US20150059755A1 - Apparatus and methods for ventilatory treatment - Google Patents

Apparatus and methods for ventilatory treatment Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20150059755A1
US20150059755A1 US14/391,910 US201314391910A US2015059755A1 US 20150059755 A1 US20150059755 A1 US 20150059755A1 US 201314391910 A US201314391910 A US 201314391910A US 2015059755 A1 US2015059755 A1 US 2015059755A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
ventilation
measure
value
patient
epap
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.)
Abandoned
Application number
US14/391,910
Other languages
English (en)
Inventor
David John Bassin
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.)
Resmed Pty Ltd
Original Assignee
Resmed Pty Ltd
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 Resmed Pty Ltd filed Critical Resmed Pty Ltd
Priority to US14/391,910 priority Critical patent/US20150059755A1/en
Assigned to RESMED LIMITED reassignment RESMED LIMITED ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: BASSIN, DAVID JOHN
Publication of US20150059755A1 publication Critical patent/US20150059755A1/en
Assigned to ResMed Pty Ltd reassignment ResMed Pty Ltd CHANGE OF NAME (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: RESMED LIMITED
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/0051Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes with alarm devices
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/0057Pumps therefor
    • A61M16/0066Blowers or centrifugal pumps
    • A61M16/0069Blowers or centrifugal pumps the speed thereof being controlled by respiratory parameters, e.g. by inhalation
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B5/00Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
    • A61B5/48Other medical applications
    • A61B5/4806Sleep evaluation
    • A61B5/4818Sleep apnoea
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/0003Accessories therefor, e.g. sensors, vibrators, negative pressure
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/021Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes operated by electrical means
    • A61M16/022Control means therefor
    • A61M16/024Control means therefor including calculation means, e.g. using a processor
    • A61M16/026Control means therefor including calculation means, e.g. using a processor specially adapted for predicting, e.g. for determining an information representative of a flow limitation during a ventilation cycle by using a root square technique or a regression analysis
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/06Respiratory or anaesthetic masks
    • A61M16/0605Means for improving the adaptation of the mask to the patient
    • A61M16/0616Means for improving the adaptation of the mask to the patient with face sealing means comprising a flap or membrane projecting inwards, such that sealing increases with increasing inhalation gas pressure
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/06Respiratory or anaesthetic masks
    • A61M16/0605Means for improving the adaptation of the mask to the patient
    • A61M16/0633Means for improving the adaptation of the mask to the patient with forehead support
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/06Respiratory or anaesthetic masks
    • A61M16/0666Nasal cannulas or tubing
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/20Valves specially adapted to medical respiratory devices
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B5/00Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
    • A61B5/08Detecting, measuring or recording devices for evaluating the respiratory organs
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B5/00Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
    • A61B5/08Detecting, measuring or recording devices for evaluating the respiratory organs
    • A61B5/087Measuring breath flow
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B5/00Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
    • A61B5/103Detecting, measuring or recording devices for testing the shape, pattern, colour, size or movement of the body or parts thereof, for diagnostic purposes
    • A61B5/11Measuring movement of the entire body or parts thereof, e.g. head or hand tremor, mobility of a limb
    • A61B5/113Measuring movement of the entire body or parts thereof, e.g. head or hand tremor, mobility of a limb occurring during breathing
    • A61B5/1135Measuring movement of the entire body or parts thereof, e.g. head or hand tremor, mobility of a limb occurring during breathing by monitoring thoracic expansion
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B5/00Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
    • A61B5/145Measuring characteristics of blood in vivo, e.g. gas concentration, pH value; Measuring characteristics of body fluids or tissues, e.g. interstitial fluid, cerebral tissue
    • A61B5/14542Measuring characteristics of blood in vivo, e.g. gas concentration, pH value; Measuring characteristics of body fluids or tissues, e.g. interstitial fluid, cerebral tissue for measuring blood gases
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/06Respiratory or anaesthetic masks
    • A61M16/0683Holding devices therefor
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/10Preparation of respiratory gases or vapours
    • A61M16/105Filters
    • A61M16/1055Filters bacterial
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/10Preparation of respiratory gases or vapours
    • A61M16/105Filters
    • A61M16/106Filters in a path
    • A61M16/107Filters in a path in the inspiratory path
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/0003Accessories therefor, e.g. sensors, vibrators, negative pressure
    • A61M2016/0027Accessories therefor, e.g. sensors, vibrators, negative pressure pressure meter
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/0003Accessories therefor, e.g. sensors, vibrators, negative pressure
    • A61M2016/003Accessories therefor, e.g. sensors, vibrators, negative pressure with a flowmeter
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M16/00Devices for influencing the respiratory system of patients by gas treatment, e.g. mouth-to-mouth respiration; Tracheal tubes
    • A61M16/0003Accessories therefor, e.g. sensors, vibrators, negative pressure
    • A61M2016/003Accessories therefor, e.g. sensors, vibrators, negative pressure with a flowmeter
    • A61M2016/0033Accessories therefor, e.g. sensors, vibrators, negative pressure with a flowmeter electrical
    • A61M2016/0036Accessories therefor, e.g. sensors, vibrators, negative pressure with a flowmeter electrical in the breathing tube and used in both inspiratory and expiratory phase
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M2202/00Special media to be introduced, removed or treated
    • A61M2202/02Gases
    • A61M2202/0208Oxygen
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M2205/00General characteristics of the apparatus
    • A61M2205/15Detection of leaks
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M2205/00General characteristics of the apparatus
    • A61M2205/18General characteristics of the apparatus with alarm
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M2205/00General characteristics of the apparatus
    • A61M2205/33Controlling, regulating or measuring
    • A61M2205/3331Pressure; Flow
    • A61M2205/3334Measuring or controlling the flow rate
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M2205/00General characteristics of the apparatus
    • A61M2205/33Controlling, regulating or measuring
    • A61M2205/3365Rotational speed
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M2205/00General characteristics of the apparatus
    • A61M2205/35Communication
    • A61M2205/3546Range
    • A61M2205/3553Range remote, e.g. between patient's home and doctor's office
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M2205/00General characteristics of the apparatus
    • A61M2205/35Communication
    • A61M2205/3576Communication with non implanted data transmission devices, e.g. using external transmitter or receiver
    • A61M2205/3584Communication with non implanted data transmission devices, e.g. using external transmitter or receiver using modem, internet or bluetooth
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M2205/00General characteristics of the apparatus
    • A61M2205/35Communication
    • A61M2205/3576Communication with non implanted data transmission devices, e.g. using external transmitter or receiver
    • A61M2205/3592Communication with non implanted data transmission devices, e.g. using external transmitter or receiver using telemetric means, e.g. radio or optical transmission
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M2205/00General characteristics of the apparatus
    • A61M2205/50General characteristics of the apparatus with microprocessors or computers
    • A61M2205/502User interfaces, e.g. screens or keyboards
    • A61M2205/505Touch-screens; Virtual keyboard or keypads; Virtual buttons; Soft keys; Mouse touches
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M2205/00General characteristics of the apparatus
    • A61M2205/50General characteristics of the apparatus with microprocessors or computers
    • A61M2205/52General characteristics of the apparatus with microprocessors or computers with memories providing a history of measured variating parameters of apparatus or patient
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M2230/00Measuring parameters of the user
    • A61M2230/40Respiratory characteristics
    • A61M2230/43Composition of exhalation
    • A61M2230/432Composition of exhalation partial CO2 pressure (P-CO2)
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M2230/00Measuring parameters of the user
    • A61M2230/40Respiratory characteristics
    • A61M2230/43Composition of exhalation
    • A61M2230/435Composition of exhalation partial O2 pressure (P-O2)
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M2230/00Measuring parameters of the user
    • A61M2230/63Motion, e.g. physical activity

