US2845543A - Patient couch - Google Patents

Patient couch Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2845543A
US2845543A US480516A US48051655A US2845543A US 2845543 A US2845543 A US 2845543A US 480516 A US480516 A US 480516A US 48051655 A US48051655 A US 48051655A US 2845543 A US2845543 A US 2845543A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
couch
patient
parts
patient couch
relation
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
US480516A
Inventor
Hansen Svend Aage Bruun
Christensen Verner
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 Individual filed Critical Individual
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2845543A publication Critical patent/US2845543A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B6/00Apparatus or devices for radiation diagnosis; Apparatus or devices for radiation diagnosis combined with radiation therapy equipment
    • A61B6/04Positioning of patients; Tiltable beds or the like
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61GTRANSPORT, PERSONAL CONVEYANCES, OR ACCOMMODATION SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR PATIENTS OR DISABLED PERSONS; OPERATING TABLES OR CHAIRS; CHAIRS FOR DENTISTRY; FUNERAL DEVICES
    • A61G13/00Operating tables; Auxiliary appliances therefor
    • A61G13/02Adjustable operating tables; Controls therefor
    • A61G13/08Adjustable operating tables; Controls therefor the table being divided into different adjustable sections

Definitions

  • the invention relates to a patient couch or couch equipment, particularly for use at examinations, X-ray photography, or treatment, and with at least two parts which are movable in relation to each other.
  • Operation couches are known in which the couch is divided into two parts hinged together along the rectilinearly extending adjacent edges, so that from a state in which it is plane the couch can be pushed up so as to resemble a gable roof, so that a patient resting on his side on the couch is made to lie with a sideward bend in the hip, by which means an injury around the hip becomes more easily accessible for an operation.
  • An object of the present invention is to provide a patient couch which is particularly well suited as diagnosis apparatus, X-ray equipment or treatment apparatus in connection with back defects or anomalies.
  • the procedure has hitherto been that the patient is placed in a sitting or half-sitting position so that a pressure is exerted on the individual elements of the spinal column, after which X-ray pictures are taken in part with the patient sitting in an upright position, in part with the patient sitting in inclined positions to the right and to the left.
  • the body inclinations can often be very painful to the patient, it may be difiicult for the patient to keep immovable, so that. the radiography may become rather lengthy and painful because the pictures have to be re-taken.
  • the couch comprises a seat part and a pack part mounted turnably in relation to each other in such a way that the axis, around which the back part is turned in relation to stationary seat part, is substantially at right angles to the patient-supporting surface of the seat-part and is located at a suitable distance from the curved joint between the vtwo parts.
  • suitable distance is meant a distance permitting ,that the lumbar lordosis of a patient resting on the couch aligns the joint when the axis of rotation passes through the lowest sacral vertebra.
  • the patient rests in a substantially horizontal plane so that no pressure is exerted on the vertebrae, and by one of the two parts of the patient couch being swung in relation to the other, e. g. the seat part in relation to the back part, the lumbar part of the patients spinal column can be put in an optional angular position, particularly convenient with a view to diagnostication or photography, in relation to the rest of the spinal column.
  • the X-ray photographer is not dependent on the patient being in part able himself to take up the desired angular position, in part able to remain in this position as long as the examination or the radiography is being performed.
  • a still further object of the invention is to provide a patient couch being well suited as treatment couch in cases where a sideward bending of the lumbar part of the patients spinal column is to be performed in relation to 'ice the rest of the spinal column, e.. g. for the purpose of straightening out an existing scoliosis.
  • Still another object of the invention is a method of treatment carried out by means of the couch.
  • Fig. 1 illustrates a plan view of an embodiment of a patient couch according to the invention
  • FIG. 2 the patient couch shown in Fig. l, in side elevation and in section on line II-II,
  • Fig. 3 an embodiment of a bearing connecting the two parts of the patientcouch to each other, viewed :from the centre of rotation for the turnable part of the patient couch, and
  • Fig. 4 a section on line IVIV in Fig. 3.
  • Figs. 1 and 2 in Figs. 1 and 2 designate the two parts of the patient couch, which two parts are movable in relation to each other.
  • the couch part 1 rests on two pairs of legs 3 and 4, two of which are shown in Fig. 2, while all of the four legs have been indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 1.
