular assist device and related computer program product
US9387284B2 (en)*2011-02-182016-07-12Vascor, IncControl of blood flow assist systems
US20150038772A1 (en)*2011-02-182015-02-05Vascor, IncControl of blood flow assist systems
WO2014072695A1 (en)*2012-11-062014-05-15Queen Mary University Of LondonMechanical circulatory support
CN105163771A (en)*2012-11-062015-12-16英国伦敦大学玛丽女王学院 mechanical circulation support
EP3120881A1 (en)*2015-07-232017-01-25Northern Development ASPulsatile ventricular assist device
US10376623B1 (en)*2018-04-052019-08-13Raif TawakolSubclavian diastolic augmentation device

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