Definitions

  • the present technology relates to one or more of the diagnosis, treatment and amelioration of respiratory disorders, and to procedures to prevent respiratory disorders.
  • the present technology relates to medical devices, and their use for treating respiratory disorders and for preventing respiratory disorders.
  • the respiratory system of the body facilitates gas exchange.
  • the nose and mouth form the entrance to the airways of a patient.
  • the airways include a series of branching tubes, which become narrower, shorter and more numerous as they penetrate deeper into the lung.
  • the prime function of the lung is gas exchange, allowing oxygen to move from the air into the venous blood and carbon dioxide to move out.
  • the trachea divides into right and left main bronchi, which further divide eventually into terminal bronchioles.
  • the bronchi make up the conducting airways, and do not take part in gas exchange. Further divisions of the airways lead to the respiratory bronchioles, and eventually to the alveoli.
  • the alveolated region of the lung is where the gas exchange takes place, and is referred to as the respiratory zone. See West, Respiratory Physiology—the essentials.
  • Obstructive Sleep Apnea a form of Sleep Disordered Breathing (SDB), is characterized by occlusion or obstruction of the upper air passage during sleep. It results from a combination of an abnormally small upper airway and the normal loss of muscle tone in the region of the tongue, soft palate and posterior oropharyngeal wall during sleep.
  • the condition causes the affected patient to stop breathing for periods typically of 30 to 120 seconds duration, sometimes 200 to 300 times per night. It often causes excessive daytime somnolence, and it may cause cardiovascular disease and brain damage.
  • the syndrome is a common disorder, particularly in middle aged overweight males, although a person affected may have no awareness of the problem. See U.S. Pat. No. 4,944,310 (Sullivan).
  • Cheyne-Stokes Respiration is a disorder of a patient's respiratory controller in which there are rhythmic alternating periods of waxing and waning ventilation, causing repetitive de-oxygenation and re-oxygenation of the arterial blood. It is possible that CSR is harmful because of the repetitive hypoxia. In some patients CSR is associated with repetitive arousal from sleep, which causes severe sleep disruption, increased sympathetic activity, and increased afterload. See U.S. Pat. No. 6,532,959 (Berthon-Jones).
  • Periodic breathing disorders of central origin such as Cheyne-Stokes respiration, may occur together with upper airway obstruction.
  • the diagnosis of CSR usually involves conducting a sleep study and analyzing the resulting polysomnography (“PSG”) data.
  • PSG polysomnography
  • a range of biological parameters are monitored that typically include a nasal flow signal, measures of respiratory effort, pulse oximetry, sleeping position, and may include: electroencephalography (“EEG”), electrocardiography (“ECG”), electromyography (“EMG”) and electro-oculography (“EOG”). Breathing characteristics are also identified from visual features, thus allowing a clinician to assess respiratory function during sleep and evaluate any presence of CSR. While the examination by a clinician is the most comprehensive method, it is a costly process and depends heavily upon clinical experience and understanding.
  • One known product used for treating sleep disordered breathing is the S9 Sleep Therapy System, manufactured by ResMed.
  • CPAP Nasal Continuous Positive Airway Pressure
  • OSA Obstructive Sleep Apnea
  • Non-invasive ventilation has been used to treat CSR, OHS, COPD, MD and Chest Wall disorders.
  • the pressure treatment may be controlled to enforce a target ventilation by measuring a tidal volume or minute ventilation, for example, and controlling the measure of ventilation to satisfy the target ventilation.
  • Servo-controlling of the measure of ventilation such as by, a comparison of an instantaneous measure of ventilation and a long term measure of ventilation, may serve as a treatment to counteract CSR.
  • the form of the pressure treatment delivered by an apparatus may be Pressure Support ventilation.
  • Such a pressure treatment typically provides generation of a higher level of pressure during inspiration (e.g., an IPAP) and generation of a lower level of pressure during expiration (e.g., an EPAP).
  • a patient interface such as a nasal mask, full-face mask or nasal pillows.
  • a range of patient interface devices are known, however a number of them suffer from being one or more of obtrusive, aesthetically undesirable, poorly fitting, difficult to use and uncomfortable especially when worn for long periods of time or when a patient is unfamiliar with a system.
  • Masks designed solely for aviators, as part of personal protection equipment or for the administration of anaesthetics may be tolerable for their original application, but nevertheless be undesirably uncomfortable to be worn for extended periods, for example, while sleeping.
  • the air at positive pressure is typically supplied to the airway of a patient by a PAP device such as a motor-driven blower.
  • a PAP device such as a motor-driven blower.
  • the outlet of the blower is connected via a flexible delivery conduit to a patient interface as described above.
  • the present technology is directed towards providing medical devices used in the detection, diagnosis, amelioration, treatment, or prevention of respiratory disorders having one or more of improved comfort, cost, efficacy, ease of use and manufacturability.
  • a first aspect of the present technology relates to apparatus used in the detection, diagnosis, amelioration, treatment or prevention of a respiratory disorder.
  • Another aspect of the present technology relates to methods used in the detection, diagnosis, amelioration, treatment or prevention of a respiratory disorder.
  • aspects of the present technology provide methods for evaluating or assessing patient SDB events and/or ventilation, which may be implemented in apparatus for assessment of ventilation or apparatus for generating a respiratory pressure treatment.
  • aspects of the present technology provide methods and apparatus that automatically adjust the level of EPAP in order to counteract upper airway obstruction during respiratory pressure treatment of periodic breathing.
  • One aspect of one form of the present technology comprises a servo-ventilator configured to control the pressure of a supply of air so as to achieve a target ventilation, which, in response to a misleading change in measured ventilation, for example as a result of a sudden change in leak, reduces a rate of adjustment of the target ventilation.
  • One aspect of one form of the present technology comprises a servo-ventilator configured to: continuously compute a target ventilation such that the target ventilation rises more slowly as a measure of recent uncompensated leak increases, and control the pressure of a supply of air so as to achieve the target ventilation.
  • One aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that provide a measure of typical recent ventilation that rises more slowly as a measure of recent uncompensated leak increases.
  • Another aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that provide a target ventilation whose rate of increase is bounded by an upper limit.
  • Another aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that provide a target ventilation that falls more swiftly as the stability of recent pressure support increases, so as to improve patient comfort.
  • Another aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that adjust a value of expiratory positive airway pressure (EPAP) according to the duration of a detected apnea or hypopnea, such that with increasing duration, the adjusted value of EPAP exponentially approaches a value that is greater than a maximum EPAP value, to improve the ability of the EPAP to splint the airway during ventilation.
  • EEPAP expiratory positive airway pressure
  • Another aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that reduce the number of false negatives in hypopnea detection by detecting hypopnea dependent on: an extent to which pressure support being delivered to the patient is large; and an extent to which a measure of absolute value of airflow of the patient is small compared to a target absolute airflow.
  • Another aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that increase an EPAP value according to a computed measure of M-shaped inspiratory flow limitation, such that the amount of increase is dependent on a ratio of breathwise ventilation to typical recent ventilation, so as to reduce the effect of “behavioural” breaths on the EPAP value.
  • Another aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that compute a measure of M-shaped inspiratory flow limitation of a patient based on a version of an inspiratory flow waveform that is symmetrised around a location of a notch in an inspiratory flow waveform.
  • Another aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that increase an EPAP value according to a computed measure of reverse-chairness of inspiratory flow limitation, such that the amount of increase depends on the consistency of reverse-chairness between current and preceding breaths, so as to reduce the adverse consequences of EPAP increase.
  • Another aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that compute a measure of reverse chairness of inspiratory flow limitation of a patient dependent on the extent of recent uncompensated leak in the delivery of airflow to the patient.
  • Another aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that increase an EPAP value according to a computed measure of inspiratory snore, in the absence of expiratory snore.
  • Another aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that compute a measure of inspiratory snore as a mean over an inspiratory portion of a current breath of a difference between the output of a snore filter on an instantaneous interface pressure and a threshold that is dependent on the instantaneous interface pressure.
  • Another aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that compute a measure of expiratory snore using joint thresholds on duration and intensity of the output of a snore filter on an instantaneous interface pressure during an expiratory portion of a current breath.
  • Another aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that estimate a phase of a current breathing cycle of a patient, such that a weight given to a standard rate of change in the phase estimate is dependent on an extent to which the patient has recently been achieving ventilation at or above a target ventilation, so as to improve tolerance of lower respiratory rates and short-term variations in the respiratory rate.
  • This most recently described aspect may be used in combination with any of the previously described aspects or combinations thereof.
  • Another aspect of one form of the present technology comprises apparatus or methods for treating a respiratory disorder that deliver pressure support to a patient at a value that is a combination of: a value of pressure support that is sufficient to increase instantaneous ventilation to a target ventilation; and a value of pressure support that is sufficient to increase gross alveolar ventilation to a target gross alveolar ventilation, so as to treat patients with periodic breathing and respiratory insufficiency.
  • This most recently described aspect may be used in combination with any of the previously described aspects or combinations thereof.
  • aspects of the present technology comprise computer readable storage media having recorded thereon computer program code that is configured to cause a processor to carry out methods according to the above described aspects.
  • portions of the aspects may form sub-aspects of the present technology.
  • various ones of the sub-aspects and/or aspects may be combined in various manners and also constitute additional aspects or sub-aspects of the present technology.
  • FIG. 1 a shows a system in accordance with the present technology.
  • a patient 1000 wearing a patient interface 3000 receives a supply of air at positive pressure from a PAP device 4000 .
  • Air from the PAP device is humidified in a humidifier 5000 , and passes along an air circuit 4170 to the patient 1000 .
  • FIG. 2 a shows an overview of a human respiratory system including the nasal and oral cavities, the larynx, vocal folds, oesophagus, trachea, bronchus, lung, alveolar sacs, heart and diaphragm.
  • FIG. 2 b shows a view of a human upper airway including the nasal cavity, nasal bone, lateral nasal cartilage, greater alar cartilage, nostril, lip superior, lip inferior, larynx, hard palate; soft palate, oropharynx, tongue, epiglottis, vocal folds, oesophagus and trachea.
  • FIG. 3 a shows a patient interface in accordance with one form of the present technology.
  • FIG. 4 a shows a PAP device in accordance with one form of the present technology.
  • FIG. 4 b shows a schematic diagram of the pneumatic circuit of a PAP device of FIG. 4 a .
  • the directions of upstream and downstream are indicated.
  • FIG. 4 c shows a schematic diagram of the electrical components of the PAP device of FIG. 4 a.
  • FIG. 4 d shows a schematic diagram of the algorithms implemented in the PAP device of FIG. 4 a .
  • arrows with solid lines indicate an actual flow of information, for example via an electronic signal.
  • FIG. 5 a shows a humidifier in accordance with one aspect of the present technology.
  • FIG. 6 a shows a model typical breath waveform of a person while sleeping.
  • the horizontal axis is time, and the vertical axis is respiratory flow.
  • a typical breath may have the following approximate values: tidal volume, Vt, 0.5 L, inhalation time, Ti, 1.6 s, peak inspiratory flow, Qpeak, 0.4 L/s, exhalation time, Te, 2.4 s, peak expiratory flow, Qpeak, ⁇ 0.5 L/s.
  • the total duration of the breath, Ttot is about 4 s.
  • the person typically breathes at a breathing rate of about 15 breaths per minute (BPM), with. Ventilation, Vent, about 7.5 L/minute.
  • BPM breaths per minute
  • a typical duty cycle the ratio of Ti to Ttot is about 40%.
  • FIG. 6 b shows a patient during non-REM sleep breathing normally over a period of about ninety seconds, with about 34 breaths, being treated with Automatic PAP, and the mask pressure being about 11 cm H 2 O.
  • the top channel shows oximetry (SpO 2 ), the scale has a range of saturation from 90 to 99% in the vertical direction. The patient maintained a saturation of about 95% throughout the period shown.
  • the second channel shows quantitative respiratory airflow, and the scale ranges from ⁇ 1 to +1 LPS in a vertical direction, and with inspiration positive. Thoracic and abdominal movement are shown in the third and fourth channels.
  • FIG. 6 c shows polysomnography of a patient before treatment.
  • the top two channels both are EEG (electroencephalogram) from different scalp locations.
  • Periodic spikes in second represent cortical arousal and related activity.
  • the third channel down is submental EMG (electromyogram). Increasing activity around time of arousals represent genioglossus recruitment.
  • the fourth & fifth channels are EOG (electro-oculogram).
  • the sixth channel is an electrocardiogram.
  • the seventh channel shows pulse oximetry (SpO 2 ) with repetitive desaturations to below 70% from about 90%.
  • the eighth channel is respiratory airflow using nasal cannula connected to differential pressure transducer.
  • apneas Repetitive apneas of 25 to 35 seconds alternating with 10 to 15 second bursts of recovery breathing coinciding with EEG arousal and increased EMG activity.
  • the ninth shows movement of chest and tenth shows movement of abdomen.
  • the abdomen shows a crescendo of movement over the length of the apnea leading to the arousal. Both become untidy during the arousal due to gross body movement during recovery hyperpnea.
  • the apneas are therefore obstructive, and the condition is severe.
  • the lowest channel is posture, and in this example it does not show change.
  • FIG. 6 d shows patient flow data where the patient is experiencing a series of total obstructive apneas.
  • the duration of the recording is approximately 160 seconds.
  • Flow ranges from about +1 L/s to about ⁇ 1.5 L/s.
  • Each apnea lasts approximately 10-15 s.
  • FIG. 6 e shows a scaled inspiratory portion of a breath where the patient is experiencing low frequency inspiratory snore.
  • FIG. 6 f shows a scaled inspiratory portion of a breath where the patient is experiencing an example of ordinary or “mesa” flatness inspiratory flow limitation.
  • FIG. 6 g shows a scaled inspiratory portion of a breath where the patient is experiencing an example of “reverse chair” inspiratory flow limitation.
  • FIG. 6 h shows a scaled inspiratory portion of a breath where the patient is experiencing an example of “M-shaped” inspiratory flow limitation.
  • FIG. 6 i illustrates an example of Cheyne-Stokes respiration.
  • the data span six minutes.
  • the signal representative of flow was measured using a pressure sensor connected to nasal cannulae.
  • the patient exhibits apneas of about 22 seconds and hyperpneas of about 38 seconds. Higher frequency low amplitude oscillation during apnea is cardiogenic.
  • FIGS. 7 a to 7 q are flow charts illustrating the operation of the algorithms of FIG. 4 d in one form of the PAP device of FIG. 4 a.
  • FIG. 8 illustrates an example “smooth and comfortable” treatment pressure waveform as a function of phase in accordance with one form of the present technology.
  • the present technology comprises apparatus for treating a respiratory disorder.
  • the apparatus may comprise a flow generator or blower for supplying pressurised respiratory gas, such as air, to the patient 1000 via an air delivery tube leading to a patient interface 3000 .
  • the present technology comprises a method for treating a respiratory disorder comprising the step of applying positive pressure to the entrance of the airways of a patient 1000 .
  • the present technology comprises a method of treating Obstructive Sleep Apnea in a patient by applying nasal continuous positive airway pressure to the patient.
  • a supply of air at positive pressure is provided to the nasal passages of the patient via one or both nares.
  • a non-invasive patient interface 3000 in accordance with one aspect of the present technology comprises the following functional aspects: a seal-forming structure 3100 , a plenum chamber 3200 , a positioning and stabilising structure 3300 and a connection port 3600 for connection to air circuit 4170 .
  • a functional aspect may be provided by one or more physical components.
  • one physical component may provide one or more functional aspects.
  • the seal-forming structure 3100 is arranged to surround an entrance to the airways of, the patient so as to facilitate the supply of air at positive pressure to the airways.
  • a PAP device 4000 in accordance with one aspect of the present technology comprises mechanical and pneumatic components 4100 , electrical components 4200 and is programmed to execute one or more algorithms 4300 .
  • the PAP device has an external housing 4010 formed in two parts, an upper portion 4012 of the external housing 4010 , and a lower portion 4014 of the external housing 4010 .
  • the external housing 4010 may include one or more panel(s) 4015 .
  • the PAP device 4000 comprises a chassis 4016 that supports one or more internal components of the PAP device 4000 .
  • a pneumatic block 4020 is supported by, or formed as part of the chassis 4016 .
  • the PAP device 4000 may include a handle 4018 .
  • the pneumatic path of the PAP device 4000 comprises an inlet air filter 4112 , an inlet muffler 4122 , a controllable pressure device 4140 capable of supplying air at positive pressure (preferably a blower 4142 ), and an outlet muffler 4124 .
  • One or more pressure sensors 4272 and flow sensors 4274 are included in the pneumatic path.
  • the PAP device 4000 has an electrical power supply 4210 , one or more input devices 4220 , a central controller 4230 , a therapy device controller 4240 , a therapy device 4245 , one or more protection circuits 4250 , memory 4260 , transducers 4270 , data communication interface 4280 and one or more output devices 4290 .
  • Electrical components 4200 may be mounted on a single Printed Circuit Board Assembly (PCBA) 4202 .
  • PCBA Printed Circuit Board Assembly
  • the PAP device 4000 may include more than one PCBA 4202 .
  • the central controller 4230 of the PAP device 4000 is programmed to execute one or more algorithm modules 4300 , including in one implementation a pre-processing module 4310 , a therapy engine module 4320 , a pressure control module 4330 , and a fault condition module 4340 .
  • the PAP device 4000 is referred to interchangeably as a ventilator.
  • a PAP device in accordance with one form of the present technology may include an air filter 4110 , or a plurality of air filters 4110 .
  • an inlet air filter 4112 is located at the beginning of the pneumatic path upstream of a blower 4142 . See FIG. 4 b.
  • an outlet air filter 4114 for example an antibacterial filter, is located between an outlet of the pneumatic block 4020 and a patient interface 3000 . See FIG. 4 b.
  • an inlet muffler 4122 is located in the pneumatic path upstream of a blower 4142 . See FIG. 4 b.
  • an outlet muffler 4124 is located in the pneumatic path between the blower 4142 and a patient interface 3000 . See FIG. 4 b.
  • a pressure device 4140 for producing a flow of air at positive pressure is a controllable blower 4142 .
  • the blower may include a brushless DC motor 4144 with one or more impellers housed in a volute.
  • the blower is capable of delivering a supply of air, for example about 120 litres/minute, at a positive pressure in a range from about 4 cm H 2 O to about 20 cm H 2 O, or in other forms up to about 30 cm H 2 O.
  • the pressure device 4140 is under the control of the therapy device controller 4240 .
  • one or more transducers 4270 are located upstream of the pressure device 4140 .
  • the one or more transducers 4270 are constructed and arranged to measure properties of the air at that point in the pneumatic path.
  • one or more transducers 4270 are located downstream of the pressure device 4140 , and upstream of the air circuit 4170 .
  • the one or more transducers 4270 are constructed and arranged to measure properties of the air at that point in the pneumatic path.
  • one or more transducers 4270 are located proximate to the patient interface 3000 .
  • an anti-spill back valve is located between the humidifier 5000 and the pneumatic block 4020 .
  • the anti-spill back valve is constructed and arranged to reduce the risk that water will flow upstream from the humidifier 5000 , for example to the motor 4144 .
  • An air circuit 4170 in accordance with an aspect of the present technology is constructed and arranged to allow a flow of air or breathable gasses between the pneumatic block 4020 and the patient interface 3000 .
  • supplemental oxygen 4180 is delivered to a point in the pneumatic path.
  • supplemental oxygen 4180 is delivered upstream of the pneumatic block 4020 .
  • supplemental oxygen 4180 is delivered to the air circuit 4170 .
  • supplemental oxygen 4180 is delivered to the patient interface 3000 .
  • power supply 4210 is internal of the external housing 4010 of the PAP device 4000 . In another form of the present technology, power supply 4210 is external of the external housing 4010 of the PAP device 4000 .
  • power supply 4210 provides electrical power to the PAP device 4000 only. In another form of the present technology, power supply 4210 provides electrical power to both PAP device 4000 and humidifier 5000 .
  • a PAP device 4000 includes one or more input devices 4220 in the form of buttons, switches or dials to allow a person to interact with the device.
  • the buttons, switches or dials may be physical devices, or software devices accessible via a touch screen.