  • the legs are so mounted that they are not located within the range where there is a possibility of X-ray pictures being taken.
  • the part 1 of the patient couch need not have the shape shown in Fig. l, as it may for example be shortened for the purpose of coupling it to existing tables :or to a temporary couch of cushions for the purpose of putting the patient into a sitting or half-sitting position.
  • the part 1 of the patient couch is, however, couveniently made so large as to extend all the way to the upper end of culumna lumbo sacralis on a patient resting correctly on the patient couch.
  • the part1 of the patient couch carries a supporting member for one end of the part 2 of the patient couch, and in the example shown the supporting 'member is formed by a substantially circular carrying bar 5 which, opposite to the side where it is in fixed connection with the part 1 of the patient couch, is supported by two legs 6 and 7, of which only the leg 6 is shown in Fig. 2
  • the circular supporting member 5 is a bar of U-shaped cross-section.
  • the inner surfaces of the flanges of the bar 5 serve as running paths for balls mounted on a supporting member 8 secured to the patient couch.
  • a suitable number of such supporting members may be provided, for example four. It' is, however, also possible to-let such a ball-bearing support extend the whole way round.
  • the balls may also be carried by a ball bearing ring which is in fixed connection with the part 1 of the patient couch, so that the supporting member or each of the supporting members 8 need only carry a bar 9 which will thus run on balls stationary in space when the part 2 of the patient couch is turned in relation to the stationary part 1 of the patient couch.
  • the connection between the two parts 1 and 2 of the patient couch may also'be effected without the use of ball bearings.
  • the essential feature in this connection is not the nature of the bearing, but the mounting of the bearing in relation to the patient couch, so that the bearings do not get within the field of exposure, i. e. the area around the longitudinal axis of the patient couch, especially the area around the centre for the rotary motion.
  • the bearing need not per se bearranged for carrying anything, but serves first and foremost for ensuring that the connection between the two parts of the patient couch is maintained during their motion in relation to each other.
  • the principle requires no' connection at all between the two parts of'the patient couch, it being possible to perform adjustment and alignment manually.
  • the part 2 of the patient couch which part is in the embodiment example shown on the drawing at one'end supported by a supporting member 8 resting-on the bearing 5, is at the other end supported by a leg arranged for being easily displaced along the supporting surface, for example by being provided with a wheel 11. More legs than those shown on the drawing may be provided.
  • the field, within which X-ray photographs will most frequently be taken, is that designated by a in Fig. 2, and within this range lies the joint between the parts 1 and 2 of the patient couch.
  • This joint should be of such a nature that it will not show on the X-ray picture.
  • a ray at right angles to the contact surface of the patient couch should cover the shortest possible distance in the joint space which should therefore have a form differing from the cylindrical form, where the generatrix is at right angles to the contact surface of the patient couch.
  • the joint is in the case shown designed as part of a conical surface, the two surfaces facing each other on the parts 1 and 2 of the patient couch being surfaces on cones, the apexes of which lie under the part 2 of the patient couch. It is possible to choose conical surfaces, the apexes of which lie above the patient couch, and it is also possible to use a stepped form so that the two surfaces facing each other have the same form as the surfaces on stepped pulleys. In the joint as well as in all other places within the picture frame no metal bars or other materials must be used with atomic weights different from the material of the parts of the patient couch, as this might cause undesirable maks to show on the X-ray picture.
  • adjustment devices may be provided for adjusting the level of the two parts 1 and 2 of the patient couch in relation to each other. If the two parts of the patient couch are only placed together without any direct interconnection, it is for example possible to use legs that are height-adjustable in a way known per se.
  • the patient couch When the patient couch is to be used, the patient is placed resting for example on his back with his back against the back part 1 and his head to the right in Figs. 1 and 2, and with his lowest sacral vertebra in the centre 0 for the turning motion of the part2 of the patient couch.
  • the centre 0 may with a view to the proper placing of the patient be marked on the upper side of the part 2 of the patient couch.
  • the patients legs rest on the part 2 of the patient couch.
  • An X-ray picture is taken with the two parts of the patient couch in alignment. Without the patient being moved or contributing himself to the turning, the part 2 of the patient couch is then turned an angle, e. g. clockwise, in relation to the part 1 of the patient couch.
  • the size of the angle can be read on an angle scale, not shown, and depends on the side curvature with which it be desired to take the picture.