  • the buttons, switches or dials may, in one form, be physically connected to the external housing 4010 , or may, in another form, be in wireless communication with a receiver that is in electrical connection to the central controller 4230 .
  • the input device 4220 may be constructed and arranged to allow a person to select a value and/or a menu option.
  • the central controller 4230 is a processor suitable to control a PAP device 4000 such as an x86 INTEL processor.
  • a processor 4230 suitable to control a PAP device 4000 in accordance with another form of the present technology includes a processor based on ARM Cortex-M processor from ARM Holdings.
  • a processor based on ARM Cortex-M processor from ARM Holdings.
  • an STM32 series microcontroller from ST MICROELECTRONICS may be used.
  • Another processor 4230 suitable to control a PAP device 4000 in accordance with a further alternative form of the present technology includes a member selected from the family ARM9-based 32-bit RISC CPUs.
  • a member selected from the family ARM9-based 32-bit RISC CPUs For example, an STR9 series microcontroller from ST MICROELECTRONICS may be used.
  • a 16-bit RISC CPU may be used as the processor 4230 for the PAP device 4000 .
  • a processor from the MSP430 family of microcontrollers, manufactured by TEXAS INSTRUMENTS, may be used.
  • the processor 4230 is configured to receive input signal(s) from one or more transducers 4270 , and one or more input devices 4220 .
  • the processor 4230 is configured to provide output signal(s) to one or more of an output device 4290 , a therapy device controller 4240 , a data communication interface 4280 and humidifier controller 5250 .
  • the processor 4230 may be configured to implement the one or more methodologies described herein such as one or more algorithms 4300 expressed as computer programs stored in a computer readable storage medium, such as memory 4260 .
  • processor(s) may be integrated with a PAP device 4000 .
  • the processor(s) may be implemented discretely from the flow generation components of the PAP device, such as for purpose of performing any of the methodologies described herein without directly controlling delivery of a respiratory treatment.
  • such a processor may perform any of the methodologies described herein for purposes of determining control settings for a ventilator or other respiratory related events by analysis of stored data such as from any of the sensors described herein.
  • PAP device 4000 includes a clock 4232 that is connected to processor 4230 .
  • therapy device controller 4240 is a pressure control module 4330 that forms part of the algorithms 4300 executed by the processor 4230 .
  • therapy device controller 4240 is a dedicated motor control integrated circuit.
  • a MC33035 brushless DC motor controller manufactured by ONSEMI is used.
  • a PAP device 4000 in accordance with the present technology comprises one or more protection circuits 4250 .
  • protection circuit 4250 in accordance with the present technology is an electrical protection circuit.
  • protection circuit 4250 in accordance with the present technology is a temperature or pressure safety circuit.
  • the PAP device 4000 includes memory 4260 , preferably non-volatile memory.
  • memory 4260 may include battery powered static RAM.
  • memory 4260 may include volatile RAM.
  • memory 4260 is located on PCBA 4202 .
  • Memory 4260 may be in the form of EEPROM, or NAND flash.
  • PAP device 4000 includes removable form of memory 4260 , for example a memory card made in accordance with the Secure Digital (SD) standard.
  • SD Secure Digital
  • the memory 4260 acts as a computer readable storage medium on which is stored computer program instructions expressing the one or more methodologies described herein, such as the one or more algorithms 4300 .
  • Transducers may be internal of the device, or external of the PAP device. External transducers may be located for example on or form part of the air delivery circuit, e.g. the patient interface. External transducers may be in the form of non-contact sensors such as a Doppler radar movement sensor that transmit or transfer data to the PAP device.
  • a flow transducer 4274 in accordance with the present technology may be based on a differential pressure transducer, for example, an SDP600 Series differential pressure transducer from SENSIRION.
  • the differential pressure transducer is in fluid communication with the pneumatic circuit, with one of each of the pressure transducers connected to respective first and second points in a flow restricting element.
  • a signal or total flow Qt signal from the flow transducer 4274 , is received by the processor 4230 .
  • sensors for producing such a flow signal or estimating flow may be implemented.
  • a mass flow sensor such as a hot wire mass flow sensor, may be implemented to generate a flow signal in some embodiments.
  • flow may be estimated from one or more signals of other sensors described here, such as in accordance with any of the methodologies described in a U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/192,247, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
  • a pressure transducer 4272 in accordance with the present technology is located in fluid communication with the pneumatic circuit.
  • An example of a suitable pressure transducer is a sensor from the HONEYWELL ASDX series.
  • An alternative suitable pressure transducer is a sensor from the NPA Series from GENERAL ELECTRIC.
  • a signal from the pressure transducer 4272 is received by the processor 4230 .
  • the signal from the pressure transducer 4272 is filtered prior to being received by the processor 4230 .
  • a motor speed signal 4276 is generated.
  • a motor speed signal 4276 is preferably provided by therapy device controller 4240 .
  • Motor speed may, for example, be generated by a speed sensor, such as a Hall effect sensor.
  • a data communication interface 4280 is provided, and is connected to processor 4230 .
  • Data communication interface 4280 is preferably connectable to remote external communication network 4282 .
  • Data communication interface 4280 is preferably connectable to local external communication network 4284 .
  • remote external communication network 4282 is connectable to remote external device 4286 .
  • local external communication network 4284 is connectable to local external device 4288 .
  • data communication interface 4280 is part of processor 4230 . In another form, data communication interface 4280 is an integrated circuit that is separate from processor 4230 .
  • remote external communication network 4282 is the Internet.
  • the data communication interface 4280 may use wired communication (e.g. via Ethernet, or optical fibre) or a wireless protocol to connect to the Internet.
  • local external communication network 4284 utilises one or more communication standards, such as Bluetooth, or a consumer infrared protocol.
  • remote external device 4286 is one or more computers, for example a cluster of networked computers.
  • remote external device 4286 may be virtual computers, rather than physical computers. In either case, such remote external device 4286 may be accessible to an appropriately authorised person such as a clinician.
  • local external device 4288 is a personal computer, mobile phone, tablet or remote control.
  • An output device 4290 in accordance with the present technology may take the form of one or more of a visual, audio and haptic unit.
  • a visual display may be a Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) or Light Emitting Diode (LED) display.
  • a display driver 4292 receives as an input the characters, symbols, or images intended for display on the display 4294 , and converts them to commands that cause the display 4294 to display those characters, symbols, or images.
  • a display 4294 is configured to visually display characters, symbols, or images in response to commands received from the display driver 4292 .
  • the display 4294 may be an eight-segment display, in which case the display driver 4292 converts each character or symbol, such as the figure “0”, to eight logical signals indicating whether the eight respective segments are to be activated to display a particular character or symbol.
  • a pre-processing module 4310 in accordance with the present technology receives as an input raw data from a transducer, for example a flow or pressure transducer, and preferably performs one or more process steps to calculate one or more output values that will be used as an input to another module, for example a therapy engine module 4320 .
  • a transducer for example a flow or pressure transducer
  • the output values include the interface or mask pressure Pm, the respiratory flow Qr, and the leak flow Ql.
  • the pre-processing module 4310 comprises one or more of the following algorithms: pressure compensation 4312 , vent flow 4314 , leak flow 4316 , respiratory flow 4318 , and jamming detection4319.
  • a pressure compensation algorithm 4312 receives as an input a signal indicative of the pressure in the pneumatic path proximal to an outlet of the pneumatic block.
  • the pressure compensation algorithm 4312 estimates the pressure drop in the air circuit 4170 and provides as an output an estimated pressure, Pm, in the patient interface 3000 .
  • a vent flow calculation algorithm 4314 receives as an input an estimated pressure, Pm, in the patient interface 3000 and estimates a vent flow of air, Qv, from a vent 3400 in a patient interface 3000 .
  • a leak flow algorithm 4316 receives as an input a total flow, Qt, and a vent flow Qv, and provides as an output a leak flow Ql by calculating an average of Qt ⁇ Qv over a period sufficiently long to include several breathing cycles, e.g. about 10 seconds.
  • the leak flow algorithm 4316 receives as an input a total flow, Qt, a vent flow Qv, and an estimated pressure, Pm, in the patient interface 3000 , and provides as an output a leak flow Ql by calculating a leak conductance, and determining a leak flow Ql to be a function of leak conductance and interface pressure, Pm.
  • leak conductance is calculated as the quotient of low pass filtered non-vent flow Qt ⁇ Qv, and low pass filtered square root of mask pressure Pm, where the low pass filter time constant has a value sufficiently long to include several breathing cycles, e.g. about 10 seconds.
  • a respiratory flow algorithm 4318 receives as an input a total flow, Qt, a vent flow, Qv, and a leak flow, Ql, and estimates a respiratory flow to the patient, Qr, by subtracting the vent flow Qv and the leak flow Ql from the total flow Qt.
  • a state designated as “jamming” exists, which may be determined according to the methods described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,532,957, U.S. Pat. No. 6,810,876 or, U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2010/0101574 A1, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
  • the respiratory flow baseline is usually incorrect to some degree, which distorts flow shapes and affects the detection of flow limitation.
  • RecentJamming which represents the extent to which jamming, i.e. uncompensated leak, has recently existed, is calculated by the jamming algorithm 4319 .
  • an instantaneous jamming fuzzy truth variable J is calculated as the fuzzy extent to which the absolute magnitude of the respiratory flow Qr has been large for longer than expected.
  • the fuzzy extent A 1 to which the airflow has been positive for longer than expected is calculated from the time t Z1 since the last positive-going zero crossing of the respiratory flow Qr, and the inspiratory duration Ti, using the following fuzzy membership function:
  • a 1 FuzzyMember( t Z1 ,Ti, 0,2* Ti, 1) (1)
  • the fuzzy extent B 1 to which the airflow is large and positive is calculated from the respiratory flow Qr using following the fuzzy membership function:
  • the fuzzy extent I 1 to which the leak has suddenly increased is calculated as the fuzzy “and” of the fuzzy truth variables A 1 and B 1 .
  • RecentJamming is set to the instantaneous jamming value J. Otherwise, RecentJamming is set to the instantaneous jamming value J, low pass filtered with a time constant of 10 seconds.
  • a therapy engine module 4320 receives as inputs one or more of a pressure, Pm, in a patient interface 3000 , a respiratory flow of air to a patient, Qr, a leak flow, Ql, a jamming fuzzy truth variable, RecentJamming, and provides as an output one or more therapy parameters.
  • the therapy parameter is the CPAP treatment pressure Pt.
  • the therapy parameters are the EPAP, a waveform value, and a level of pressure support.
  • the therapy parameters are the EPAP, a waveform value, a target ventilation, and an instantaneous ventilation.
  • the therapy engine module 4320 comprises one or more of the following algorithms: phase determination 4321 , waveform determination 4322 , ventilation determination 4323 , flow limitation determination 4324 , apnea/hypopnea determination 4325 , snore determination 4326 , EPAP determination 4327 , target ventilation determination 4328 , and therapy parameter determination 4329 .
  • FIGS. 7 a to 7 q that illustrate the operation of the therapy engine module 4320 , solid connecting lines indicate control flow, while dashed connecting lines indicate data flow.
  • a phase determination algorithm 4321 receives as an input a signal indicative of respiratory flow, Qr, and provides an estimate ⁇ of the phase of a breathing cycle of the patient 1000 .
  • the rate of change of phase is indicative of the respiratory rate.
  • the phase estimate ⁇ is a discrete variable with values of either inhalation or exhalation. In one form, the phase estimate ⁇ is determined to have a discrete value of inhalation when a respiratory flow Qr has a positive value that exceeds a positive threshold. In one form, the phase estimate ⁇ is determined to have a discrete value of exhalation when a respiratory flow Qr has a negative value that is more negative than a negative threshold.
  • the phase estimate ⁇ is a discrete variable with values of one of inhalation, mid-inspiratory pause, and exhalation.
  • the phase estimate ⁇ is a continuous variable, for example varying from 0 to 1, or 0 to 2 ⁇ , or 0° to 360°.
  • a phase estimate ⁇ equal to 0.5 (or ⁇ or 180°) occurs at the transition from inspiration to expiration.
  • the phase determination algorithm 4321 uses fuzzy phase estimation as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,532,957, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference, with a number of adjustments.
  • the philosophy behind the adjustments is to be more tolerant of lower respiratory rates and short-term variations in respiratory rate.
  • the general phase rules are given more weight at lower levels of ventilation than previously, improving patient synchronisation. This more than compensates for the mild reduction in prescriptiveness of the ventilator with respect to maintenance of target ventilation and respiratory rate in the very short term, over one or two breaths.
  • the “standard rate” of respiration which corresponds to a kind of backup rate in conventional ventilators, is given a certain weight that depends on the degree of “trouble”, a fuzzy logical variable dependent on the degree of jamming, the degree of hypopnea, and the extent to which leak is large. Even in the absence of “trouble”, the standard rate is given significant weight. This tends to cause the ventilator's breath rate to be pulled towards the standard rate, and tends to cause dyssynchrony when the patient's respiratory rate is lower than the standard rate, which in one implementation is set at 15 breaths/minute. Awake patients who want to breathe at lower rates, particularly during the sleep onset phase, can feel pushed along by this. A common reaction is to fight the ventilator, resulting in hypoventilation (from the perspective of the ventilator), which further increases the weight given to the standard rate, and higher pressure support.
  • the weight given to the standard rate independent of “trouble” by the algorithm 4321 depends on the minimum pressure support (minimum swing) and the amount of pressure support above the minimum pressure support (“servo swing”), which is determined by the algorithm 4329 .
  • mini swing minimum pressure support
  • servo swing the amount of pressure support above the minimum pressure support
  • the idea is that low servo swing levels indicate that the patient has recently been achieving ventilation at or above the target ventilation, and so should be allowed to breathe at whatever rate the patient chooses. Progressively higher servo swing levels progressively indicate that this is less the case.
  • the actual fuzzy membership calculation is performed using the current swing (the sum of the minimum and servo swings), using boundaries (SLow and SHigh) which depend on the minimum swing.
  • the fuzzy truth variable SwingIsLargeForStdRate is the fuzzy extent to which the swing is large, for the purposes of determining the weight to be given to the standard rate (in fact the weight to be given to the standard rates of change of phase for inspiration and expiration, since in general these are different) independent of “trouble”.
  • FIG. 7 a is a flow chart illustrating a method 7100 that may be used to implement algorithm 4321 in one form of the present technology.
  • the method 7100 begins at step 7110 by computing the lower boundary SLow as a generally increasing function of the minimum swing value MinSwing.
  • SLow is computed as follows:
  • the upper boundary SHigh is computed as a generally increasing function of the minimum swing, such that SHigh is always greater than or equal to the lower boundary SLow.
  • SHigh is computed as follows:
  • the method 7100 computes the swing as the sum of the minimum swing and the current servo swing (pressure support above minimum).
  • the method 7100 then at step 7140 computes the fuzzy truth variable SwingIsLargeForStdRate as follows: At or above some rather high level of minimum swing, which in one implementation is 8 cm H 2 O (which should not really occur in a ventilator designed to treat periodic breathing of central origin), SwingIsLargeForStdRate is set to fuzzy true. Otherwise, SwingIsLargeForStdRate transitions from fuzzy false to fuzzy true as swing increases between the lower and upper boundaries SLow and SHigh:
  • SwingIsLargeForStdRate FuzzyMember(Swing, S Low,0, S High,1) (5)
  • the method 7100 estimates the phase in the manner described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,532,957, except that the weight to the standard breath rate, independent of “trouble”, is set to the computed, value of the fuzzy truth variable SwingIsLargeForStdRate.
  • Step 7150 estimates the phase as described above, giving weight to the standard breath rate, in the absence of “trouble”, equal to the value of the computed fuzzy truth variable
  • a control module 4330 controls a therapy device 4245 to provide positive airway pressure according to a predetermined waveform of pressure vs phase.
  • a waveform determination algorithm 4322 receives as an input a value ⁇ indicative of the phase of the current breathing cycle of the patient, and provides as an output a waveform value n)) in the range [0, 1].
  • the waveform is a square wave, having a value of 1 for early values of phase corresponding to inspiration, and a value of 0 for later values of phase corresponding to expiration.
  • the waveform is a more “smooth and comfortable” waveform with a gradual rise to 1 for early values of phase, and a gradual fall to 0 for later values of phase.
  • FIG. 8 illustrates an exemplary “smooth and comfortable” waveform ⁇ ( ⁇ ), which rises to 1 as the phase increases from 0 to 0.5 during inspiration, and falls to 0 as the phase increases from 0.5 to 1 during expiration.
  • a ventilation determination algorithm 4323 receives an input a respiratory flow Qr, and determines a value of instantaneous patient ventilation, Vent.
  • the ventilation determination algorithm 4323 determines a current value of instantaneous patient ventilation, Vent, as the half the absolute value of respiratory flow, Qr.
  • a processor executes one or more algorithms 4324 for the detection of inspiratory flow limitation.
  • the algorithm 4324 receives as an input a respiratory flow signal Qr and computes one or more measures of the extent to which the inspiratory portion of the breath exhibits inspiratory flow limitation.
  • the algorithm 4324 computes measures of at least one of the following three types of inspiratory flow limitation: ordinary flatness, M-shape, and “reverse chairness” (see FIGS. 6 f , 6 h , and 6 g ).
  • a waveform which is constant during its middle half at a value equal to the overall mean also has a FI of zero; this can occur in practice when the initial rise above the mean in the first quarter of the waveform balances the value below the mean in the last quarter of the waveform.
  • “High” values of the FI e.g. >0.2 indicate mild or absent flow limitation.
  • FIG. 7 b is a flow chart illustrating a method 7200 that may be used to compute a measure of flatness of inspiratory flow limitation as part of the algorithm 4324 in one form of the present technology.
  • the method 7200 starts at step 7210 , which computes a flattening index from the inspiratory airflow waveform.
  • the mean value of the inspiratory airflow waveform is calculated, the flow values are divided by the mean to produce a normalised waveform, and the RMS deviation of the middle half of the normalised waveform is the flattening index.
  • the pointwise average of the most recent 5 breaths is carried out before the above FI calculation.
  • the FI is calculated on individual breaths and some kind of filtering operation is performed on the recent FI values, such as taking the median of the last three FI values.
  • there is no such filtering such that the FI is derived from only a single breath and a treatment response is directly based on that single breath FI.
  • the rationale for such single-breath implementations is that during periodic breathing of predominantly central origin, such as CSR, the decline of respiratory effort and the onset of upper airway obstruction may be so rapid that there are only one or two flow-limited breaths before the onset of closed (i.e. obstructive) central apnea, or the flow-limited breaths may be intermingled with a variety of shapes not typically indicative of UAO, and it is desirable to respond rapidly to this evidence of flow limitation.
  • Step 7220 calculates a fuzzy truth variable Flatness at the end of each breath that generally decreases as the flatness index for that breath increases.
  • Flatness is computed as follows:
  • M-shaped inspiratory flow waveforms with tidal volumes or breathwise ventilation values not much greater than the typical recent values, are indicative of flow limitation.
  • Such waveforms have a relatively rapid rise and fall and a dip or “notch” in flow approximately in the middle, the dip being due to flow limitation (see FIG. 6 h ).
  • tidal volumes or ventilation values At higher tidal volumes or ventilation values, such waveforms are generally behavioural, i.e. microarousals during sleep, or sighs, and are not indicative of flow limitation.
  • tidal volume or ventilation is generally decreased by M-shape, but a rapidly responding servo-ventilator will tend to counteract such a fall in ventilation by increasing the pressure support, so that a low ventilation level is not generally a helpful feature in deciding whether the waveform is actually flow-limited.
  • the similarity of the inspiratory flow waveform to a waveform which is broadly similar to an M shape is determined.
  • FIG. 7 c is a flow chart illustrating a method 7300 that may be used to compute a measure of M-shaped inspiratory flow limitation as part of the algorithm 4324 in one form of the present technology.
  • the method 7300 attempts to find the location of the notch, and then linearly time-distorts the waveform so that the notch is at the centre of the waveform.
  • the first step 7310 performs a modified convolution of the normalised inspiratory flow waveform f(t) (wherein the normalisation division by the mean) with a V-shaped kernel V(t) of length Ti/2, centred on zero, where Ti is the duration of inspiration:
  • V ⁇ ( t ) 8 ⁇ ⁇ t T i ⁇ - 1 ( 7 )
  • the modified convolution is based on separate convolutions with the left and right halves of the kernel V(t).
  • the left half convolution is calculated as
  • I L ⁇ ( ⁇ ) ⁇ - T i 4 0 ⁇ V ⁇ ( t ) ⁇ f ⁇ ( t - ⁇ ) ⁇ ⁇ t ( 8 )
  • I R ⁇ ( ⁇ ) ⁇ 0 T i 4 ⁇ V ⁇ ( t ) ⁇ f ⁇ ( t - ⁇ ) ⁇ ⁇ t ( 9 )
  • the modified convolution I( ⁇ ) is computed as a combination of the left and right half convolutions I L ( ⁇ ) and I R ( ⁇ ) such that if either of the left and right half convolutions is zero, the result is zero, regardless of the other quantity, and if both are 1, the result is 1.
  • the combination of the left and right half convolutions resembles a logical “and” function in some sense, hence is given the name “V-anded convolution”.
  • the combination is a modified geometric mean of the left and right half convolutions:
  • I ⁇ ( ⁇ ) ⁇ I L ⁇ ( ⁇ ) ⁇ I R ⁇ ( ⁇ ) , I L ⁇ ( ⁇ ) > 0 ⁇ ⁇ and ⁇ ⁇ I R ⁇ ( ⁇ ) > 0 0 otherwise ( 10 )
  • the above constraint provides a condition that the inspiratory flow waveform to the left of the posited notch is generally increasing leftwards, and that to the right of the notch is generally increasing rightwards. This provides more specificity than simply summing the left and right integrals.
  • the integrals of the product of the time-shifted normalised inspiratory flow waveform with each half-V must be strictly positive, otherwise the V-anded convolution is zero. This prevents a variety of pathologies, for example, when the part of the inspiratory flow to the left of the centre of the V does not actually increase leftwards, but the integral of the right half of the V waveform is so large that it overwhelms an actually decreasing left half.
  • V-anded convolution is performed with the position of the centre of the kernel V(t) ranging from Ti/4 to 3 Ti/4, thus yielding results for the central half of the inspiratory flow waveform.
  • Step 7320 finds the location at which the modified convolution I( ⁇ ) peaks, and if the height of this peak is greater than a threshold, a notch is deemed to exist at the location t notch of the centre of the kernel V(t) at which this peak is located.
  • the threshold is set to 0.15.
  • step 7320 the inspiratory flow waveform f(t) is then, at step 7330 , time distorted or “symmetrised” so that half the waveform is to the left of t notch and half is to the right.
  • This operation gives a time-distorted or “symmetrised” version G(t) of the flow waveform f(t):
  • step 7335 sets G(t) to the inspiratory flow waveform f(t), since some waveforms that do not exhibit a detectable notch may still have M-shaped flow limitation.
  • ⁇ f , g ⁇ l ⁇ l ⁇ f ⁇ ( t ) ⁇ g ⁇ ( t ) ⁇ ⁇ t ( 12 )
  • step 7340 calculates the extent as the ratio M3Ratio of the power in the third harmonic of the symmetrised waveform G(t) to the sum Of the power in the first and third harmonics, where it is understood that if the inner product operator has no subscript, the interval is the inspiratory interval [0,Ti]:
  • step 7340 calculates a measure Symm of the symmetry of the inspiratory flow waveform f(t) about the notch location. In one implementation, step 7340 calculates the third harmonic components of the first and second halves of the symmetrised waveform G(t):
  • M 3 ⁇ L ⁇ F 3 , G ⁇ [ 0 , Ti 2 ] ( 16 )
  • M 3 ⁇ R ⁇ F 3 , G ⁇ [ Ti 2 , Ti ] ( 17 )
  • Step 7340 then calculates the measure Symm as the ratio of the lesser of these components to the sum of their absolute values:
  • Step 7350 then tests whether the measure Symm is less than a low threshold, set in one implementation to 0.3. If so (“Y”), the inspiratory flow waveform is deemed not to be symmetrically M-shaped, and a quantity M3RatioSym, which is a measure of the extent to which the inspiratory flow waveform is symmetrically M-shaped, is set equal to zero at step 7360 . Otherwise (“N”), M3RatioSym is set equal to M3Ratio at step 7370 .
  • the flow waveform increases somewhat at the start of inspiration, stays approximately steady, then later in inspiration rises significantly, to levels suggesting an absence of obstruction, then declines to zero in a fairly normal fashion towards the end of inspiration (see FIG. 6 g ).
  • a “smooth and comfortable” pressure waveform such as illustrated in FIG.
  • reverse chairness is thought to be due to an initial state of partial obstruction, with the rising pressure opening the upper airway during inspiration, so that in the latter part of inspiration the airway is substantially unobstructed. It has been observed that if this phenomenon is untreated, and the EPAP is progressively lowered, total upper airway obstruction may result. Hence it is desirable to detect reverse chairness and raise EPAP in response to it.
  • non-obstructive behavioural waveforms most notably a microarousal during sleep, or a sigh, may produce a waveform exhibiting reverse chairness, and so in the present technology measures are taken to attempt not to respond to these non-obstructive causes of reverse chairness.
  • FIG. 7 d is a flow chart illustrating a method 7400 that may be used to compute a measure of reverse chairness of inspiratory flow limitation as part of the algorithm 4324 in one form of the present technology.
  • the method 7400 starts at step 7410 , at which a smoothed derivative of the inspiratory flow waveform is calculated.
  • step 7410 convolves the inspiratory flow waveform with the first derivative of a Gaussian function with standard deviation 0.1 seconds.
  • various other means with similar frequency response characteristics such as a suitable low-pass filter followed by differentiation, are used.
  • the smoothed derivative (in litres/sec/sec) is normalised at step 7415 by TypVent/9, where TypVent is a measure of typical recent ventilation (in litres/min) (e.g., calculated as described below with reference to FIG. 7 o ), giving a normalised derivative with the units sec ⁇ 1 .
  • Step 7420 then performs shape recognition using a state machine with three states, corresponding to the initial rise, the approximately flat region, and the further rise.
  • state “LookingForInitialPositive” the normalised derivative is traversed until it is found to be at least 0.3, whereupon the state transitions to “LookingForLevel”.
  • a search is performed, starting from the current position in the normalised derivative, for a normalised derivative value less than 0.05, whereupon the state transitions to “LookingForPositive”.
  • the minimum and maximum normalised derivatives from this location onward are continuously updated as the search again proceeds, this time looking for a location at which the maximum normalised derivative has surpassed 0.15, and the normalised derivative is at least 0.05 less than the maximum normalised derivative.
  • the idea of the latter criterion is to provide some hysteresis.
  • Step 7420 returns the difference between the maximum and minimum normalised derivatives, called DerivativeRange. If the third state is never reached, DerivativeRange is returned as zero. Step 7425 then tests whether DerivativeRange is greater than some low threshold, equal to 0.2 in one implementation. If so (“Y”), the waveform is provisionally deemed reverse-chair-shaped, the location tmin of the minimum derivative is recorded, and the method 7400 proceeds to step 7430 . Otherwise (“N”), the method 7400 at step 7495 sets a fuzzy truth variable ReverseChairnessCurrent to 0, and concludes.
  • Step 7430 computes a variable LateProportion, which is the proportion of the inspiratory tidal volume in the latter half of the inspiration, ignoring the first and last 10% of the inspiration by time:
  • LateProportion ⁇ 0.5 ⁇ Ti 0.9 ⁇ Ti ⁇ ⁇ f ⁇ ( t ) ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ t ⁇ 0.1 ⁇ Ti 0.9 ⁇ Ti ⁇ ⁇ ( t ) ⁇ ⁇ ⁇ t ( 19 )
  • Step 7430 also calculates a variable EarlyProportion, the proportion of the inspiratory tidal volume which occurs before the minimum derivative location tmin:
  • Equation (20) is the inspiratory tidal volume, a quantity that is used later in the method 7400 .
  • Step 7435 compares EarlyProportion to a low threshold, equal to 0.1 in one implementation. If EarlyProportion is less than the threshold (“Y”), the waveform is deemed not reverse-chair shaped, and the method 7400 proceeds to step 7495 as described above. Otherwise (“N”), at step 7440 the typical recent tidal volume (in litres per breath) is calculated. In one implementation, step 7440 divides the typical recent ventilation in litres per minute (e.g. computed as described below with reference to FIG. 7 o ) by the typical respiratory rate in breaths per minute.
  • Step 7445 computes DerivIncreaseIsLarge as a generally increasing function of the DerivativeRange returned by the three-state detection step 7420 .
  • step 7445 computes DerivIncreaseIsLarge as follows:
  • Step 7450 computes LateProportionIsLarge as a generally increasing function of LateProportion.
  • step 7450 computes LateProportionIsLarge as follows:
  • LateProportionIsLarge FuzzyMember(LateProportion,0.55,0,0.7,1) (22)
  • Step 7455 computes Tidal VolumeIsNotLarge as a generally decreasing function of the inspiratory tidal volume computed at step 7430 , with thresholds proportional to the typical recent tidal volume computed at step 7440 .
  • step 7455 computes TidalVolumeIsNotLarge as follows
  • TidalVolumeIsNotLarge FuzzyMember(InspTidalVolume,TypicalTidalVolume*1.3,1,TypicalTidalVolume*2.0,0) (23)
  • Step 7460 computes a real-valued variable NoRecentJamming as a generally decreasing function of the fuzzy truth variable RecentJamming computed by the jamming pre-processing algorithm 4319 .
  • step 7460 computes NoRecentJamming as follows:
  • the method 7400 at step 7470 computes a variable ReverseChairnessCurrent, the fuzzy extent to which the current inspiration is reverse-chair-shaped, as the fuzzy And of DerivIncreaseIsLarge, LateProportionIsLarge, and TidalVolumeIsNotLarge, multiplied by NoRecentJamming:
  • a processor 4230 executes one or more algorithms 4325 for the detection of apneas and/or hypopneas.
  • Total upper airway obstruction produces zero true respiratory airflow.
  • the respiratory airflow as estimated by the ventilator will in general not be zero, even in the absence of leak.
  • the rise in pressure during inspiration in the airpath and the mask results in compression of gas in the airpath, down to the site of upper airway obstruction, and thus there is a true, if small inflow, into the system.
  • the rise in pressure during inspiration may cause part of the mask to move away from the face, even while maintaining a seal sufficient to prevent any leak, which results in a further inflow of gas into the airpath during inspiration. Corresponding outflows occur during expiration.
  • the model of leak as a function of mask pressure may be imperfect, particularly at higher leak levels, so that even during zero true airflow the estimated flow may be alternately positive (during inspiration) and negative during expiration. For these reasons a criterion of zero or almost zero respiratory airflow for detecting apneas will often not be met during true closed (i.e. obstructive) apnea, and is thus inappropriate.
  • the criterion for detecting apnea is that the airflow is low relative to typical recent airflow.
  • FIG. 7 e is a flow chart illustrating a method 7500 that may be used to implement apnea detection as part of the algorithm 4325 in one form of the present technology.
  • a measure of the current respiratory airflow is computed.
  • step 7510 computes the RMS value of the respiratory airflow over a short recent interval, in one implementation equal to the last two seconds.
  • a measure of the typical recent airflow is computed.
  • the measure of typical recent airflow is computed directly, by calculating the RMS value of respiratory airflow in a window of length longer than the interval used in step 7510 , in one implementation 60 seconds before the present.
  • step 7520 calculates the square root of the output of a lowpass filter on the square of the value of respiratory airflow, where the lowpass filter has a typical time response of the order of 60 seconds, such as a first-order lowpass filter with time constant 60 seconds.
  • Step 7530 the ratio of the measure of the current airflow to the measure of typical recent airflow is computed.
  • Step 7540 tests whether the computed ratio is continuously less than or equal to a low threshold ( 0 . 25 in one implementation) for some duration that is greater than or equal to a predetermined duration D (10 seconds in one implementation). If so (“Y”), a Boolean variable (flag), Apnea, indicating whether an apnea was detected, is set to true at step 7550 . Otherwise (“N”), the flag is cleared at step 7560 . Contiguous periods of time during which Apnea is true are regarded as apnea episodes. According to step 7540 , apnea periods must be at least D in duration.
  • a ventilator may produce some true respiratory flow, particularly if it is a ventilator that rapidly increases pressure support in response to hypopnea, as in one form of the present technology.
  • a modest respiratory airflow large enough for the method 7500 to not detect an apnea.
  • the true respiratory airflow may be low enough so that if respiratory airflow estimation (algorithm 4318 ) had been accurate, the method 7500 would have detected an apnea.
  • respiratory airflow estimation algorithm 4318
  • the combination of moderate to large pressure support and small absolute airflow referred to as high ventilation impedance, may be taken as an indication of a hypopnea.
  • FIG. 7 f is a flow chart illustrating a method 7600 that may be used to implement hypopnea detection as part of the algorithm 4325 in one form of the present technology.
  • the method 7600 starts at step 7610 , which applies a lowpass filter with a characteristic response time on the order of one or two typical breaths to the absolute value of airflow.
  • the lowpass filter is a second order Bessel lowpass filter, implemented digitally using the bilinear transform method, with a frequency response having its ⁇ 3 dB point at 3.2/60 seconds.
  • the output of step 7610 is denoted AbsAirflowFilterOutput.
  • step 7620 the target absolute airflow (denoted TgtAbsAirflow), is computed as twice the current target ventilation, a continuously changing quantity that is based on the measure of typical recent ventilation, and is computed using the algorithm 4328 described below.
  • Step 7620 then computes a fuzzy truth variable AirflowIsSmall, indicating the extent to which the absolute airflow is small, as a generally decreasing function of AbsAirflowFilterOutput, with thresholds proportional to TgtAbsAirflow.
  • step 7620 computes AirflowIsSmall as follows:
  • AirflowIsSmall FuzzyMember(AbsAirflowFilterOutput,TgtAbsAirflow*0.15,1,TgtAbsAirflow*0.25,0) (26)
  • Step 7630 then computes a fuzzy truth variable SwingIsLarge indicating the extent to which the pressure support (i.e., the swing) is large.
  • step 7630 computes SwingIsLarge as follows:
  • a fuzzy truth variable VentilationImpedanceIsHigh indicative of high ventilation impedance is calculated at step 7640 as the fuzzy “And” of AirflowIsSmall and SwingIsLarge:
  • a processor 4230 executes one or more snore algorithms for the detection of snore.
  • Snore is generally indicative of upper airway obstruction.
  • a relatively simple technique to obtain a snore signal may include applying a bandpass filter to a pressure signal measured at a suitable location, typically in the ventilator airpath, and deriving an indicator of the magnitude of the filter output, for example by full-wave rectification and low-pass filtering. Some compensation for noise produced by the ventilator is typically necessary.
  • Mask leak may produce sounds (designated “spurious snore”) which this or other methods of evaluating the degree of snore treat as snore. This can lead to a “positive feedback” situation in which EPAP is increased in response to mask leak, further increasing the amount of mask leak, which is treated as snore, resulting in a further increase in EPAP, and so on.
  • the broad goal of the algorithm 4326 is to compute a measure of true inspiratory snore and to detect apparent snore during expiration.
  • the aim is to provide an EPAP increase generally increasing with the degree of inspiratory snore, but if the apparent expiratory snore is too large, not to provide any increase in EPAP, because the expiratory snore is very likely to represent mask leak or possibly another source of spurious snore.
  • true expiratory snore is not treated, but true expiratory snore appears to be quite rare, especially in a ventilator rather than a CPAP device, and the resulting gain in specificity is well worthwhile.
  • True snore is generally inspiratory only, maximal in mid to late inspiration, and generally decreases markedly or disappears in the last part of inspiration.
  • FIG. 7 g is a flow chart illustrating a method 7700 of computing a measure of inspiratory snore and detecting apparent expiratory snore, that may be used to implement the algorithm 4326 in one form of the present technology.
  • snore units Since there is no generally accepted standard for measuring snore, in the following the magnitude of snore is expressed in “snore units”. In these units, 0 represents no snore, 0.2 represents a very soft snore, 1.0 represents a moderately loud snore, and 2.0 a louder snore. These units are linear in amplitude.
  • the method 7700 starts at step 7710 , which applies a snore filter to the instantaneous mask pressure Pm.
  • the snore filter is a bandpass filter with passband between 30 and 300 Hz, followed by full wave rectification and lowpass filtering with a high frequency cutoff of between 0.5 and 2 Hz.
  • the output of the snore filter is termed “raw snore”.
  • a snore threshold is computed.
  • the snore threshold depends not on the EPAP, but on the instantaneous mask pressure Pm, because the spurious snore signal generally varies almost instantaneously with mask pressure, possibly with a small delay due to physical properties, such as inertia, of the mask and face.
  • the snore threshold tsn follows a generally increasing course with increasing mask pressure Pm.
  • step 7720 computes tsn (in snore units) as follows:
  • Step 7730 follows, at which the method 7700 computes a weighting W(s) to be applied to the amount of raw inspiratory snore s above the snore threshold tsn. If the inspiratory flow is high, the noise produced both in the patient's respiratory system and in the airpath may be considerable, producing spurious snore. In such a situation, the high flow indicates that there cannot be any significant degree of UAO. Raw snore occurring at very high respiratory flows is therefore given a low weighting.
  • the weighting function W(s) computed at step 7730 is therefore, in one implementation, given by
  • Step 7735 accumulates the weighted difference between the amount of raw snore and the snore threshold tsn over the inspiratory portion of the current breath, by multiplying the difference at each sample (e.g. at 50 Hz) by the weighting function W(s).
  • Step 7740 then, at the end of the inspiratory portion of the current breath, divides the accumulated weighted difference by the accumulation of W(s) over the inspiratory portion. The result is the mean weighted inspiratory snore in excess of threshold (MWISAT) for the current breath.
  • MMISAT mean weighted inspiratory snore in excess of threshold
  • the method 7700 uses joint thresholds on intensity and duration of raw snore during the expiratory portion for detecting significant expiratory snore.
  • the thresholds are “joint” in the sense that the threshold on duration generally decreases as the threshold on intensity increases. This means that if there has been loud expiratory snore for a short period of time, or softer expiratory snore for a longer period of time, or yet softer expiratory snore for a yet longer period of time, significant expiratory snore is deemed to be present.
  • the durations are measured in terms of time, but in other implementations the durations are normalised by dividing by the duration Te of expiration.
  • Step 7750 of the method 7700 therefore accumulates a distribution D(s) (analogous to an observed probability distribution function) of the intensity s of raw snore during the expiratory portion of the current breath.
  • step 7750 maintains D(s) as a histogram of raw snore intensities s during expiration.
  • step 7760 converts the distribution D(s) into a reverse cumulative distribution function (CDF) C(s) of raw snore intensity s during the expiration.
  • the reverse CDF C(s) is the proportion of the expiratory duration Te spent at a snore intensity greater than or equal to s.
  • the reverse CDF C(s) is then, at step 7770 , compared with a predetermined “critical” snore function Cc(s) that expresses the joint thresholds on intensity and duration.
  • the critical snore function Cc(s) decreases generally with increasing raw snore intensity s.
  • the critical snore function Cc(s) is defined as follows:
  • step 7780 sets a Boolean variable ExpiratorySnore indicating that significant expiratory snore has been detected to True. Otherwise (“N”), step 7790 sets ExpiratorySnore to False.
  • the minimum intensity st of raw snore is 0.2 snore units.
  • a number of different features indicative of upper airway obstruction cause a rise in the EPAP above a pre-set minimum value minEPAP, to a degree which is broadly proportional to the severity of the upper airway obstruction.
  • the EPAP decays progressively towards the pre-set minimum EPAP. This decay tends to minimise the EPAP delivered.
  • the EPAP is a balance between the forces tending to make it rise and the tendency to decay. An approximate equilibrium may be reached in which occasional indicators of mild UAO cause upward movements in EPAP which are counterbalanced by the decay that occurs when there are no indicators of UAO.
  • the EPAP response to the indications of flow limitation is progressive (i.e., more flow limitation results in a greater EPAP component compared to the EPAP component due to less flow limitation), because with progressively more severe flow limitation the need to respond rapidly to try to prevent an apnea or arousal increases, and also because there is less uncertainty about the presence of flow limitation.
  • Control systems with progressive responses to signals are also almost invariably more stable and generally better behaved than those with large changes in response to small changes in the level of signals.
  • FIG. 7 h is a flow chart illustrating a method 7800 of determining a new value of EPAP, CurrentEPAP, as a function of the various indications of upper airway obstruction computed by the algorithms 4324 , 4325 , and 4326 .
  • the method 7800 may be used to implement the algorithm 4327 in one form of the present technology.
  • the method 7800 computes five separate components of EPAP above the pre-set minimum value minEPAP: EPAP (1,2) (due to apnea and/or high ventilation impedance) at step 7810 , EPAP (3) (due to flatness of inspiratory flow) at step 7820 , EPAP (4) (due to M-shaped inspiratory flow) at step 7830 , EPAP (5) (due to reverse chairness of inspiratory flow) at step 7840 , and EPAP (6) (due to snore) at step 7850 .
  • Step 7860 adds these five components to the pre-set minimum value minEPAP.
  • step 7870 the method 7800 ensures that the resulting new value of CurrentEPAP does not exceed a pre-set maximum value maxEPAP. In other words, step 7870 “clips above” the newly computed value of CurrentEPAP to maxEPAP. The method 7800 then concludes.
  • Each of the steps 7810 to 7850 takes as input, in addition to the corresponding measure(s) of UAO, one or more of the following PAP device variables or signals: the respiratory flow Qr, the amount Leak of leak (equal to the leak flow Ql, in litres per second), the current target ventilation Vtgt, the present value of CurrentEPAP, the amount of swing (or pressure support), the instantaneous mask pressure Pm, and the recent jamming fuzzy truth variable RecentJamming.