  • Another X-ray picture is taken, whereupon the part 2 of the patient couch is turned an angle desired to the opposite side, i. e. anticlockwise in relation to the part 1 of the patient couch, with the patient still resting on his back on the two parts of the couch, and then a third X-ray picture is taken.
  • the patient couch may also be used for taking X-ray pictures of patients lying on their sides.
  • the part 2 of the patient couch may be arranged for being lowered in relation to the part 1 of the patient couch, so that a sideward obliquity of the spinal column is avoided when the patient lies on his side,
  • the extent of the two parts of the couch may in the embodiment given be adapted to the range of application aimed at.
  • the surface of the couch need not be plane, for instance it can have a urface in the form of the body.
  • the patient couch according to the invention is, particularly when it is to be used as X-ray equipment, so de signed that the parts of the couch, which by a motion of the seat part in relation to the back part can be brought within the picture frame, have uniform transmission factors for the X-rays, so that no undesirable shadows or light areas show on the picture.
  • the joint between the two parts, back part and seat part might cause such a shadow or light area, but according to the invention the joining faces are expediently parts of a conical surface, the axis of rotation of which coincides with the axis of rotation of the seat part.
  • the patient couch according to the invention may form part of the equipment for an X-ray apparatus, but need not in itself be a complete couch, it being possible to couple it to an existing table, the latter then representing the remaining part of the patient couch.
  • the two parts may be supported separately and only guided in their motion in relation to each other, or one part may completely or partly support the other.
  • care must be taken that the bearings, if any, do not lie within the bounds of the picture frame so as to show on the picture.
  • Treatments according to the invention camprises treatment of a unilateral protrusion of an intervertebral disc. Further it comprises the case in which not an active but only a passive external force is present, for instance one or two springs trying to keep two parts of the couch in a preset position, preferably in alignment, from which position it is up to the patient to move the two parts against the spring force thereby training the muscles and actuating the spinal column.
  • the couch may be divided in several parts and springs can be arranged between every two adjacent parts or only between a single pair or some of the pairs. By an increasing number of parts the couch is tending to be a reproduction of the spinal column.
  • a patient couch for use in X-ray examinations and treatment and comprising at least two co-planar parts, a seat part and a back part rotatable in relation to each other in a single plane, that improvement comprising a joint between the two parts having a shape such that X-rays striking the joint at substantially right angles to the plane of the surface of the parts of said couch penetrate the same thickness of material as X-rays striking any other point of the parts of said couch within the field of exposure at substantially right angles.
  • said joint being formed by two complementary abutting surfaces, one being the outer surface of a truncated cone and the other being the inner surface of a truncated cone, the axis of both cones coinciding with the axis of rotation of the seat part.
  • a patient couch for use in X-ray examinations and treatment comprising a seat part and a back part which are co-planar and rotatable in relation to each other in a single plane, a joint between the seat part and the back part having a shape such that X-rays striking the joint at a substantially right angles to the plane of the surface of the parts of said couch penetrate the same thickness of material as X-rays striking any other point of the parts of said couch within the field of exposure at substantially right angles, the materials of which the parts of said couch which lie within said field of exposure are composed having the same coefficient of penetration for X-rays.
  • a patient couch as claimed in claim 3 said joint being formed by two complementary abutting surfaces
  • a patient couch for use in X-ray examinations and treatment comprising at least two co-planar parts, a
  • a patient couch for use in X-ray examinations and treatment comprising a seat part and a back part which are co-planar and rotatable in relation to each other in a single plane, a circular joint between the two parts, the material and shape of the two parts adjacent the joint being such that an image of the joint does not appear on a picture produced by the passage of X-rays through said parts, said back part having a carrying member shaped as an arc of a circle, the ends of said carrying member being connected to said back part outside the field of exposure, two legs positioned outside the field of exposure supporting said carrying member at a distance from the back part, the seat part comprising a supporting member at one end coacting with said carrying member and two legs with rollers on their lower ends at the other end.