  • the EPAP component EPAP (1,2) increases with the duration of the detected episode of apnea or high ventilation impedance (HVI). Since episodes of apnea and high ventilation impedance as calculated by the algorithm 4325 may overlap, it is desirable to combine them in some way.
  • HVI high ventilation impedance
  • FIG. 7 i is a flow chart illustrating a method 7900 which may be used to implement step 7810 of the method 7800 .
  • the method 7900 starts at step 7910 , which determines whether an episode of apnea or HVI, i.e. a period during which it is continuously the case that FuzzyOr (VentilationImpedanceIsHigh, Apnea)>0 (here taking Apnea to be a fuzzy truth variable which is either 0 or 1), has just ceased. If so (“Y”), the next step 7920 computes the duration T_apn_Rx of the episode for therapy purposes.
  • the integral with respect to time of W(t) over the episode may then be taken as the duration T_apn_Rx of the combined apnea and high ventilation impedance episode for therapy purposes.
  • step 7920 Another implementation of step 7920 , which is simpler and more conservative, is as follows. If there was an apnea during the episode, the period of high ventilation impedance is ignored and T_apn_Rx is taken just to be the actual apnea duration as described above. Otherwise, T_apn_Rx is set equal to the weighted duration of high ventilation impedance, determined by integrating VentilationImpedanceIsHigh as described above, multiplied by a scaling factor.
  • the scaling factor is set to be between 0 and 1, for example 0.75, due to the fact that when only the state of high ventilation impedance exists, either the hypopnea is not as severe as that which obtains when the apnea detection method 7500 detects an apnea, or that there has actually been an apnea, but there is lower confidence that this is the case, or some combination of these two possibilities, so the hypopnea deserves less therapy than a clearly diagnosed apnea of the same duration.
  • step 7930 and 7940 the EPAP component EPAP (1,2) due to apnea/hypopnea is computed in such a way that with increasing T_apn_Rx, the maximum possible new value of EPAP as a result of EPAP (1,2) , termed MaxPossibleNewEPAP, exponentially approaches a value, termed HighApneaRollOffPressure, that is set somewhat above the maximum possible EPAP value maxEPAP.
  • step 7930 the maximum possible new value of EPAP as a result of EPAP (1,2) due to apnea/hypopnea is computed in such a way that with increasing T_apn_Rx, the maximum possible new value of EPAP as a result of EPAP (1,2) , termed MaxPossibleNewEPAP, exponentially approaches a value, termed HighApneaRollOffPressure, that is set somewhat above the maximum possible EPAP value maxEPAP.
  • MaxPossibleNewEPAP CurrentEPAP+(HighApneaRollOffPressure ⁇ CurrentEPAP)*(1 ⁇ exp( k*T _apn — Rx )) (33)
  • step 7930 The rate constant k in equation (33) (with units 1/sec) is decreased as HighApneaRollOffPressure increases, to avoid too rapid an increase in pressure at low EPAP values.
  • the actual new EPAP as a result of EPAP (1,2) is then limited at step 7940 to be no more than maxEPAP.
  • the component EPAP (1,2) is therefore computed at step 7940 as
  • EPAP (1,2) min(MaxPossibleNewEPAP,maxEPAP) ⁇ CurrentEPAP (35)
  • step 7950 the EPAP component EPAP (1,2) is decayed exponentially towards zero using a time constant ⁇ 1,2 . This is accomplished by reducing EPAP (1,2) by EPAP (1,2) * ⁇ T/ ⁇ 1,2 , where ⁇ T is the interval since the last update of EPAP (1,2) .
  • the time constant ⁇ 1,2 is 40 minutes.
  • FIG. 7 j is a flow chart illustrating a method 71000 that may be used to implement step 7820 of the method 7800 .
  • the method 71000 therefore starts at step 71010 , which calculates a value CurrentEEP_RxFactor that generally decreases as CurrentEPAP increases.
  • CurrentEEP_RxFactor that generally decreases as CurrentEPAP increases.
  • step 71020 computes a variable LeakRxFactor which generally decreases as Leak increases.
  • step 71020 computes LeakRxFactor as follows:
  • the thresholds 0.5 and 1.0 on Leak in equation (37) are higher than in previous technology.
  • Step 71030 therefore computes a variable EarlyExpLeakRatio as the ratio of the peak flow in the first 0.5 seconds of expiration to the mean flow in the next 0.5 seconds of expiration. During valve-like leaks, EarlyExpLeakRatio typically exceeds 5:1. Normal breathing gives a ratio of about 1:1 to 4:1. Step 71030 then calculates a variable ValveLikeLeak_RxFactor that generally decreases as EarlyExpLeakRatio increases above the thresholds that indicate valve-like leak is likely to be happening. In one implementation,
  • ValveLikeLeak_RxFactor Interp(EarlyExpLeakRatio,4,1,5,0) (38)
  • step 71040 calculates a threshold MinFlatnessForRx on flatness for any increase in EPAP (3) to be prescribed, as follows:
  • MinFlatnessForRx 1 ⁇ LeakRxFactor*ValveLikeLeak_RxFactor*CurrentEEP_RxFactor (39).
  • Step 71050 then tests whether the value of Flatness computed by the algorithm 4324 is less than or equal to the threshold MinFlatnessForRx. If not (“N”), the increase dEPAP (3) in EPAP (3) is calculated at step 71060 in proportion to the excess of Flatness over the threshold MinFlatnessForRx.
  • the constant of proportionality is 0.5 cm H 2 O:
  • Step 71060 then increases EPAP (3) by ⁇ EPAP (3) .
  • Step 71070 clips the increased value of EPAP (3) to maxEPAP ⁇ CurrentEPAP, to ensure the increased value of EPAP as a result of flatness does not exceed maxEPAP.
  • step 71050 determines that Flatness is less than or equal to MinFlatnessForRx (“Y”)
  • step 71080 the value of EPAP (3) is decayed exponentially towards zero using a time constant ⁇ 3 . This is accomplished by reducing EPAP (3) by EPAP (3) * ⁇ T/ ⁇ 3 , where ⁇ T is the interval since the last update of EPAP (3) .
  • the time constant ⁇ 3 is 20 minutes.
  • FIG. 7 k is a flow chart illustrating a method 71100 that may be used to implement step 7830 of the method 7800 in one form of the present technology.
  • step 71110 tests whether the duration Ti of inspiration is greater than a “long” threshold, 3.5 seconds in one implementation. If so (“Y”), a variable MRxProportion, the proportion of the maximum increase per breath in EPAP (4) , the EPAP component due to M-shaped inspiratory flow, to be applied in the current breath, is set to 0 at step 71120 . Otherwise (“N”), step 71130 computes MRxProportion to increase generally with the value of M3RatioSym computed by the algorithm 4324 . In one implementation, step 71130 computes MRxProportion from M3RatioSym as follows:
  • step 71040 calculates the ratio of the breathwise ventilation (the mean of the instantaneous ventilation Vent over the breath) to the typical recent ventilation (e.g. computed as described below with reference to FIG. 7 o ).
  • Step 71140 then adjusts MRxProportion to generally decrease as that ratio increases.
  • step 71140 adjusts MRXProportion as follows:
  • Step 71150 tests whether M3RatioSym is greater than 0. If so (“Y”), step 71160 increases EPAP (4) by an amount dEPAP (4) proportional to MRxProportion.
  • the constant of proportionality i.e. maximum increase per breath in the EPAP component due to M-shaped inspiratory flow, in one implementation, is set to 0.3 cm H 2 O:
  • Step 71170 clips the increased value of EPAP (4) to maxEPAP ⁇ CurrentEPAP, to ensure the new value of EPAP does not exceed maxEPAP.
  • step 71150 determines that M3RatioSym is not greater than zero (“N”)
  • step 71180 the value of EPAP (4) is decayed exponentially towards zero using a time constant ⁇ 4 . This is accomplished by reducing EPAP (4) by EPAP (4) * ⁇ T/ ⁇ 4 , where ⁇ T is the interval since the last update of EPAP (4) .
  • the time constant ⁇ 4 is 20 minutes.
  • FIG. 7 l is a flow chart illustrating a method 71200 that may be used to implement step 7840 of the method 7800 .
  • the first step 71210 of the method 71200 therefore calculates a variable ReverseChairnessConsistent as a weighted geometric mean of ReverseChairnessCurrent computed by the algorithm 4324 for the current and preceding breaths. This calculation can be interpreted as a particular kind of fuzzy “and” function over current and preceding breaths.
  • step 71210 finds the minimum and maximum of the values of ReverseChairnessCurrent for the current and preceding breaths, designating them MinChairness and MaxChairness. If either or both of MinChairness and MaxChairness is zero, the reverse chairness measure ReverseChairnessConsistent is set to zero. Otherwise, in one implementation step 71210 calculates ReverseChairnessConsistent as follows:
  • Step 71220 then computes a variable ReverseChairnessForRx, a measure of reverse chairness for therapy purposes, that transitions from ReverseChairnessCurrent to ReverseChairnessConsistent as CurrentEPAP increases.
  • step 71220 computes ReverseChairnessForRx as
  • ReverseChairnessForRx Interp(CurrentEPAP,8,ReverseChairnessCurrent,10,ReverseChairnessConsistent) (45)
  • Step 71230 then tests whether ReverseChairnessForRx is less than a low threshold, 0.05 in one implementation. If not (“N”), the reverse chairness is deemed significant, step 71240 increases the EPAP component EPAP (5) due to reverse chairness by an amount ⁇ EPAP (5) that is proportional to ReverseChairnessForRx by an amount that decreases with increasing current EPAP and increasing leak. In one implementation, step 71240 increases EPAP (5) by
  • Step 71250 clips the increased value of EPAP (5) to maxEPAP ⁇ CurrentEPAP, to ensure the new value of EPAP does not exceed maxEPAP.
  • step 71230 determines that ReverseChairnessForRx is insignificant (“N”)
  • step 71260 the value of EPAP (5) is decayed exponentially towards zero using a time constant ⁇ 5 . This is accomplished by reducing EPAP (S) by EPAP (5) * ⁇ T/ ⁇ 5 , where ⁇ T is the interval since the last update of EPAP (5) .
  • the time constant ⁇ 5 is 20 minutes.
  • FIG. 7 m is a flow chart illustrating a method 71300 that may be used to implement step 7850 of the method 7800 .
  • the method 71300 start at step 71320 , which examines the Boolean variable ExpiratorySnore, indicating that significant expiratory snore has been detected, computed by the algorithm 4326 . If step 71320 determines that ExpiratorySnore is true (“Y”), at step 71330 the value of the component EPAP (6) of EPAP due to snore is decayed exponentially towards zero using a time constant ⁇ 6 . This is accomplished by reducing EPAP (6) by EPAP (6) * ⁇ T/ ⁇ 6 , where ⁇ T is the interval since the last update of EPAP (6) . In one implementation, the time constant ⁇ 6 is 20 minutes.
  • step 71340 determines whether the mean weighted inspiratory snore above the threshold (MWISAT) computed by the algorithm 4326 is greater than zero, indicating inspiratory snore is present. If not (“N”), the method 71300 proceeds to step 71330 to decay the value of EPAP (6) towards zero as described above.
  • MMISAT mean weighted inspiratory snore above the threshold
  • the EPAP component EPAP (6) is increased according to the MWISAT value.
  • the amount of increase in EPAP (6) is decreased with increasing jamming, and in particular with the maximum value of the fuzzy truth variable RecentJamming during the breath just completed. This maximum value, MaxJammingDuringBreath, is computed from RecentJamming at step 71350 .
  • Step 71360 then increases EPAP (6) by an amount ⁇ EPAP (6) that is proportional to MWISAT by an amount that decreases as MaxJammingDuringBreath increases. In one implementation, step 71360 increases EPAP (6) by
  • step 71370 clips the increased value of EPAP (6) to maxEPAP ⁇ CurrentEPAP, to ensure the new value of EPAP does not exceed maxEPAP.
  • the target ventilation has been set to 90% of the typical recent ventilation, calculated as the output of a first-order lowpass filter with time constant 3 minutes (the ventilation filter) that is applied to the instantaneous ventilation.
  • an aim of the present technology is to stabilise the ventilation, not to set any particular level, and the patients in whom it is generally used have arterial CO 2 levels below normal, with the goal in these patients being to raise the CO 2 level, so it is desirable to maintain pressure support at the lowest level consistent with awake comfort.
  • the present technology contains features designed to make it harder for the target ventilation to rise rapidly, and to make it easier for the target ventilation to fall when pressure support has been reasonably stable for a while, and hence by the above considerations is at an inappropriately high level.
  • FIG. 7 n is a flow chart illustrating a method 71400 of computing the target ventilation, that may be used to implement the algorithm 4328 in one form of the present technology.
  • the method 71400 starts at step 71410 , which computes a measure of the typical recent ventilation from the instantaneous ventilation (computed by the algorithm 4323 ), as described in detail below with reference to FIG. 7 o .
  • Step 71410 is sometimes referred to as the typical recent ventilation filter.
  • the following step 71420 computes a fuzzy truth variable ShouldSpeedUpTargetVentilationAdjustment, the fuzzy extent to which any fall in target ventilation should be speeded up, from the current value of pressure support, as described below with reference to FIG. 7 p .
  • Step 71430 then computes a target fraction that is to be multiplied by the typical recent ventilation. In previous approaches, the target fraction was fixed at a value just below 1, e.g. 0.9. One mechanism for lowering the target ventilation more rapidly involves decreasing the target fraction to a value slightly further below 1 as ShouldSpeedUpTargetVentilationAdjustment increases.
  • step 71430 computes the target fraction as
  • Step 71440 multiplies the computed target fraction by the measure of typical recent ventilation computed by step 71410 .
  • the resulting product is passed to step 71460 that computes the target ventilation, as described in detail below with reference to FIG. 7 q .
  • Step 71460 is sometimes referred to as the target ventilation filter.
  • the rate constant (the reciprocal of the time constant) of the low pass filter that computed the target ventilation in previous approaches was fixed, typically at 1/180, and equal for both increases and decreases in target ventilation.
  • another mechanism for lowering the target ventilation more rapidly is to increase the decreasing rate constant of the target ventilation filter as ShouldSpeedUpTargetVentilationAdjustment increases.
  • Step 71450 therefore computes a factor SpeedUpRatio that generally increases with ShouldSpeedUpTargetVentilationAdjustment, to be multiplied by the decreasing rate constant in step 71460 .
  • step 71450 computes the factor SpeedUpRatio as follows:
  • the decreasing rate constant has a maximum value of 3 times its basic value.
  • the time taken to reduce the target ventilation to the patient's mean ventilation requirement depends on how much the target ventilation is above this requirement, but it is not unusual to see a reduction in target ventilation over a period of 0.1 to 3 minutes (after the initial 90 seconds of stable nontrivial pressure support) such that the target and hence actual ventilation is lowered to a level which results in the arterial CO 2 being above the apneic threshold, so that intrinsic respiratory drive returns, and thus pressure support drops rapidly to minimum.
  • FIG. 7 o is a flow chart illustrating a method 71500 of computing a measure of the typical recent ventilation, as used to implement step 71410 in the method 71400 in one form of the present technology.
  • Jamming (described above), by shifting the respiratory flow baseline, almost always causes an unjustified increase in apparent ventilation, and therefore the typical recent ventilation.
  • the rate of adjustment of typical recent ventilation is reduced when there is, or has recently been, jamming.
  • the instantaneous ventilation (computed by the algorithm 4323 ) is input to a jam-dependent lowpass filter 71510 that comprises the steps 71520 to 71580 , executed on receipt of each input sample.
  • the jam-dependent filter 71510 effectively slows down time to the extent that there is, or has recently been, jamming.
  • the time-slowing in the jam-dependent filter 71510 is implemented by accumulating the proportion of an update which should be performed to the jam-dependent filter output, and allowing the update to occur only when that accumulated proportion exceeds one.
  • the rate of updating of output samples of the jam-dependent filter is thereby reduced by the value of the update proportion.
  • the first step 71520 therefore computes a variable UpdateProportion that generally decreases from 1 to 0 as RecentJamming increases. In one implementation, step 71520 computes UpdateProportion as
  • the next step 71530 increments an accumulated value of UpdateProportion by UpdateProportion.
  • Step 71540 tests whether the accumulated value of UpdateProportion is greater than or equal to one. If not (“N”), a variable WeightedSum is incremented by the product of UpdateProportion and the ventilation filter's current output sample (step 71550 ). The method 71500 then returns to step 71520 to compute a new value of UpdateProportion from RecentJamming.
  • a variable WeightedVentilation is computed at step 71560 as the sum of WeightedSum and the product of the ventilation filter's current output sample and one minus the previous value of the accumulated UpdateProportion (which was less than one).
  • step 71570 the accumulated value of UpdateProportion is re-initialized (to a value between 0 and 1) by subtracting one from the accumulated value of UpdateProportion.
  • step 71580 re-initializes WeightedSum by multiplying the new value of the accumulated UpdateProportion by the ventilation filter's current output sample. The method 71500 then returns to step 71520 to compute a new value of UpdateProportion from RecentJamming.
  • the output of the jam-dependent filter 71510 is the sequence of values of WeightedVentilation produced by step 71560 . If UpdateProportion is 1 (as when RecentJamming is fully false), the output of the jam-dependent filter 71510 is simply the instantaneous ventilation. If UpdateProportion becomes zero (as when RecentJamming is fully true), the output of the jam-dependent filter 71510 is frozen at its current value. In the intermediate case where UpdateProportion is between 0 and 1, (as when RecentJamming is between 0.1 and 0.3), say 1/N where N is an integer, the output of the jam-dependent filter 71510 is an N-sample average of the instantaneous ventilation, updated once every N samples.
  • the output of the jam-dependent filter 71510 is, in one form of the present technology, passed to a ventilation filter 71590 whose response has a similar time course to the jamming detection algorithm 4319 .
  • the output of the ventilation filter 71590 does not rise in response to a sudden uncompensated leak until RecentJamming starts to become fuzzily true.
  • the output of the ventilation filter 71590 is then the typical recent ventilation.
  • the ventilation filter 71590 is a second-order Bessel lowpass filter with a minus 3 db point of 0.0178 Hz.
  • the response of the ventilation filter 71590 is slow enough to reduce within-breath fluctuations in ventilation to a value much lower than the upward slew rate limit described below, and fast enough that its time constant is less than the three-minute time constant used in the typical recent ventilation filter of previous approaches.
  • step 71410 the ventilation filter 71590 precedes the jam-dependent filter 71510 .
  • the output of the jam-dependent filter 71510 is then used as the measure of typical recent ventilation.
  • target ventilation is still relatively easy for the target ventilation to be above what the patient actually requires in mean. This may occur when target ventilation rises due to arousals, or may simply be a result of the wake to sleep transition, when both metabolic rate decreases and respiratory controller CO 2 response decreases, and “awake drive” disappears.
  • an aim of the present technology is to deliver pressure support above minimum only when actually necessary to deal with relatively brisk and brief falls in central drive, in order to stabilise ventilation in a respiratory system in which ventilation would otherwise oscillate.
  • the method 71400 incorporates a step 71420 of detecting a state of fairly stable pressure support significantly above the minimum, and mechanisms (equations (48) and (49)) to speed target ventilation adjustment downwards when that occurs.
  • FIG. 7 p is a flow chart illustrating a method 71600 of computing the fuzzy truth variable ShouldSpeedUpTargetVentilationAdjustment as used at step 71420 of the method 71400 in one form of the present technology.
  • the method 71600 computes the fuzzy extent to which the pressure support above minimum (the “servoassistance” or “servo swing”) has been fairly stable for a first recent period and also for a second recent period substantially shorter than the first recent period, then pressure support has been fairly stable for a while and is currently fairly stable. This could be determined by a variety of statistical measures of spread, such as standard deviation, mean absolute deviation, or a high pass filter of some type; a fairly low value of spread obtained by any of these indicates that the pressure support is fairly stable.
  • order statistics are used to determine stability, generally being more robust, especially when the distribution in the particular individual is unknown, as it typically is in this case.
  • the first recent period is the most recent 90 seconds and the second recent period is the most recent 30 seconds.
  • the choice of 90 seconds as the period over which to assess stability is determined by the fact that essentially all Cheyne-Stokes oscillations of central drive have a period of 90 seconds or less, 40 to 60 seconds being the usual range. Periodic breathing of other causes tends to have periods of 60 seconds or less. Thus if the ventilator were delivering significant servoassistance only to stabilise such oscillations, it could not be fairly stable over a period of 90 seconds.
  • the method 71600 starts at step 71610 , at which the pressure support above minimum is lightly lowpass filtered, in one implementation with a time constant of 2 seconds.
  • the next step 71620 calculates running order statistics over the most recent 30 seconds.
  • a histogram of values over the most recent 30 seconds is continually updated by means of a circular buffer of input values 30 seconds in length.
  • the histogram categories of the newest and oldest sample in the circular buffer are determined, the count in the histogram category of the oldest sample is decremented by one and the count in the histogram of the newest sample is incremented by one. Determination of approximate order statistics from histograms is routine.
  • step 71620 compute's a measure of spread referred to as Spread30 as the difference between the 0.8 and the 0.2 order statistic, equivalently the difference between the 80th percentile value and the 20th percentile value.
  • step 71620 also computes the median, referred to as Median30.
  • the following step 71630 computes the ratio of Spread30 to Median30.
  • Step 71640 follows, at which running order statistics over the most recent 90 seconds are calculated in similar fashion to step 71620 .
  • step 71640 computes a measure of spread referred to as Spread90 as the difference between the 0.8 and the 0.2 order statistic, equivalently the difference between the 80th percentile value and the 20th percentile value.
  • the final step 71650 computes the fuzzy truth variable ShouldSpeedUpTargetVentilationAdjustment based on the computed order statistics and the constant MaxPossibleServoAssistance, the difference between maximum and minimum pressure support.
  • step 71650 sets ShouldSpeedUpTargetVentilationAdjustment to zero, because recent pressure support cannot be stable and high under these circumstances. Otherwise, step 71650 computes ShouldSpeedUpTargetVentilationAdjustment as the fuzzy “And” of five fuzzy truth variables.
  • the first of the five fuzzy truth variables that is fuzzy “Anded” to compute ShouldSpeedUpTargetVentilationAdjustment indicates the extent to which MaxPossibleServoAssistance is large compared to predetermined thresholds. This variable is present because when MaxPossibleServoAssistance is small, it is fairly easy for the servoassistance to be small even in the presence of large fluctuations in actual ventilation, so any apparent stability in pressure support is discounted.
  • the next two fuzzy truth variables evaluate the extent that pressure support has been fairly stable over the most recent 30 seconds.
  • the fourth fuzzy truth variable evaluates the extent to which servoassistance has been nontrivial (e.g., generally sufficient to affect the patient's respiratory pattern) over the last 30 seconds, and the last fuzzy truth variable evaluates the extent to which pressure support has been stable over the last 90 seconds.
  • step 71650 computes ShouldSpeedUpTargetVentilationAdjustment as follows:
  • step 71650 is permitted to compute the variable ShouldSpeedUpTargetVentilationAdjustment.
  • FIG. 7 q is a flow chart illustrating a method 71700 of computing the target ventilation from the typical recent ventilation, which may be used to implement step 71460 of the method 71400 in one form of the present technology.
  • the method 71700 imposes an upper limit on the rate of increase (the upward slew rate) of the target ventilation.
  • the method 71700 starts at step 71710 , which subtracts the current value of target ventilation from the typical recent ventilation multiplied by the target fraction, as provided by step 71440 of the method 71400 , yielding a prospective increment to the target ventilation.
  • Step 71720 determines whether the prospective increment is greater than zero. If so (“Y”), the prospective increment is multiplied at step 71730 by the increasing rate constant, which in one implementation is set to a fixed value, typically 1/180 sec ⁇ 1 .
  • the next step 71740 clips the resulting adjusted increment above to the upward slew rate limit, which in one implementation is set at 0.93 litres/minute/minute, corresponding to a target ventilation increase of 2.5 litres/minute per three minutes.
  • the method 71700 then proceeds to step 71790 , described below.
  • step 71720 determines that the prospective increment is not greater than zero (“N”)
  • step 71750 multiplies the prospective increment (actually a decrement) by the decreasing rate constant
  • step 71760 multiplies the product by the SpeedUpRatio computed at step 71450 of the method 71400 to obtain the adjusted increment.
  • Step 71700 adds the adjusted increment to the current target ventilation to generate the new value of target ventilation.
  • Step 71795 is an optional step described below.
  • the processor 4230 executes one or more algorithms 4329 for the determination of therapy parameters.
  • the algorithm 4329 receives as an input one of more of the following:
  • the algorithm 4329 first computes a pressure support value A that is sufficient to increase the instantaneous ventilation to the target ventilation. In one implementation, the algorithm 4329 computes A in proportion to the integral of the difference between the target ventilation and the instantaneous ventilation:
  • G is the controller gain, typically set to 0.3 cm H 2 O litres/min/second. Note that the computed pressure support A is clipped to the range [minSwing, maxSwing].
  • controllers are used to compute the pressure support value A, from the target ventilation and the instantaneous ventilation, for example, proportional, proportional-integral, proportional-integral-differential.
  • the algorithm 4329 then computes the target treatment pressure Pt using the following equation:
  • the algorithm 4329 computes the pressure support value A as in equation (52).
  • the therapy engine module 4320 then outputs the EPAP, the waveform value, and the computed value of pressure support A.
  • the control module 4330 then performs the remaining computation of the target treatment pressure Pt as described above.
  • the algorithm 4329 merely outputs the EPAP, the waveform value, the target ventilation, and the instantaneous ventilation.
  • the control module 4330 then performs the remaining computation of the target treatment pressure Pt as described above.
  • a preferable approach is to set a minimum target ventilation. This may be implemented straightforwardly in the method 71700 , by inserting an optional step 71795 (shown as a dashed box in FIG. 7 q ) that bounds the target ventilation below by the set minimum target ventilation. In one implementation, the minimum target ventilation rises gradually from zero to its set level, to allow the patient to get to sleep before the target ventilation is bounded below by the minimum target ventilation.
  • Another approach is to set a minimum target gross alveolar ventilation (as described in the commonly owned U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 20070163590 A1, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference), and to combine the control methodology based on gross alveolar ventilation described in that disclosure with the control methodology of algorithm 4329 described above.
  • one implementation is to run both in parallel, and adjust the pressure support to some combination of the values of pressure support set by each methodology. In one implementation, the combination is the greater of the two values.
  • a control module 4330 in accordance with one form of the present technology receives as an input a target treatment pressure Pt, and controls a therapy device 4245 to deliver that pressure.
  • a control module 4330 in accordance with another form of the present technology receives as inputs an EPAP, a waveform value, and a level of pressure support, computes a target treatment pressure Pt as in equation (53), and controls a therapy device 4245 to deliver that pressure.
  • a control module 4330 in accordance with another form of the present technology receives as an input an EPAP, a waveform value, a target ventilation, and an instantaneous ventilation, computes a level of pressure support from the target ventilation and the instantaneous ventilation as in equation (52), computes a target treatment pressure Pt using the EPAP, the waveform value, and the pressure support as in equation (53), and controls a therapy device 4245 to deliver that pressure.
  • a processor executes one or more methods for the detection of fault conditions.
  • the fault conditions detected by the one or more methods includes at least one of the following:
  • the corresponding algorithm Upon detection of the fault condition, the corresponding algorithm signals the presence of the fault by one or more of the following:
  • the therapy device 4245 is under the control of the control module 4330 to deliver therapy to a patient 1000 .
  • the therapy device 4245 is a positive air pressure device 4140 .
  • a humidifier 5000 comprising a water reservoir 5110 and a heating plate 5120 .
  • air supplied to a patient may be atmospheric air, and in other forms of the present technology atmospheric air may be supplemented with oxygen.
  • CPAP treatment will be taken to mean the application of a supply of air or breathable gas to the entrance to the airways at a pressure that is continuously positive with respect to atmosphere, and preferably approximately constant through a respiratory cycle of a patient.
  • the pressure at the entrance to the airways will vary by a few centimetres of water within a single respiratory cycle, for example being higher during inhalation and lower during exhalation.
  • the pressure at the entrance to the airways will be slightly higher during exhalation, and slightly lower during inhalation.
  • the pressure will vary between different respiratory cycles of the patient, for example being increased in response to detection of indications of partial upper airway obstruction, and decreased in the absence of indications of partial upper airway obstruction.
  • Air circuit A conduit or tube constructed and arranged in use to deliver a supply of air or breathable gas between a PAP device and a patient interface.
  • the air circuit may be in fluid connection with the outlet of the pneumatic block and the patient interface.
  • the air circuit may be referred to as air delivery tube.
  • APAP Automatic Positive Airway Pressure. Positive airway pressure that is continually adjustable between minimum and maximum limits, depending on the presence or absence of indications of SDB events.
  • Blower or flow generator A device that delivers a flow of air at a pressure above ambient pressure.
  • Controller A device, or portion of a device that adjusts an output based on an input.
  • one form of controller has a variable that is under control the control variable—that constitutes the input to the device.
  • the output of the device is a function of the current value of the control variable, and a set point for the variable.
  • a servo-ventilator may include a controller that has ventilation as an input, a target ventilation as the set point, and level of pressure support as an output.
  • Other forms of input may be one or more of oxygen saturation (SaO 2 ), partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PCO 2 ), movement, a signal from a photoplethysmogram, and peak flow.
  • the set point of the controller may be one or more of fixed, variable or learned.
  • the set point in a ventilator may be a long term average of the measured ventilation of a patient.
  • Another ventilator may have a ventilation set point that changes with time.
  • a pressure controller may be configured to control a blower or pump to deliver air at a particular pressure.
  • Therapy in the present context may be one or more of positive pressure therapy, oxygen therapy, carbon dioxide therapy, control of dead space, and the administration of a drug.
  • a device for converting electrical energy into rotary movement of a member is an impeller, which rotates in place around a fixed axis so as to impart a pressure increase to air moving along the axis of rotation.
  • PAP Positive Airway Pressure
  • Transducers A device for converting one form of energy or signal into another.
  • a transducer may be a sensor or detector for converting mechanical energy (such as movement) into an electrical signal.
  • Examples of transducers include pressure sensors, flow sensors, carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) sensors, oxygen (O 2 ) sensors, effort sensors, movement sensors, noise sensors, a plethysmograph, and cameras.
  • Volute The casing of the centrifugal pump that receives the air being pumped by the impeller, slowing down the flow rate of air and increasing the pressure.
  • the cross-section of the volute increases in area towards the discharge port.
  • An apnea will be said to have occurred when flow falls below a predetermined threshold for a duration, e.g. 10 seconds.
  • An obstructive apnea will be said to have occurred when, despite patient effort, some obstruction of the airway does not allow air to flow.
  • a central apnea will be said to have occurred when an apnea is detected that is due to a reduction in breathing effort, or the absence of breathing effort.
  • Breathing rate The rate of spontaneous respiration of a patient, usually measured in breaths per minute.
  • Duty cycle The ratio of inhalation time, Ti to total breath time, Ttot.
  • Effort The work done by a spontaneously breathing person attempting to breathe.
  • Expiratory portion of a breathing cycle The period from the start of expiratory flow to the start of inspiratory flow.
  • flow limitation will be taken to be the state of affairs in a patient's respiration where an increase in effort by the patient does not give rise to a corresponding increase in flow.
  • flow limitation occurs during an inspiratory portion of the breathing cycle it may be described as inspiratory flow limitation.
  • flow limitation occurs during an expiratory portion of the breathing cycle it may be described as expiratory flow limitation.
  • hypopnea A hypopnea will be taken to be a reduction in flow, but not a cessation of flow. In one form, a hypopnea may be said to have occurred when there is a reduction in flow below a threshold for a duration. In one form in adults, the following either of the following may be regarded as being hypopneas:
  • Hyperpnea An increase in flow to a level higher than normal flow.
  • Inspiratory portion of a breathing cycle Preferably the period from the start of inspiratory flow to the start of expiratory flow will be taken to be the inspiratory portion of a breathing cycle.
  • Patency The degree of the airway being open, or the extent to which the airway is open. A patent airway is open. Airway patency may be quantified, for example with a value of one (1) being patent, and a value of zero (0), being closed.
  • PEEP Positive End-Expiratory Pressure
  • Peak flow (Qpeak) The maximum value of flow during the inspiratory portion of the respiratory flow waveform.
  • Respiratory flow, airflow, patient airflow, respiratory airflow Qr: These synonymous terms may be understood to refer to the PAP device's estimate of respiratory airflow, as opposed to “true respiratory flow” or “true respiratory airflow”, which is the actual respiratory flow experienced by the patient, usually expressed in litres per minute.
  • Vt Tidal volume
  • Typical recent ventilation The value of ventilation around which recent values over some predetermined timescale tend to cluster, that is, a measure of the central tendency of the recent values of ventilation.
  • Upper airway obstruction includes both partial and total upper airway obstruction. This may be associated with a state of flow limitation, in which the level of flow increases only slightly or may even decrease as the pressure difference across the upper airway increases (Starling resistor behaviour).
  • Ventilation A measure of the total amount of gas being exchanged by the patient's respiratory system, including both inspiratory and expiratory flow, per unit time. When expressed as a volume per minute, this quantity is often referred to as “minute ventilation”. Minute ventilation is sometimes given simply as a volume, understood to be the volume per minute.
  • Flow rate The instantaneous volume (or mass) of air delivered per unit time. While flow rate and ventilation have the same dimensions of volume or mass per unit time, flow rate is measured over a much shorter period of time. Flow may be nominally positive for the inspiratory portion of a breathing cycle of a patient, and hence negative for the expiratory portion of the breathing cycle of a patient. In some cases, a reference to flow rate will be a reference to a scalar quantity, namely a quantity having magnitude only. In other cases, a reference to flow rate will be a reference to a vector quantity, namely a quantity having both magnitude and direction. Flow will be given the symbol Q. Total flow, Qt, is the flow of air leaving the PAP device.
  • Vent flow, Qv is the flow of air leaving a vent to allow washout of exhaled gases.
  • Leak flow, Ql is the flow rate of unintentional leak from a patient interface system.
  • Respiratory flow, Qr is the flow of air that is received into the patient's respiratory system.
  • Leak A flow of air to the ambient. Leak may be intentional, for example to allow for the washout of exhaled CO 2 . Leak may be unintentional, for example, as the result of an incomplete seal between a mask and a patient's face.
  • Pressure Force per unit area. Pressure may be measured in a range of units, including cm H 2 O, g-f/cm 2 , hectopascal. 1 cm H 2 O is equal to I g-f/cm 2 and is approximately 0.98 hectopascal. In this specification, unless otherwise stated, pressure is given in units of cm H 2 O.
  • a reference to treatment pressure is a reference to a pressure in the range of about 4-20 cm H 2 O, or about 4-30 cm H 2 O.
  • the pressure in the patient interface (or, more succinctly, mask pressure) is given the symbol Pm.
  • Sound Power The energy per unit time carried by a sound wave.
  • the sound power is proportional to the square of sound pressure multiplied by the area of the wavefront. Sound power is usually given in decibels SWL, that is, decibels relative to a reference power, normally taken as 10 ⁇ 12 watt.
  • Sound Pressure The local deviation from ambient pressure at a given time instant as a result of a sound wave travelling through a medium. Sound power is usually given in decibels SPL, that is, decibels relative to a reference power, normally taken as 20 ⁇ 10 ⁇ 6 pascal (Pa), considered the threshold of human hearing.
  • Adaptive Servo-Ventilator A ventilator that has a changeable, rather than fixed target ventilation.
  • the changeable target ventilation may be learned from some characteristic of the patient, for example, a respiratory characteristic of the patient.
  • Backup rate a parameter of a ventilator that establishes the minimum respiration rate (typically in number of breaths per minute) that the ventilator will deliver to the patient, if not otherwise triggered.
  • EPAP or EEP: a base pressure, to which a pressure varying within the breath is added to produce the desired mask pressure which the ventilator will attempt to achieve at a given time.
  • IPAP desired mask pressure which the ventilator will attempt to achieve during the inspiratory portion of the breath.
  • Servo-ventilator A ventilator that measures patient ventilation has a target ventilation, and which adjusts the level of pressure support to bring the patient ventilation towards the target ventilation.
  • Spontaneous/Timed A mode of a ventilator or other device that attempts to detect the initiation of a breath of a spontaneously breathing patient. If however, the device is unable to detect a breath within a predetermined period of time, the device will automatically initiate delivery of the breath.
  • Triggered When a ventilator delivers a breath of air to a spontaneously breathing patient, it is said to be triggered to do so at the initiation of the respiratory portion of the breathing cycle by the patient's efforts.
  • Ventilator A mechanical device that provides pressure support to a patient to perform some or all of the work of breathing.
  • Ventilator inspiration and ventilator expiration the periods during which the ventilator considers that it should deliver pressures appropriate respectively to patient inspiration and expiration. Depending on the quality of patient-ventilator synchronisation, and the presence of upper airway obstruction, these may or may not correspond to actual patient inspiration or expiration.
  • Diaphragm A sheet of muscle that extends across the bottom of the rib cage. The diaphragm separates the thoracic cavity, containing the heart, lungs and ribs, from the abdominal cavity. As the diaphragm contracts the volume of the thoracic cavity increases and air is drawn into the lungs.
  • Larynx The larynx, or voice box houses the vocal folds and connects the inferior part of the pharynx (hypopharynx) with the trachea.
  • Lungs The organs of respiration in humans.
  • the conducting zone of the lungs contains the trachea, the bronchi, the bronchioles, and the terminal bronchioles.
  • the respiratory zone contains the respiratory bronchioles, the alveolar ducts, and the alveoli.
  • Nasal cavity The nasal cavity (or nasal fossa) is a large air filled space above and behind the nose in the middle of the face.
  • the nasal cavity is divided in two by a vertical fin called the nasal septum.
  • On the sides of the nasal cavity are three horizontal outgrowths called nasal conchae (singular “concha”) or turbinates.
  • nasal conchae singular “concha”
  • turbinates To the front of the nasal cavity is the nose, while the back blends, via the choanae, into the nasopharynx.
  • Pharynx The part of the throat situated immediately inferior to (below) the nasal cavity, and superior to the oesophagus and larynx.
  • the pharynx is conventionally divided into three sections: the nasopharynx (epipharynx) (the nasal part of the pharynx), the oropharynx (mesopharynx) (the oral part of the pharynx), and the laryngopharynx (hypopharynx).
  • Fuzzy logic is used in a number of places in this technology. The following is used to indicate a fuzzy membership function, which outputs a “fuzzy truth value” in the range [0, 1], 0 representing fuzzy false and 1 representing fuzzy true:
  • FuzzyMember (ActualQuantity, ReferenceQuantity1, FuzzyTruthValueAtReferenceQuantity1, ReferenceQuantity2, FuzzyTruthValueAtReferenceQuantity2, . . . , ReferenceQuantityN, FuzzyTruthValueAtReferenceQuantityN)
  • a fuzzy membership function is defined as
  • FuzzyMember ⁇ ( x , x 1 , f 1 , x 2 , f 2 , ... ⁇ , x N , f N ) ⁇ f 1 , x ⁇ x 1 f N , x ⁇ x N InterpOnInterval ⁇ ( x , x k , f k , x k + 1 , f k + 1 ) , x k ⁇ x ⁇ x k + 1 , 1 ⁇ k ⁇ N
  • InterpOnInterval ⁇ ( x , x k , f k , x k + 1 , f k + 1 ) ⁇ f k + ( f k + 1 - f k ) ⁇ ( x - x k ) x k + 1 - x k , x k ⁇ x k + 1 f k otherwise ,
  • the f i are fuzzy truth values
  • x and the x j are real numbers.
  • fuzzy “Or” of fuzzy truth values is the maximum of those values; the fuzzy “And” of fuzzy truth values is the minimum of these values. These will be indicated by the functions FuzzyOr and FuzzyAnd of two or more fuzzy truth values. It is to be understood that other typical definitions of these fuzzy operations would work similarly in the present technology.
  • V ⁇ ( t ) V ⁇ ( T ) * exp ⁇ ( - t - T ⁇ )
  • the oscillations in central drive to the respiratory musculature associated with Cheyne-Stokes Respiration may be associated with oscillations in drive to the upper airway musculature, exacerbating any tendency to upper airway obstruction.
  • Any method which attempts to counteract the self-sustaining oscillations in respiratory drive by ventilating the patient typically with more ventilator drive during periods of low patient effort than during periods of high patient effort, needs the upper airway to be substantially open when it is attempting to deliver ventilatory assistance, otherwise the ventilatory assistance will be to some extent, and often totally, ineffective during the periods of low or zero patient effort, and thus unable to stabilise the patient's ventilation.
  • This need to keep the upper airway open is typically addressed by attempting to set an expiratory positive airway pressure (EPAP) such that the upper airway is kept open at all times.
  • EEPAP expiratory positive airway pressure
  • Titration is a skilled and typically expensive operation, preferably being conducted in a sleep laboratory, and may not yield an EPAP sufficient to overcome upper airway obstruction (UAO).
  • UAO upper airway obstruction
  • Reasons for this include the fact that UAO is often postural, and the patient may never during the titration night assume the posture which produces the worst UAO, typically the supine posture. Sedative and other drugs may variably influence the upper airway.
  • An advantage of the present technology is therefore the ability to diagnose and/or treat the combination of CSR and OSA at the patient's home without the need for PSG and/or titration in a sleep laboratory.
  • a further advantage is the ability to treat the combination of CSR and OSA more effectively and in a manner that improves patient comfort.
  • an advantage is to counteract the tendency of automatic servo ventilators to inappropriately increase the target ventilation in response to artifacts such as uncompensated leak.
  • any and all components herein described are understood to be capable of being manufactured and, as such, may be manufactured together or separately.
US14/391,910 2012-04-13 2013-04-12 Apparatus and methods for ventilatory treatment Abandoned US20150059755A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US14/391,910 US20150059755A1 (en) 2012-04-13 2013-04-12 Apparatus and methods for ventilatory treatment