Landscapes

  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Biomedical Technology (AREA)
  • Veterinary Medicine (AREA)
  • Public Health (AREA)
  • Medical Informatics (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Animal Behavior & Ethology (AREA)
  • High Energy & Nuclear Physics (AREA)
  • Radiology & Medical Imaging (AREA)
  • Pathology (AREA)
  • Heart & Thoracic Surgery (AREA)
  • Molecular Biology (AREA)
  • Surgery (AREA)
  • Optics & Photonics (AREA)
  • Nuclear Medicine, Radiotherapy & Molecular Imaging (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Biophysics (AREA)
  • Apparatus For Radiation Diagnosis (AREA)

Description

y 1958 s.-A. B. HANSEN EI'AL 2,845,543
PATIENT coucn Filed Jan. 7, 1955 INVENTORS SVEND A. B. HANSEN 8. VERNER CHRISTENSEN United States atent O" PATIENT COUCH Svend Aage Bruun Hansen, Copenhagen, and Verner Christensen, Thisted, Denmark Application January 7, 1955, Serial N 0. 480,516 Claims priority, application Denmark January .9, 1954 7 Claims. (Cl. 250-54) The invention relates to a patient couch or couch equipment, particularly for use at examinations, X-ray photography, or treatment, and with at least two parts which are movable in relation to each other.
Operation couches are known in which the couch is divided into two parts hinged together along the rectilinearly extending adjacent edges, so that from a state in which it is plane the couch can be pushed up so as to resemble a gable roof, so that a patient resting on his side on the couch is made to lie with a sideward bend in the hip, by which means an injury around the hip becomes more easily accessible for an operation.
An object of the present invention is to provide a patient couch which is particularly well suited as diagnosis apparatus, X-ray equipment or treatment apparatus in connection with back defects or anomalies. In the case of X-ray photography of the lower part of the back (columna lumbo sacralis) the procedure has hitherto been that the patient is placed in a sitting or half-sitting position so that a pressure is exerted on the individual elements of the spinal column, after which X-ray pictures are taken in part with the patient sitting in an upright position, in part with the patient sitting in inclined positions to the right and to the left. As the body inclinations can often be very painful to the patient, it may be difiicult for the patient to keep immovable, so that. the radiography may become rather lengthy and painful because the pictures have to be re-taken. I
A further object of the invention is to avoid these drawbacks. According to the invention the couch comprises a seat part and a pack part mounted turnably in relation to each other in such a way that the axis, around which the back part is turned in relation to stationary seat part, is substantially at right angles to the patient-supporting surface of the seat-part and is located at a suitable distance from the curved joint between the vtwo parts. By suitable distance is meant a distance permitting ,that the lumbar lordosis of a patient resting on the couch aligns the joint when the axis of rotation passes through the lowest sacral vertebra. By this construction is attained that the patient rests in a substantially horizontal plane so that no pressure is exerted on the vertebrae, and by one of the two parts of the patient couch being swung in relation to the other, e. g. the seat part in relation to the back part, the lumbar part of the patients spinal column can be put in an optional angular position, particularly convenient with a view to diagnostication or photography, in relation to the rest of the spinal column. In other words, the X-ray photographer is not dependent on the patient being in part able himself to take up the desired angular position, in part able to remain in this position as long as the examination or the radiography is being performed.
A still further object of the invention is to provide a patient couch being well suited as treatment couch in cases where a sideward bending of the lumbar part of the patients spinal column is to be performed in relation to 'ice the rest of the spinal column, e.. g. for the purpose of straightening out an existing scoliosis.
Still another object of the invention is a method of treatment carried out by means of the couch.
The invention is in the following explained in detail with reference to the accompanying drawing where:
Fig. 1 illustrates a plan view of an embodiment of a patient couch according to the invention,
Fig. 2 the patient couch shown in Fig. l, in side elevation and in section on line II-II,
Fig. 3 an embodiment of a bearing connecting the two parts of the patientcouch to each other, viewed :from the centre of rotation for the turnable part of the patient couch, and
Fig. 4 a section on line IVIV in Fig. 3.
1 and 2 in Figs. 1 and 2 designate the two parts of the patient couch, which two parts are movable in relation to each other. The couch part 1 rests on two pairs of legs 3 and 4, two of which are shown in Fig. 2, while all of the four legs have been indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 1. The legs are so mounted that they are not located within the range where there is a possibility of X-ray pictures being taken. The part 1 of the patient couch need not have the shape shown in Fig. l, as it may for example be shortened for the purpose of coupling it to existing tables :or to a temporary couch of cushions for the purpose of putting the patient into a sitting or half-sitting position. The part 1 of the patient couch is, however, couveniently made so large as to extend all the way to the upper end of culumna lumbo sacralis on a patient resting correctly on the patient couch.
The part1 of the patient couch carries a supporting member for one end of the part 2 of the patient couch, and in the example shown the supporting 'member is formed by a substantially circular carrying bar 5 which, opposite to the side where it is in fixed connection with the part 1 of the patient couch, is supported by two legs 6 and 7, of which only the leg 6 is shown in Fig. 2
In Fig. 4, which shows an embodiment of the connection btween the two parts 1 and 2 of the patient couch, the circular supporting member 5 is a bar of U-shaped cross-section. The inner surfaces of the flanges of the bar 5 serve as running paths for balls mounted on a supporting member 8 secured to the patient couch. A suitable number of such supporting members may be provided, for example four. It' is, however, also possible to-let such a ball-bearing support extend the whole way round. The balls may also be carried by a ball bearing ring which is in fixed connection with the part 1 of the patient couch, so that the supporting member or each of the supporting members 8 need only carry a bar 9 which will thus run on balls stationary in space when the part 2 of the patient couch is turned in relation to the stationary part 1 of the patient couch. The connection between the two parts 1 and 2 of the patient couch may also'be effected without the use of ball bearings. The essential feature in this connection is not the nature of the bearing, but the mounting of the bearing in relation to the patient couch, so that the bearings do not get within the field of exposure, i. e. the area around the longitudinal axis of the patient couch, especially the area around the centre for the rotary motion. The bearing need not per se bearranged for carrying anything, but serves first and foremost for ensuring that the connection between the two parts of the patient couch is maintained during their motion in relation to each other. The principle requires no' connection at all between the two parts of'the patient couch, it being possible to perform adjustment and alignment manually.
The part 2 of the patient couch, which part is in the embodiment example shown on the drawing at one'end supported by a supporting member 8 resting-on the bearing 5, is at the other end supported by a leg arranged for being easily displaced along the supporting surface, for example by being provided with a wheel 11. More legs than those shown on the drawing may be provided.
The field, within which X-ray photographs will most frequently be taken, is that designated by a in Fig. 2, and within this range lies the joint between the parts 1 and 2 of the patient couch. This joint should be of such a nature that it will not show on the X-ray picture. This means that a ray at right angles to the contact surface of the patient couch should cover the shortest possible distance in the joint space which should therefore have a form differing from the cylindrical form, where the generatrix is at right angles to the contact surface of the patient couch.
The joint is in the case shown designed as part of a conical surface, the two surfaces facing each other on the parts 1 and 2 of the patient couch being surfaces on cones, the apexes of which lie under the part 2 of the patient couch. It is possible to choose conical surfaces, the apexes of which lie above the patient couch, and it is also possible to use a stepped form so that the two surfaces facing each other have the same form as the surfaces on stepped pulleys. In the joint as well as in all other places within the picture frame no metal bars or other materials must be used with atomic weights different from the material of the parts of the patient couch, as this might cause undesirable maks to show on the X-ray picture.
For the purpose of adjusting the joint, adjustment devices, not shown, may be provided for adjusting the level of the two parts 1 and 2 of the patient couch in relation to each other. If the two parts of the patient couch are only placed together without any direct interconnection, it is for example possible to use legs that are height-adjustable in a way known per se.
When the patient couch is to be used, the patient is placed resting for example on his back with his back against the back part 1 and his head to the right in Figs. 1 and 2, and with his lowest sacral vertebra in the centre 0 for the turning motion of the part2 of the patient couch. The centre 0 may with a view to the proper placing of the patient be marked on the upper side of the part 2 of the patient couch. The patients legs rest on the part 2 of the patient couch. An X-ray picture is taken with the two parts of the patient couch in alignment. Without the patient being moved or contributing himself to the turning, the part 2 of the patient couch is then turned an angle, e. g. clockwise, in relation to the part 1 of the patient couch. The size of the angle can be read on an angle scale, not shown, and depends on the side curvature with which it be desired to take the picture. Another X-ray picture is taken, whereupon the part 2 of the patient couch is turned an angle desired to the opposite side, i. e. anticlockwise in relation to the part 1 of the patient couch, with the patient still resting on his back on the two parts of the couch, and then a third X-ray picture is taken.
The patient couch may also be used for taking X-ray pictures of patients lying on their sides. In this case the part 2 of the patient couch may be arranged for being lowered in relation to the part 1 of the patient couch, so that a sideward obliquity of the spinal column is avoided when the patient lies on his side, The extent of the two parts of the couch may in the embodiment given be adapted to the range of application aimed at. The surface of the couch need not be plane, for instance it can have a urface in the form of the body.
When treating a patient he or she may be brought in fixed position in relation to both parts of the couch for example by means of straps or the like. During the treatment one part is kept stationary and the other oscillated through the angle prescribed by doctor. The oscillation may be carried out by hand or by any other known means, for instance an electric motor.
The patient couch according to the invention is, particularly when it is to be used as X-ray equipment, so de signed that the parts of the couch, which by a motion of the seat part in relation to the back part can be brought within the picture frame, have uniform transmission factors for the X-rays, so that no undesirable shadows or light areas show on the picture. The joint between the two parts, back part and seat part, might cause such a shadow or light area, but according to the invention the joining faces are expediently parts of a conical surface, the axis of rotation of which coincides with the axis of rotation of the seat part. Hereby is attained that X-rays emitted at right angles to the contact surface of the patient couch are everywhere subjected to the same absorption.
The patient couch according to the invention may form part of the equipment for an X-ray apparatus, but need not in itself be a complete couch, it being possible to couple it to an existing table, the latter then representing the remaining part of the patient couch.
The two parts may be supported separately and only guided in their motion in relation to each other, or one part may completely or partly support the other. In the case of X-ray apparatuses, care must be taken that the bearings, if any, do not lie within the bounds of the picture frame so as to show on the picture.
Treatments according to the invention camprises treatment of a unilateral protrusion of an intervertebral disc. Further it comprises the case in which not an active but only a passive external force is present, for instance one or two springs trying to keep two parts of the couch in a preset position, preferably in alignment, from which position it is up to the patient to move the two parts against the spring force thereby training the muscles and actuating the spinal column. When relaxing the said two parts of the couch and consequently the patient is brought back to the original position. The couch may be divided in several parts and springs can be arranged between every two adjacent parts or only between a single pair or some of the pairs. By an increasing number of parts the couch is tending to be a reproduction of the spinal column.
We claim:
1. In a patient couch for use in X-ray examinations and treatment and comprising at least two co-planar parts, a seat part and a back part rotatable in relation to each other in a single plane, that improvement comprising a joint between the two parts having a shape such that X-rays striking the joint at substantially right angles to the plane of the surface of the parts of said couch penetrate the same thickness of material as X-rays striking any other point of the parts of said couch within the field of exposure at substantially right angles.
2. The improvement as claimed in claim 1, said joint being formed by two complementary abutting surfaces, one being the outer surface of a truncated cone and the other being the inner surface of a truncated cone, the axis of both cones coinciding with the axis of rotation of the seat part.
3. A patient couch for use in X-ray examinations and treatment comprising a seat part and a back part which are co-planar and rotatable in relation to each other in a single plane, a joint between the seat part and the back part having a shape such that X-rays striking the joint at a substantially right angles to the plane of the surface of the parts of said couch penetrate the same thickness of material as X-rays striking any other point of the parts of said couch within the field of exposure at substantially right angles, the materials of which the parts of said couch which lie within said field of exposure are composed having the same coefficient of penetration for X-rays.
4. A patient couch as claimed in claim 3, said joint being formed by two complementary abutting surfaces,
one being the outer surface of a truncated cone and the other being the inner surface of a truncated cone, the axis of both cones coinciding with the axis of rotation of the seat part.
5. A patient couch for use in X-ray examinations and treatment, comprising at least two co-planar parts, a
seat part and a back part, rotatable in relation to each other in a single plane, and having a circular joint between the two parts, the material and the shape of the two parts adjacent to the joint being such that an image of the joint does not appear on a picture produced by the passage of X-rays through said parts.
6. A patient couch as claimed in claim 5, and an angle scale being provided in fixed connection with one of said parts and an indicator cooperable with said angle scale provided in fixed connection with the other part.
7. A patient couch for use in X-ray examinations and treatment comprising a seat part and a back part which are co-planar and rotatable in relation to each other in a single plane, a circular joint between the two parts, the material and shape of the two parts adjacent the joint being such that an image of the joint does not appear on a picture produced by the passage of X-rays through said parts, said back part having a carrying member shaped as an arc of a circle, the ends of said carrying member being connected to said back part outside the field of exposure, two legs positioned outside the field of exposure supporting said carrying member at a distance from the back part, the seat part comprising a supporting member at one end coacting with said carrying member and two legs with rollers on their lower ends at the other end.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 921,559 McManis May 11, 1909 1,092,435 Dorrance Apr. 7, 1914 1,213,137 Albright Jan. 23, 1917 1,600,598 Meyer Sept. 21, 1926
US480516A 1954-01-09 1955-01-07 Patient couch Expired - Lifetime US2845543A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DK2845543X 1954-01-09

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2845543A true US2845543A (en) 1958-07-29

Family

ID=8158709

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US480516A Expired - Lifetime US2845543A (en) 1954-01-09 1955-01-07 Patient couch

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2845543A (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5919131A (en) * 1998-04-22 1999-07-06 American Echo, Inc. Patient examination method using a tethered probe and a rotatable examination table having three access sites
US5950262A (en) * 1998-04-22 1999-09-14 American Echo, Inc. Rotatable examination table
EP0995397A3 (en) * 1998-10-05 2000-05-03 Esaote S.p.A. Diagnostic and/or therapeutic treatment apparatus, particularly for nuclear magnetic resonance imaging
US20050187460A1 (en) * 2001-10-01 2005-08-25 Fonar Corporation Patient bed support for an open MRI system
US20050222505A1 (en) * 2001-06-21 2005-10-06 Fonar Corporation MRI scanner and method for modular patient handling
US7024711B1 (en) * 2000-08-31 2006-04-11 Stasney T Glen Sonography bed having patient support and sonographer access provisions
US20100171500A1 (en) * 2007-05-10 2010-07-08 Oni Medical Systems, Inc. Dedicated system for msk joint imaging

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US921559A (en) * 1906-10-22 1909-05-11 John V Mcmanis Osteopathic table.
US1092435A (en) * 1913-02-07 1914-04-07 Harold J Dorrance Osteopathic-treatment table.
US1213137A (en) * 1913-02-01 1917-01-23 C W Albright Company Treating-table.
US1600598A (en) * 1922-03-09 1926-09-21 Meyer William X-ray apparatus

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US921559A (en) * 1906-10-22 1909-05-11 John V Mcmanis Osteopathic table.
US1213137A (en) * 1913-02-01 1917-01-23 C W Albright Company Treating-table.
US1092435A (en) * 1913-02-07 1914-04-07 Harold J Dorrance Osteopathic-treatment table.
US1600598A (en) * 1922-03-09 1926-09-21 Meyer William X-ray apparatus

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5919131A (en) * 1998-04-22 1999-07-06 American Echo, Inc. Patient examination method using a tethered probe and a rotatable examination table having three access sites
US5950262A (en) * 1998-04-22 1999-09-14 American Echo, Inc. Rotatable examination table
EP0995397A3 (en) * 1998-10-05 2000-05-03 Esaote S.p.A. Diagnostic and/or therapeutic treatment apparatus, particularly for nuclear magnetic resonance imaging
EP1004269A1 (en) 1998-10-05 2000-05-31 Esaote S.p.A. Patient table in combination with a magnetic resonance imaging machine
US6346814B1 (en) 1998-10-05 2002-02-12 Alessandro Carrozzi Machine for diagnostic and/or therapeutic treatment, particularly a nuclear magnetic resonance imaging machine
US6377830B1 (en) 1998-10-05 2002-04-23 Esaote, S.P.A. Patient table in combination with biomedical apparati like magnetic resonance imaging machine
US7024711B1 (en) * 2000-08-31 2006-04-11 Stasney T Glen Sonography bed having patient support and sonographer access provisions
US20050222505A1 (en) * 2001-06-21 2005-10-06 Fonar Corporation MRI scanner and method for modular patient handling
US20050187460A1 (en) * 2001-10-01 2005-08-25 Fonar Corporation Patient bed support for an open MRI system
US20100171500A1 (en) * 2007-05-10 2010-07-08 Oni Medical Systems, Inc. Dedicated system for msk joint imaging
US8384386B2 (en) 2007-05-10 2013-02-26 General Electric Company Dedicated system for msk joint imaging

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4312500A (en) Patient support
US3503082A (en) Hospital bed
US5991651A (en) Compression/traction method for use with imaging machines
JP4594329B2 (en) Magnetic resonance imaging system
US4941709A (en) Examination chair for placing a patient in desired positions for E.G. radiological examination
US3466439A (en) Radiation treatment apparatus with transversely gapped table
US10130542B1 (en) Device for positioning the neck of a person in the flexion and extension positions
US2845543A (en) Patient couch
JPH08509881A (en) Method and apparatus for segmented radiography scanning
GB2151472A (en) Human-body turning device
US3700229A (en) Examinee fastening device for use in an x-ray photographing apparatus
US5166968A (en) Portable x-ray cassette holder
US4316091A (en) CT Scanner
KR102022477B1 (en) Sickroom Bed with Cassette Tray for Radiographic Imaging
US5835557A (en) Apparatus for displaying x-ray images
US6618613B1 (en) Non-axial body computed tomography
DE102013215454A1 (en) Method and device for patient positioning
JP3569286B2 (en) A device for compressing the lumbar spine for medical imaging purposes
JPS63318930A (en) Ultrasonic diagnostic apparatus
DE10146915B4 (en) Method and imaging device for a 3D examination of the patient in an upright or partially upright posture
US3284815A (en) Tiltable beds
JP4672099B2 (en) X-ray diagnostic equipment
JP2023554170A (en) Multi-axis medical imaging
US3524057A (en) X-ray stand for posing a subject's feet for a plurality of x-ray exposures from different positions
KR101916574B1 (en) Patient adaptive automatic radiography examination table