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US201261623643P 2012-04-13 2012-04-13
PCT/AU2013/000382 WO2013152403A1 (en) 2012-04-13 2013-04-12 Apparatus and methods for ventilatory treatment
US14/391,910 US20150059755A1 (en) 2012-04-13 2013-04-12 Apparatus and methods for ventilatory treatment

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/AU2013/000382 A-371-Of-International WO2013152403A1 (en) 2012-04-13 2013-04-12 Apparatus and methods for ventilatory treatment

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US17/017,552 Continuation US20210093812A1 (en) 2012-04-13 2020-09-10 Apparatus and methods for ventilatory treatment

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20150059755A1 true US20150059755A1 (en) 2015-03-05

Family

ID=49326958

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US14/391,910 Abandoned US20150059755A1 (en) 2012-04-13 2013-04-12 Apparatus and methods for ventilatory treatment
US17/017,552 Pending US20210093812A1 (en) 2012-04-13 2020-09-10 Apparatus and methods for ventilatory treatment

Family Applications After (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US17/017,552 Pending US20210093812A1 (en) 2012-04-13 2020-09-10 Apparatus and methods for ventilatory treatment

Country Status (7)

Country Link
US (2) US20150059755A1 (ja)
EP (3) EP4137185A1 (ja)
JP (4) JP6340360B2 (ja)
CN (2) CN104302338B (ja)
AU (2) AU2013247403B2 (ja)
NZ (4) NZ630350A (ja)
WO (1) WO2013152403A1 (ja)

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20140345611A1 (en) * 2013-05-22 2014-11-27 Pall Corporation Connection system
USD779652S1 (en) * 2010-09-10 2017-02-21 Resmed Limited Cushion for respiratory mask
USD808008S1 (en) * 2014-03-14 2018-01-16 Resmed Limited Elbow module for a patient interface
US20200345961A1 (en) * 2015-08-14 2020-11-05 ResMed Pty Ltd Monitoring respiratory pressure therapy
CN111991661A (zh) * 2015-03-20 2020-11-27 瑞思迈私人有限公司 用于呼吸障碍的通气治疗的方法和装置
US20210085241A1 (en) * 2019-09-19 2021-03-25 Casio Computer Co., Ltd. Cyclic alternative pattern (cap) detection device, cyclic alternative pattern (cap) detection method, and recording medium
US11452829B2 (en) * 2016-11-18 2022-09-27 ResMed Pty Ltd Methods and apparatus for ventilatory treatment of respiratory disorders
WO2022251886A1 (en) * 2021-05-14 2022-12-01 Telesair, Inc. Method for controlling oxygen-containing gas and related products
EP4233951A3 (en) * 2017-05-12 2023-10-25 ResMed Pty Ltd Apparatus for treatment of respiratory disorders
US11844605B2 (en) 2016-11-10 2023-12-19 The Research Foundation For Suny System, method and biomarkers for airway obstruction

Families Citing this family (30)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN113007106B (zh) 2011-07-13 2023-08-11 费雪派克医疗保健有限公司 叶轮和马达组件
CN205515844U (zh) 2012-12-18 2016-08-31 费雪派克医疗保健有限公司 呼吸辅助装置以及用于电机的总成
EP3062859B1 (en) * 2013-10-30 2022-07-06 ResMed Pty Ltd Control for pressure of a patient interface
CN103736183A (zh) * 2013-12-13 2014-04-23 科迈(常州)电子有限公司 一种双水平呼吸机压力控制装置及压力控制方法
NZ630750A (en) * 2014-02-13 2016-03-31 Resmed Ltd Diagnosis and treatment of respiratory disorders
NZ630749A (en) * 2014-02-13 2016-03-31 Resmed Ltd Real-time detection of periodic breathing
TWI645835B (zh) * 2014-02-25 2019-01-01 萊鎂醫療器材股份有限公司 呼吸氣流偵測裝置、方法及其應用
CN107073236B (zh) * 2014-09-18 2020-05-05 瑞思迈私人有限公司 用于患者接口的气体冲洗换气口
NZ730969A (en) * 2014-10-27 2022-05-27 ResMed Pty Ltd Method and apparatus for treating hyperarousal disorders
CN104688232B (zh) * 2015-03-23 2017-12-01 北京怡和嘉业医疗科技股份有限公司 一种睡眠呼吸暂停的检测方法及设备
CN104739413B (zh) * 2015-03-23 2017-09-26 北京怡和嘉业医疗科技有限公司 一种鼾声检测方法及系统
WO2016170011A1 (en) 2015-04-20 2016-10-27 Resmed Sensor Technologies Limited Gesture recognition with sensors
CN114177445A (zh) 2015-06-24 2022-03-15 费雪派克医疗保健有限公司 呼吸辅助设备
CN105147244B (zh) * 2015-06-24 2017-03-22 湖南明康中锦医疗科技发展有限公司 鼾声检测控制设备及其检测控制方法
RU2725092C2 (ru) * 2015-06-30 2020-06-29 Конинклейке Филипс Н.В. Управляющее устройство для устройства доставки лекарственного аэрозоля
WO2017097907A1 (en) 2015-12-08 2017-06-15 Resmed Limited Non-contact diagnosis and monitoring of sleep disorders
EP3410934B1 (en) 2016-02-02 2021-04-07 ResMed Pty Ltd Methods and apparatus for treating respiratory disorders
AU2017231750B2 (en) * 2016-03-08 2022-03-03 Fresenius Medical Care Holdings, Inc. Methods and systems for detecting an occlusion in a blood circuit of a dialysis system
CN105963835B (zh) * 2016-04-21 2018-03-06 广州七喜医疗设备有限公司 一种vcv漏气补偿的方法
WO2017192077A1 (en) * 2016-05-03 2017-11-09 Maquet Critical Care Ab Capnotracking of cardiac output or effective pulmonary blood floow during mechanical ventilation
CN106725492B (zh) * 2016-12-23 2019-09-17 北京怡和嘉业医疗科技股份有限公司 一种气流数据检测方法和装置
CN106730208B (zh) * 2017-01-18 2020-05-15 湖南明康中锦医疗科技发展有限公司 自适应调整漏气量的方法及呼吸机
CN114288513A (zh) 2017-04-23 2022-04-08 费雪派克医疗保健有限公司 呼吸辅助设备
EP3737475A4 (en) 2018-02-16 2021-03-24 University Of Louisville Research Foundation, Inc. RESPIRATORY TRAINING AND RESPIRATORY PRESSURE MONITORING DEVICE
KR20210087046A (ko) * 2018-10-23 2021-07-09 레스메드 피티와이 엘티디 Cpap 시스템의 셋업을 위한 시스템 및 방법
CN109497949B (zh) * 2018-12-12 2022-04-22 深圳融昕医疗科技有限公司 呼吸暂停类型的检测方法、装置、呼吸机和存储介质
CN109999292A (zh) * 2019-03-29 2019-07-12 北京怡和嘉业医疗科技股份有限公司 用于通气设备的控制系统、方法及通气设备
CN110934590A (zh) * 2019-12-03 2020-03-31 中国矿业大学 作业状态下呼吸流量的实时测量方法
CN111324154B (zh) * 2020-01-20 2022-06-24 深圳市科曼医疗设备有限公司 混合腔压力控制方法、呼吸机设备和计算机可读存储介质
CN113975563A (zh) * 2021-11-02 2022-01-28 成都泰盟软件有限公司 一种基于打鼾声音识别的呼吸机控制方法及呼吸机

Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5931160A (en) * 1995-12-08 1999-08-03 Cardiopulmonary Corporation Ventilator control system and method
US20020023644A1 (en) * 1996-09-23 2002-02-28 Michael Berthon-Jones Assisted ventilation to match patient respiratory need
US20030050568A1 (en) * 2001-05-23 2003-03-13 Green Paul Anthony Ventilator patient synchronization
US6553992B1 (en) * 2000-03-03 2003-04-29 Resmed Ltd. Adjustment of ventilator pressure-time profile to balance comfort and effectiveness
US6644312B2 (en) * 2000-03-07 2003-11-11 Resmed Limited Determining suitable ventilator settings for patients with alveolar hypoventilation during sleep
US20070089741A1 (en) * 2004-04-23 2007-04-26 Stephan Bohm Method and apparatus for changing the concentration of a target gas at the blood compartment of a patient's lung during artificial ventilation
US7520279B2 (en) * 2001-07-19 2009-04-21 Resmed Limited Pressure support ventilation of patients
US20100275921A1 (en) * 2009-04-29 2010-11-04 Resmed Limited Methods and apparatus for detecting and treating respiratory insufficiency
US20110041850A1 (en) * 2009-08-20 2011-02-24 Nellcor Puritan Bennett Llc Method For Ventilation

Family Cites Families (57)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0088761B1 (en) 1981-04-24 1987-08-12 Somed Pty. Ltd. Device for treating snoring sickness
JPH03267040A (ja) * 1990-03-16 1991-11-27 Seizaburo Arita ファジィ血圧調整方法および装置,ファジィ入力方法および装置,ならびにファジイ制御方法および装置
US6085747A (en) * 1991-06-14 2000-07-11 Respironics, Inc. Method and apparatus for controlling sleep disorder breathing
US5203343A (en) * 1991-06-14 1993-04-20 Board Of Regents, The University Of Texas System Method and apparatus for controlling sleep disorder breathing
US7013892B2 (en) * 1991-11-01 2006-03-21 Ric Investments, Llc Sleep apnea treatment apparatus
US5803066A (en) * 1992-05-07 1998-09-08 New York University Method and apparatus for optimizing the continuous positive airway pressure for treating obstructive sleep apnea
EP1900324B1 (en) * 1993-11-05 2009-06-03 ResMed Limited Apparatus for determining patency of the airway
US6932084B2 (en) * 1994-06-03 2005-08-23 Ric Investments, Inc. Method and apparatus for providing positive airway pressure to a patient
US6105575A (en) * 1994-06-03 2000-08-22 Respironics, Inc. Method and apparatus for providing positive airway pressure to a patient
US5794615A (en) * 1994-06-03 1998-08-18 Respironics, Inc. Method and apparatus for providing proportional positive airway pressure to treat congestive heart failure
ATE383814T1 (de) * 1997-03-17 2008-02-15 Vivometrics Inc Verfahren zur atmungswellenformanalyse in bezug auf ihren einfluss auf neuromuskuläre atmung
AUPP026997A0 (en) * 1997-11-07 1997-12-04 Resmed Limited Administration of cpap treatment pressure in presence of apnea
AU2006225224B2 (en) * 1998-05-22 2010-06-10 Resmed Limited Ventilatory assistance for treatment of cardiac failure and Cheyne-Stokes breathing
AUPP366398A0 (en) * 1998-05-22 1998-06-18 Resmed Limited Ventilatory assistance for treatment of cardiac failure and cheyne-stokes breathing
US6626176B1 (en) * 1998-08-19 2003-09-30 Map Medizintechnik Fur Arzt Und Patient Gmbh & Co. Kg Method and device for switching the inspiration or expiration phase during CPAP therapy
US6401713B1 (en) * 1999-05-05 2002-06-11 Respironics, Inc. Apparatus and method of providing continuous positive airway pressure
US6910480B1 (en) * 1999-09-15 2005-06-28 Resmed Ltd. Patient-ventilator synchronization using dual phase sensors
DE10014427A1 (de) * 2000-03-24 2001-10-04 Weinmann G Geraete Med Verfahren zur Steuerung eines Beatmungsgerätes sowie Vorrichtung zur Überwachung
US6532960B1 (en) * 2000-07-10 2003-03-18 Respironics, Inc. Automatic rise time adjustment for bi-level pressure support system
SE0002849D0 (sv) * 2000-08-08 2000-08-08 Siemens Elema Ab Ventilator
US6814073B2 (en) * 2000-08-29 2004-11-09 Resmed Limited Respiratory apparatus with improved flow-flattening detection
US6752151B2 (en) * 2000-09-25 2004-06-22 Respironics, Inc. Method and apparatus for providing variable positive airway pressure
US7168429B2 (en) * 2001-10-12 2007-01-30 Ric Investments, Llc Auto-titration pressure support system and method of using same
US7938114B2 (en) * 2001-10-12 2011-05-10 Ric Investments Llc Auto-titration bi-level pressure support system and method of using same
JP4538711B2 (ja) * 2002-09-18 2010-09-08 秀俊 若松 生理状態管理システムおよび生理状態管理方法
US7160252B2 (en) * 2003-01-10 2007-01-09 Medtronic, Inc. Method and apparatus for detecting respiratory disturbances
WO2004066804A2 (en) * 2003-01-30 2004-08-12 Compumedics Limited Algorithm for automatic positive air pressure titration
EP2856939B1 (de) * 2003-09-03 2017-07-26 ResMed R&D Germany GmbH Verfahren zur Observation schlafbezogener Atmungsstörungen
NZ579858A (en) * 2003-11-26 2011-02-25 Resmed Ltd Macro-control of treatment for sleep disordered breathing
EP2208504B1 (en) * 2003-11-26 2012-12-26 ResMed Limited Apparatus for the systemic control of ventilatory support in the presence of respiratory insufficiency
NZ547601A (en) * 2003-12-29 2008-06-30 Resmed Ltd Mechanical ventilation in the presence of sleep disordered breathing
EP1789120A4 (en) * 2004-09-03 2009-10-28 Resmed Ltd ADJUSTING THE TARGET FAN IN A SERVO FAN
US20060060198A1 (en) * 2004-09-17 2006-03-23 Acoba, Llc Method and system of scoring sleep disordered breathing
EP2510966B1 (en) * 2004-09-28 2014-01-15 ResMed Ltd. Apparatus for resolving upper airway instability
US7717110B2 (en) * 2004-10-01 2010-05-18 Ric Investments, Llc Method and apparatus for treating Cheyne-Stokes respiration
EP1827227A4 (en) * 2004-12-23 2009-04-08 Resmed Ltd METHOD FOR DETECTING AND DIFFERENTIATING RESPIRATORY MODES FROM RESPIRATORY SIGNALS
EP1893265B1 (en) * 2005-06-14 2013-12-04 ResMed Limited Apparatus for improving cpap patient compliance
NZ607280A (en) * 2006-03-06 2014-06-27 Resmed Ltd Method and apparatus for improved flow limitation detection of obstructive sleep apnea
US20070227538A1 (en) * 2006-03-08 2007-10-04 Bernd Scholler Method and device for controlling a ventilator
WO2007140512A1 (en) * 2006-06-05 2007-12-13 Resmed Ltd Systems and/or methods for calibration-less devices or less expensive calibration devices for treating sleep-disordered breathing
WO2008025064A1 (en) 2006-08-30 2008-03-06 Resmed Ltd Determination of leak during cpap treatment
US9913982B2 (en) * 2011-01-28 2018-03-13 Cyberonics, Inc. Obstructive sleep apnea treatment devices, systems and methods
ATE512686T1 (de) * 2007-03-30 2011-07-15 Weinmann G Geraete Med Beatmungsgerät mit ermittlung der alveolären ventilation (a.v.)
WO2008138040A1 (en) * 2007-05-11 2008-11-20 Resmed Ltd Automated control for detection of flow limitation
US20080295837A1 (en) * 2007-05-29 2008-12-04 Mccormick Timothy P Method to limit leak compensation based on a breathing circuit leak alarm
US8794235B2 (en) * 2007-06-08 2014-08-05 Ric Investments, Llc System and method for treating ventilatory instability
WO2009026582A1 (en) * 2007-08-23 2009-02-26 Invacare Corporation Method and apparatus for adjusting desired pressure in positive airway pressure devices
WO2010070497A1 (en) * 2008-12-19 2010-06-24 Koninklijke Philips Electronics, N.V. System and method for treating lung disease using positive pressure airway support
EP2401017B1 (en) * 2009-02-25 2016-03-30 Koninklijke Philips N.V. Automatic pressure titration
US8418691B2 (en) * 2009-03-20 2013-04-16 Covidien Lp Leak-compensated pressure regulated volume control ventilation
US8550077B2 (en) * 2009-05-19 2013-10-08 The Cleveland Clinic Foundation Ventilator control system utilizing a mid-frequency ventilation pattern
US8985106B2 (en) * 2009-06-05 2015-03-24 Resmed Limited Methods and devices for the detection of hypopnoea
EP2453966B1 (en) * 2009-07-14 2019-03-20 ResMed Ltd. Setup automation for respiratory treatment apparatus
US20110029910A1 (en) * 2009-07-31 2011-02-03 Nellcor Puritan Bennett Llc Method And System For Providing A Graphical User Interface For Delivering A Low Flow Recruitment Maneuver
EP2368593A1 (en) * 2010-03-26 2011-09-28 Dräger Medical GmbH Estimating a leakage flow
FR2959407A1 (fr) * 2010-04-30 2011-11-04 Centre Nat Rech Scient Procede et systeme d'analyse de l'activite respiratoire d'un patient et applications correspondantes
WO2012014106A1 (en) * 2010-07-27 2012-02-02 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Leak estimation using function estimation.

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5931160A (en) * 1995-12-08 1999-08-03 Cardiopulmonary Corporation Ventilator control system and method
US20020023644A1 (en) * 1996-09-23 2002-02-28 Michael Berthon-Jones Assisted ventilation to match patient respiratory need
US6553992B1 (en) * 2000-03-03 2003-04-29 Resmed Ltd. Adjustment of ventilator pressure-time profile to balance comfort and effectiveness
US6644312B2 (en) * 2000-03-07 2003-11-11 Resmed Limited Determining suitable ventilator settings for patients with alveolar hypoventilation during sleep
US20030050568A1 (en) * 2001-05-23 2003-03-13 Green Paul Anthony Ventilator patient synchronization
US7520279B2 (en) * 2001-07-19 2009-04-21 Resmed Limited Pressure support ventilation of patients
US20070089741A1 (en) * 2004-04-23 2007-04-26 Stephan Bohm Method and apparatus for changing the concentration of a target gas at the blood compartment of a patient's lung during artificial ventilation
US20100275921A1 (en) * 2009-04-29 2010-11-04 Resmed Limited Methods and apparatus for detecting and treating respiratory insufficiency
US20110041850A1 (en) * 2009-08-20 2011-02-24 Nellcor Puritan Bennett Llc Method For Ventilation

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
USD779652S1 (en) * 2010-09-10 2017-02-21 Resmed Limited Cushion for respiratory mask
USD785161S1 (en) * 2010-09-10 2017-04-25 Resmed Limited Elbow component for respiratory mask
USD871569S1 (en) 2010-09-10 2019-12-31 ResMed Pty Ltd Headgear for respiratory mask
US20140345611A1 (en) * 2013-05-22 2014-11-27 Pall Corporation Connection system
US9320867B2 (en) * 2013-05-22 2016-04-26 Pall Corporation Connection system
USD808008S1 (en) * 2014-03-14 2018-01-16 Resmed Limited Elbow module for a patient interface
US20210187221A1 (en) * 2015-03-20 2021-06-24 ResMed Pty Ltd Methods and apparatus for ventilatory treatment of respiratory disorders
CN111991661A (zh) * 2015-03-20 2020-11-27 瑞思迈私人有限公司 用于呼吸障碍的通气治疗的方法和装置
US20200345961A1 (en) * 2015-08-14 2020-11-05 ResMed Pty Ltd Monitoring respiratory pressure therapy
US11696990B2 (en) * 2015-08-14 2023-07-11 Resmed Paris Sas Monitoring respiratory pressure therapy
US11844605B2 (en) 2016-11-10 2023-12-19 The Research Foundation For Suny System, method and biomarkers for airway obstruction
US11452829B2 (en) * 2016-11-18 2022-09-27 ResMed Pty Ltd Methods and apparatus for ventilatory treatment of respiratory disorders
EP4233951A3 (en) * 2017-05-12 2023-10-25 ResMed Pty Ltd Apparatus for treatment of respiratory disorders
US20210085241A1 (en) * 2019-09-19 2021-03-25 Casio Computer Co., Ltd. Cyclic alternative pattern (cap) detection device, cyclic alternative pattern (cap) detection method, and recording medium
US11653876B2 (en) * 2019-09-19 2023-05-23 Casio Computer Co., Ltd. Cyclic alternative pattern (CAP) detection device, cyclic alternative pattern (CAP) detection method, and recording medium
WO2022251886A1 (en) * 2021-05-14 2022-12-01 Telesair, Inc. Method for controlling oxygen-containing gas and related products

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU2015238920B2 (en) 2016-09-08
CN104302338B (zh) 2018-02-16
AU2013247403A1 (en) 2014-09-25
JP2015512728A (ja) 2015-04-30
CN104302338A (zh) 2015-01-21
NZ630350A (en) 2016-05-27
EP2836264B1 (en) 2019-05-22
JP2022160696A (ja) 2022-10-19
EP2836264A1 (en) 2015-02-18
JP2018110880A (ja) 2018-07-19
NZ752081A (en) 2020-05-29
NZ763203A (en) 2021-10-29
US20210093812A1 (en) 2021-04-01
JP2021007792A (ja) 2021-01-28
AU2013247403B2 (en) 2015-07-16
JP6340360B2 (ja) 2018-06-06
JP7441156B2 (ja) 2024-02-29
EP4137185A1 (en) 2023-02-22
EP2836264A4 (en) 2015-12-23
CN108114355A (zh) 2018-06-05
JP6782267B2 (ja) 2020-11-11
AU2015238920A1 (en) 2015-10-29
EP3549628A1 (en) 2019-10-09
EP3549628B1 (en) 2022-08-24
WO2013152403A1 (en) 2013-10-17
NZ719166A (en) 2017-10-27
NZ736250A (en) 2019-04-26

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US20210093812A1 (en) Apparatus and methods for ventilatory treatment
US11801009B2 (en) System and method for determining sleep stage
EP3104776B1 (en) Diagnosis of respiratory disorders
US20150114396A1 (en) Methods and apparatus for pressure treatment modulation
US20230078997A1 (en) Methods and apparatus for treatment of respiratory disorders
EP3154616B1 (en) Methods and apparatus for treatment of respiratory disorders
US20230053852A1 (en) Characterising systems for respiratory therapy
NZ763203B2 (en) Apparatus and methods for ventilatory treatment
WO2023049958A1 (en) Characterising systems for respiratory therapy

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: RESMED LIMITED, AUSTRALIA

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:BASSIN, DAVID JOHN;REEL/FRAME:033937/0034

Effective date: 20130531

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: FINAL REJECTION MAILED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: RESPONSE AFTER FINAL ACTION FORWARDED TO EXAMINER

AS Assignment

Owner name: RESMED PTY LTD, AUSTRALIA

Free format text: CHANGE OF NAME;ASSIGNOR:RESMED LIMITED;REEL/FRAME:049111/0302

Effective date: 20181206

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: NON FINAL ACTION MAILED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: RESPONSE TO NON-FINAL OFFICE ACTION ENTERED AND FORWARDED TO EXAMINER

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: FINAL REJECTION MAILED

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: FINAL REJECTION MAILED

STCC Information on status: application revival

Free format text: WITHDRAWN ABANDONMENT, AWAITING EXAMINER ACTION

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION