US3831203A - Implantable blood pumping system - Google Patents

Implantable blood pumping system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3831203A
US3831203A US00401730A US40173073A US3831203A US 3831203 A US3831203 A US 3831203A US 00401730 A US00401730 A US 00401730A US 40173073 A US40173073 A US 40173073A US 3831203 A US3831203 A US 3831203A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
piston
blood
pump
membrane
pressure
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US00401730A
Inventor
M Ridgway
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.)
US Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
Original Assignee
US Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
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 US Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) filed Critical US Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
Priority to US00401730A priority Critical patent/US3831203A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3831203A publication Critical patent/US3831203A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime 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
    • A61M60/00Blood pumps; Devices for mechanical circulatory actuation; Balloon pumps for circulatory assistance
    • A61M60/80Constructional details other than related to driving
    • A61M60/855Constructional details other than related to driving of implantable pumps or pumping devices
    • A61M60/89Valves
    • A61M60/894Passive valves, i.e. valves actuated by the blood
    • 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
    • A61M60/00Blood pumps; Devices for mechanical circulatory actuation; Balloon pumps for circulatory assistance
    • A61M60/10Location thereof with respect to the patient's body
    • A61M60/122Implantable pumps or pumping devices, i.e. the blood being pumped inside the patient's body
    • A61M60/165Implantable pumps or pumping devices, i.e. the blood being pumped inside the patient's body implantable in, on, or around the heart
    • 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
    • A61M60/00Blood pumps; Devices for mechanical circulatory actuation; Balloon pumps for circulatory assistance
    • A61M60/40Details relating to driving
    • A61M60/424Details relating to driving for positive displacement blood pumps
    • A61M60/427Details relating to driving for positive displacement blood pumps the force acting on the blood contacting member being hydraulic or pneumatic
    • 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
    • A61M60/00Blood pumps; Devices for mechanical circulatory actuation; Balloon pumps for circulatory assistance
    • A61M60/40Details relating to driving
    • A61M60/424Details relating to driving for positive displacement blood pumps
    • A61M60/438Details relating to driving for positive displacement blood pumps the force acting on the blood contacting member being mechanical
    • A61M60/441Details relating to driving for positive displacement blood pumps the force acting on the blood contacting member being mechanical generated by an electromotor
    • 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
    • A61M60/00Blood pumps; Devices for mechanical circulatory actuation; Balloon pumps for circulatory assistance
    • A61M60/40Details relating to driving
    • A61M60/424Details relating to driving for positive displacement blood pumps
    • A61M60/457Details relating to driving for positive displacement blood pumps the force acting on the blood contacting member being magnetic
    • A61M60/459Details relating to driving for positive displacement blood pumps the force acting on the blood contacting member being magnetic generated by permanent magnets
    • 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
    • A61M60/00Blood pumps; Devices for mechanical circulatory actuation; Balloon pumps for circulatory assistance
    • A61M60/50Details relating to control
    • A61M60/508Electronic control means, e.g. for feedback regulation
    • A61M60/515Regulation using real-time patient data
    • A61M60/531Regulation using real-time patient data using blood pressure data, e.g. from blood pressure sensors
    • 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
    • A61M60/00Blood pumps; Devices for mechanical circulatory actuation; Balloon pumps for circulatory assistance
    • A61M60/50Details relating to control
    • A61M60/508Electronic control means, e.g. for feedback regulation
    • A61M60/538Regulation using real-time blood pump operational parameter data, e.g. motor current
    • A61M60/546Regulation using real-time blood pump operational parameter data, e.g. motor current of blood flow, e.g. by adapting rotor 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
    • A61M60/00Blood pumps; Devices for mechanical circulatory actuation; Balloon pumps for circulatory assistance
    • A61M60/50Details relating to control
    • A61M60/508Electronic control means, e.g. for feedback regulation
    • A61M60/538Regulation using real-time blood pump operational parameter data, e.g. motor current
    • A61M60/554Regulation using real-time blood pump operational parameter data, e.g. motor current of blood 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
    • A61M60/00Blood pumps; Devices for mechanical circulatory actuation; Balloon pumps for circulatory assistance
    • A61M60/80Constructional details other than related to driving
    • A61M60/835Constructional details other than related to driving of positive displacement blood pumps
    • A61M60/837Aspects of flexible displacement members, e.g. shapes or materials
    • 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
    • A61M60/00Blood pumps; Devices for mechanical circulatory actuation; Balloon pumps for circulatory assistance
    • A61M60/10Location thereof with respect to the patient's body
    • A61M60/122Implantable pumps or pumping devices, i.e. the blood being pumped inside the patient's body
    • A61M60/126Implantable pumps or pumping devices, i.e. the blood being pumped inside the patient's body implantable via, into, inside, in line, branching on, or around a blood vessel
    • A61M60/148Implantable pumps or pumping devices, i.e. the blood being pumped inside the patient's body implantable via, into, inside, in line, branching on, or around a blood vessel in line with a blood vessel using resection or like techniques, e.g. permanent endovascular heart assist 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
    • A61M60/00Blood pumps; Devices for mechanical circulatory actuation; Balloon pumps for circulatory assistance
    • A61M60/20Type thereof
    • A61M60/247Positive displacement blood pumps
    • A61M60/253Positive displacement blood pumps including a displacement member directly acting on the blood
    • A61M60/268Positive displacement blood pumps including a displacement member directly acting on the blood the displacement member being flexible, e.g. membranes, diaphragms or bladders
    • 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
    • A61M60/00Blood pumps; Devices for mechanical circulatory actuation; Balloon pumps for circulatory assistance
    • A61M60/80Constructional details other than related to driving
    • A61M60/855Constructional details other than related to driving of implantable pumps or pumping devices
    • A61M60/869Compliance chambers containing a gas or liquid other than blood to compensate volume variations of a blood chamber

Definitions

  • a mechanically driven and automatically controlled artificial blood pump for replacement of a ventricle of a natural heart including an expandable piston mounted within a flexible membrane but separated therefrom by means of a protective liquid. Both the membrane and piston are mounted within a housing having an upper chamber in which blood is pumped by the piston through actuation of the membrane from an inlet port to an outlet port and a lower chamber that is provided with perforations to expose the lower part of the membrane to body fluids that normally surround a heart and which are at ambient body pressure.
  • a central part of the membrane is sealed to the housing to separate the upper and lower chambers.
  • the piston is driven at a constant rate of reciprocation over a fixed-length stroke by means of an electric motor through a cylindrical groove cam.
  • SIRT 1 BF 2 The invention disclosed herein was made under, or in, the course of Contract No. AT(O4-3)-857 with the United States Atomic Energy Commission.
  • the present invention relates generally to artificial implantable blood pumps, and more particularly, it relates to a variable volume blood pump including a piston-driven flexible membrane that is referenced to ambient body pressure.
  • One physiological need is to maintain a natural level of blood pressure in the circulatory system.
  • Veins for example, are easily collapsed and distended by unusual blood pressure variations and under natural conditions are near ambient atmospheric pressure at all times to maintain their normal shape.
  • any signifi cant lowering of venous blood pressure from atmospheric pressure will result in collapse of the veins and consequent disruption of blood flow.
  • the pulmonary circulatory system is particularly pressure sensitive in that it contains blood vessels having delicate walls for transport of oxygen to the blood. Consequently, the pressure in these vessels must be kept very near normal physiological values lest an underpressure cause collapse of the vessels or an overpressure cause rupture of the vessels.
  • An artificial heart system should therefore maintain the blood pressures in a cardiovascular system at natural levels with reference to ambient pressure and pump the blood at a rate that will sustain physiological demands of the body.
  • the pump in such a system be allowed to fill at a rate that is determined only by venous pressure at the pump input and that active drawing of the blood into the pump be avoided.
  • venous input pressure is 6 to 8 mm of mercury above ambient and natural variations which control the blood inflow rate to the natural heart are corre- I spondingly small. It would be convenient, therefore, to allow the blood to flow into the pump only under a natural pressure head in a manner similar to a natural heart.
  • Another problem in the design of artificial heart pumps is to avoid applying excessive force to the pumping piston during the initial part of the discharge phase of the pump when, due to the natural elasticity of the arterial system, the back-pressure is less than the value Y encountered at the end of the stroke.
  • the back-pressure can normally be expected to vary between and mm of mercury.
  • the peak pressure would normally rise to about mm of mercury.
  • recipients of artificial heart pumps may be victims of degenerative cardiovascular disease which could raise the peak back-pressure to mm of mercury.
  • the actuator should be capable of providing a driving force which matches exactly the changing arterial back-pressure and thus duplicating the natural blood outflow velocity profile.
  • the present invention pertains to an implantable blood pump that provides variable flow rates and pressures as required by a natural physiological arterio venous system, in an efficient manner and without damage to the blood or distortion of blood vessels.
  • the pump includes a housing having an upper chamber provided with a blood inlet port and a blood outlet port and a lower chamber that is perforated to allow entry of body fluids that normally surround a heart and which are at ambient pressure.
  • a flexible membrane is mounted within the housing and is sealed to the housing at the division of the upper and lower chambers.
  • the flexible membrane includes an upper portion that is expandable into the upper chamber for pumping blood from the inlet port to the outlet port.
  • the membrane also includes a lower portion that is exposed through the perforations in the housing to the body fluids at ambient pressure.
  • An expandable piston is mounted within the membrane with a protective liquid separating the piston and membrane at all times.
  • the lower portion of the membrane is moved away from the pump housing by the body fluids at ambient pressure flowing through the perforations whenever the pressure in the upper chamber drops a predetermined differential amount below ambient pressure.
  • the pressure in the upper chamber is precisely controlled thereby and maintained at a level that gently draws blood into the chamber yet prevents the pressure in the chamber from dropping to a dangerous level.
  • blood volume and flow rates are automatically met since any slight rise in venous pressure at the inlet port reduces the volume of the amount of body fluids admitted through the perforations and thereby increases the volume of blood drawn into the pump.
  • the piston is expanded during systole to move the flexible membrane into the upper chamber to pump the blood out of the chamber, the body fluids in the lower chamber are first expelled by the flexible membrane while the pressure in the upper chamber builds up slowly.
  • arterial back pressure is at its minimum instantaneous level; therefore, little energy is wasted in unnecessarily accelerating the blood.
  • a constant speed rotary driving source may be used to actuate the piston.
  • the arrangement moreover, permits the piston to have a fixed-length stroke at a constant rate of reciprocation.
  • Another object is to simulate the action of a natural heart without distortion of connecting blood vessels.
  • Another object is to compensate very exactly and in a precisely controlled manner for the inflow impedance of an artificial implantable blood pump.
  • Another object is to provide an artificial implantable blood pump that is simple, reliable, efficient and that automatically accommodates to variable blood flow rates and volume demands of a physiological system under normal levels of physical activity.
  • Another object is to provide an artificial implantable blood pump including a piston having a constant rate of reciprocation and stroke length and that is driven with a rotary drive capable of load averaging that is, conserving energy while providing the exact instantaneous driving force required no more and no less.
  • Another object is to provide an expandable piston with a flexible driving end that includes a nonfolding wall.
  • FIG. I is a cross-sectional side view of a piston actuated artificial implantable blood pump with the piston shown at the end ofa discharge stroke, according to the invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional siide view of the pump of FIG. I with the piston shown partway through a filling stroke.
  • FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional side view of the pump of FIG. I with the piston shown at the end of a filling stroke.
  • FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional side view of the pump of FIG. I with the piston shown partway through a discharge stroke.
  • FIG. 5 is a side view, partially in cross-section, of an electric motor and a cylindrical groove cam for reciprocating the piston of FIG. l.
  • FIG. 6 is an end view of the cam follower for the cam of FIG. 5.
  • FIG. I an artificial implantable blood pump It) including an expandable piston l2 mounted within a flexible membrane 14 but separated therefrom by means of a protective liquid lid.
  • the membrane I4 and piston 12 are mounted within a housing I8 having an upper chamber 20 for pumping blood from an inlet port 21 to an outlet port 23 and a lower chamber 24 that is provided with perforations 26 to expose the lower part of the membrane 14 to body fluids which are adjacent the space in which the pump is implanted. There body fluids are naturally at ambient body pressure.
  • the piston 12 normally is driven to successive positions, shown in FIGS.
  • the motor conveniently may be a brushless dc motor using permanent magnets of samarium-cobalt in the rotor and an ironless stator designed to run at a constant speed of 9,000 rpm in the housing 30 on selfenergizing compliant plastic-coated multifoil type gas bearings.
  • a hermetic aluminum seal 32 separates the motor 27 from the cam 29. Rotary motion is coupled through the seal 32 by means of a double-plate magnetic coupling 33 which drives a compound planetary gear train 35. The cam 29 is driven by the gear train at a reduced speed.
  • the inputoutput ratio may be l which provides a cam rotation of RPM for a 9,000 RPM motor speed.
  • the cam runs in a set of combined radial-thrust bearings 36 which conveniently may be made of porous bronze.
  • the rotary motion of the cam 29 is converted to reciprocating motion by means of a continuous single-turn elliptical slot 38 machined in the inner surface of the cam over the length of the cam.
  • a shuttle 39 (FIGS. 5 and 6) is provided with a guide pin 411 which rides in the slot 38 and is further provided with grooves 42 which mate with linear stationary guides 44 that are made integral with the housing 30 to prevent rotation of the shuttle.
  • a bellows 45 has an outer end sealed to the housing 30 and at the other end to the bottom of the shuttle 39. Also attached to and integral with the bottom of the shuttle is a connector 47 to which the lower end of a cable 48 connects.
  • the cable is covered with a plastic sheath 49 that is sealed at the edges of a hole in the housing 30.
  • the cable is reciprocated within the sheath by means of the shuttle 39, the hermetic seal of the housing 30 being ensured by the bellows 45.
  • the upper end of the cable 48 is secured to the piston 12 by means of a hub 50 to reciprocate the piston with the cable.
  • the piston 12 includes an upper portion comprising flexible double membrane walls; an outer wall 51 and an inner wall 52 enclosing a space 53 that is filled with a liquid or a light grease.
  • the piston also includes a single-wall membrane lower portion 55.
  • the inner membrane 52 is pulled almost flat, while the outer membrane SI is deflected into a slightly convex or bulged shape by the liquid in the space 53.
  • the mid-positions of the piston I2 such as shown in FIGS.
  • walls 51 and 52 both bulge due to their being pulled into the diameter of a stiff rib 56 of the lower membrane portion 55, the liquid in the space 53 smoothly bowing the walls 51 and 52 to prevent any folding or wrinkling and consequent wear during reciprocation of the piston.
  • the piston I2 encloses an inner space 58 that is filled with a gas such as nitrogen or carbon dioxide to maintain a fullness in the shape of the piston as it is reciprocated. Compression of the gas during reciprocation is partially accommodated at the lower end of the piston by expansion of the membrane 14 into a make-up reservoir 59 provided in the lower end of the housing 18.
  • the reservoir 59 is filled with body fluids at the end of a discharge stroke (FIG. I), and at the end of a filling stroke, the fluids are discharged from the reservoir through perforation in the housing lb.
  • the piston 12 may be driven with a push-pull force through the cable 48, or, alternatively, a spring 61 may be mounted between the hub 50 and a supporting web 62 so that only a pulling force is required to be transmitted through the cable. This permits the use of a more flexible cable and thereby allows greater freedom of placement of the motor and pump in a body.
  • the force of the piston 12 on the upper portion of the membrane M in the space 20 is thereby alleviated so that the pressure of the blood within the space 26 does not drop to a dangerous level below ambient.
  • the amount of body fluids that enter the housing through the perforations 26 is a function of sustained venous pressure during the downstroke of the piston l2. For a very high physiological demand for blood, venous pressure will be at or slightly above ambient at all times, and there will be no entry of body fluids through perforations 26.
  • the membrane 14 thereby is pulled out of the chamber 20 to a maximum extent. A maximum amount of blood will therefore enter the chamber 20 during such a downstroke.
  • the chamber 20 is automatically filled to the extent necessary to supply physiological demands yet the piston is actuated at a constant rate to travel over a constant stroke length, the pump being designed to supply maximum and minimum blood volme demands of the physiological system in which it is to be used.
  • the chamber 20 will be partially filled in correspondence with physiological demands and the lower portion of the membrane 114 may be partially deflected by body fluids that entered the housing 1% through perforations 26.
  • This condition of the pump 18 is illustrated in FIG. 3.
  • the piston 12 is designed to fit closely behind but separated from the membrane Ml at all times by means of the protective liquid 16, except at its lower end where it is connected and sealed to the membrane 14 and housing 18 in a lip 64 in the housing, thereby providing a bearing for reciprocation of the piston. Such an arrangement prevents damage to the membrane 14 by direct contact with the moving portions of the piston 12 during either upstroke or downstroke and avoids stress concentrations within the membrane.
  • a housing having an upper chamber and a lower chamber, said upper chamber including a blood inlet port for receiving blood from said blood vessel system and a blood outlet port for supplying blood to said blood vessel system, said lower chamber being provided with a multitude of openings to allow passage of said body fluids into and out of said lower chamber;
  • a flexible membrane mounted within said housing an extending into said upper and lower chambers, said membrane having a central area sealed to said housing to separate said upper and lower chambers;
  • expandable means mounted within said membrane
  • actuating means for periodically expanding an contracting said expandable means to actuate said flexible membrane to pump blood from said inlet port to said outlet port;
  • a protective liquid separating said membrane and said expandable means, the pressure within said upper chamber being maintained at a constant predetermined lower differential pressure with respect to the pressure of said body fluids during contraction of said expandable means, said predetermined differential pressure being maintained constant by movement of said membrane in said lower chamber away from said housing in response to a drop in pressure in said upper chamber below said pre determined differential pressure.
  • said expandable means is a piston having upper and lower wall portions and including a compressible gas enclosed by said wall portions, said upper wall portion flexing outward and inward durinng expansion and contraction of said piston to actuate said membrane.
  • said upper wall portion is adjacent the portion of said membrane extending into said upper chamber and includes double walls enclosing a space, and a viscous liquid filling said space, said viscous liquid opposing a tendency of said double walls to fold during expansion and contraction of said piston.
  • the pump of claim 2 further including a flexible wall defining an expandable reservoir, said expandable reservoir being open to said gas enclosed by said piston walls, said reservoir wall being exposed to said body fluids at ambient pressure for expansion and contraction therein during contraction and expansion respectively of said piston, to minimize the degree of compression of said gas during contraction of said piston.
  • said actuating means includes a cable attached to said piston for contracting said piston, and a spring for expanding said piston.
  • said actuating means includes an electric motor, a cylindrical groove drum cam driven by said motor, a follower reciprocated by said cam to pull said cable against the force of said spring to contract said piston and to release said cable under control of said spring to expand said piston.
  • the pump of claim 2 further including a lip in said housing, said lower wall portion of said piston being connected to said lip to provide a bearing for ex pansion and contraction of said piston.

Abstract

A mechanically driven and automatically controlled artificial blood pump for replacement of a ventricle of a natural heart, including an expandable piston mounted within a flexible membrane but separated therefrom by means of a protective liquid. Both the membrane and piston are mounted within a housing having an upper chamber in which blood is pumped by the piston through actuation of the membrane from an inlet port to an outlet port and a lower chamber that is provided with perforations to expose the lower part of the membrane to body fluids that normally surround a heart and which are at ambient body pressure. A central part of the membrane is sealed to the housing to separate the upper and lower chambers. The piston is driven at a constant rate of reciprocation over a fixed-length stroke by means of an electric motor through a cylindrical groove cam. Since there is a natural change in venous pressure during diastole in response to bodily demands, there is a corresponding change in the pressure at the inlet valve of the blood pump and in the upper chamber. Automatic control is achieved by using a reciprocating drive of fixed rate and displacement in conjunction with a liquid reservoir referenced to ambient body tissue pressure which allows power assisted filling while precluding negative pressures at the inflow blood vessel. This particular arrangement ensures that the volume of blood admitted to the upper chamber during diastole is an accurate function of the blood demand of the body at all times, irrespective of the inflow valve impedance, since any differential space between maximum piston displacement and demanded blood volume is filled by the body fluids at ambient pressure. The pump can therefore be mechanically actuated by a relatively simple driving unit while automatically providing the required blood flow rate and maintaining diastolic pressure in the upper chamber very close to normal pressure.

Description

Unite idgway ttes atet 1 RLTABLE lliiLD 1P ill" SYSTEM [75] lnventor: Mailcolrn G. Ridgway, Huntington Beach, Calif.
[73] Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Atomic Energy (Iommission, Washington, DC.
[22] Filed: Sept. 28, 1973 [21] Appl. No.: 401,730
[52] US. Cl 3/1, 3/D1G. 2, 417/383 [51] llnt. Cl. A6111 1/24 [58] Field oli Search... 3/1, D16. 2; 128/1 D, 214 R,
l28/D1G. 3; 417/383, 389, 394, 395
Primary Examiner-Richard A. Gaudet Assistant Examiner-Ronald L. Frinks Attorney, Agent, or Firm.lohn A. Horan; Frederick A. Robertson; Clifton E. Clouse, Jr.
57 nnsrnncr A mechanically driven and automatically controlled artificial blood pump for replacement of a ventricle of a natural heart, including an expandable piston mounted within a flexible membrane but separated therefrom by means of a protective liquid. Both the membrane and piston are mounted within a housing having an upper chamber in which blood is pumped by the piston through actuation of the membrane from an inlet port to an outlet port and a lower chamber that is provided with perforations to expose the lower part of the membrane to body fluids that normally surround a heart and which are at ambient body pressure. A central part of the membrane: is sealed to the housing to separate the upper and lower chambers. The piston is driven at a constant rate of reciprocation over a fixed-length stroke by means of an electric motor through a cylindrical groove cam. Since there is a natural change in venous pressure during diastole in response to bodily demands, there is a corresponding change in the pressure at the inlet valve of the blood pump and in the upper chamber. Automatic control is achieved by using a reciprocating drive of fixed rate and displacement in conjunction with a liquid reservoir referenced to ambient body tissue pressure which allows power assisted filling while precluding negative pressures at the inflow blood vessel. This particular arrangement ensures that the volume of blood admitted to the upper chamber during diastole is an accurate function of the blood demand of the body at all times, irrespective of the inflow valve impedance, since any difierential space between maximum piston displacement and demanded blood volume is filled by the body fluids at ambient pressure. The pump can therefore be mechanically actuated by a relatively simple driving unit while automatically providing the required blood flow rate and maintaining diastolic pressure in the upper chamber very close to normal pressure.
10 Claims, 6 Drawing Figures PATENIEUAUBZYIQH 3,831.203
SIRT 1 BF 2 The invention disclosed herein was made under, or in, the course of Contract No. AT(O4-3)-857 with the United States Atomic Energy Commission.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates generally to artificial implantable blood pumps, and more particularly, it relates to a variable volume blood pump including a piston-driven flexible membrane that is referenced to ambient body pressure.
One physiological need is to maintain a natural level of blood pressure in the circulatory system. Veins, for example, are easily collapsed and distended by unusual blood pressure variations and under natural conditions are near ambient atmospheric pressure at all times to maintain their normal shape. In particular, any signifi cant lowering of venous blood pressure from atmospheric pressure will result in collapse of the veins and consequent disruption of blood flow. The pulmonary circulatory system is particularly pressure sensitive in that it contains blood vessels having delicate walls for transport of oxygen to the blood. Consequently, the pressure in these vessels must be kept very near normal physiological values lest an underpressure cause collapse of the vessels or an overpressure cause rupture of the vessels. An artificial heart system should therefore maintain the blood pressures in a cardiovascular system at natural levels with reference to ambient pressure and pump the blood at a rate that will sustain physiological demands of the body.
In order to prevent venous collapse in an artificial heart system, it is preferable that the pump in such a system be allowed to fill at a rate that is determined only by venous pressure at the pump input and that active drawing of the blood into the pump be avoided. Typically, venous input pressure is 6 to 8 mm of mercury above ambient and natural variations which control the blood inflow rate to the natural heart are corre- I spondingly small. It would be convenient, therefore, to allow the blood to flow into the pump only under a natural pressure head in a manner similar to a natural heart. However, because of the hydraulic characteristics of practical artificial blood pumps, the inflow impedance of such a pump is considerably higher than a nat' ural heart and prevents sufficient inflow during the time allowable for filling of the pump. Thus, for a blood pump to maintain the required flow rates, it must be driven so that blood is actively drawn into the pump during its filling phase. However, if insufficient blood is drawn into the pump, there may be a pressure buildup to harmful levels in the vessels supplying blood to the pump, the dangerous pressure level being about 18 mm of mercury; and, as discussed hereinbefore, when blood is too actively drawn into a pump, there is the danger of collapsing the veins. Additionally, sustained below-ambient pressures on the vessels at the pump inlet tend to damage the blood and may lead to damage of the inflow valves on the pump if the immediately surrounnding blood vessel collapses and is sucked into the valve orifice. Thus, any suction created by a blood pump must be very precisely controlled to avoid these damages, yet the pump should provide the flow rates necessary for at least moderate levels of physical activity. For a mature male a flow rate that is variable approximately between 6-12 liters per minute is required.
Another problem in the design of artificial heart pumps is to avoid applying excessive force to the pumping piston during the initial part of the discharge phase of the pump when, due to the natural elasticity of the arterial system, the back-pressure is less than the value Y encountered at the end of the stroke. Unless the pumping membrane is artifically restrained, excessive force during this period will discharge the blood too rapidly, increasing the kinetic losses at the outflow valve, thereby reducing the conversion efficiency of the device and possibly damaging the blood cells. For low levels of physical activity the back-pressure can normally be expected to vary between and mm of mercury. During relatively strenuous activity the peak pressure would normally rise to about mm of mercury. However, recipients of artificial heart pumps may be victims of degenerative cardiovascular disease which could raise the peak back-pressure to mm of mercury. To avoid these possible deleteriory effects and to maximize the conversion efficiency of the artificial pumping system, the actuator should be capable of providing a driving force which matches exactly the changing arterial back-pressure and thus duplicating the natural blood outflow velocity profile.
Existing designs proposed to meet some or all of the foregoing are complicated and inefficient. The invention provides a simple, efficient, compact, potentially reliable design which is responsive to all of the requirements discussed above.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION In brief, the present invention pertains to an implantable blood pump that provides variable flow rates and pressures as required by a natural physiological arterio venous system, in an efficient manner and without damage to the blood or distortion of blood vessels. The pump includes a housing having an upper chamber provided with a blood inlet port and a blood outlet port and a lower chamber that is perforated to allow entry of body fluids that normally surround a heart and which are at ambient pressure. A flexible membrane is mounted within the housing and is sealed to the housing at the division of the upper and lower chambers. The flexible membrane includes an upper portion that is expandable into the upper chamber for pumping blood from the inlet port to the outlet port. The membrane also includes a lower portion that is exposed through the perforations in the housing to the body fluids at ambient pressure. An expandable piston is mounted within the membrane with a protective liquid separating the piston and membrane at all times. During diastole, as the piston is contracted to move the upper portion of the membrane out of the upper chamber to draw blood into the chamber, the lower portion of the membrane is moved away from the pump housing by the body fluids at ambient pressure flowing through the perforations whenever the pressure in the upper chamber drops a predetermined differential amount below ambient pressure. The pressure in the upper chamber is precisely controlled thereby and maintained at a level that gently draws blood into the chamber yet prevents the pressure in the chamber from dropping to a dangerous level. Moreover, blood volume and flow rates are automatically met since any slight rise in venous pressure at the inlet port reduces the volume of the amount of body fluids admitted through the perforations and thereby increases the volume of blood drawn into the pump. As the piston is expanded during systole to move the flexible membrane into the upper chamber to pump the blood out of the chamber, the body fluids in the lower chamber are first expelled by the flexible membrane while the pressure in the upper chamber builds up slowly. At this time arterial back pressure is at its minimum instantaneous level; therefore, little energy is wasted in unnecessarily accelerating the blood. Since variable blood pressure and flow rates are automatically accommodated in such an arrangement, a constant speed rotary driving source, with its inherent simplicity, reliability and load averaging qualities, may be used to actuate the piston. The arrangement, moreover, permits the piston to have a fixed-length stroke at a constant rate of reciprocation.
It is an object of the invention to supply the bloodflow rate and pressure demands of a physiological system by means of an artificial implantable blood pump.
Another object is to simulate the action of a natural heart without distortion of connecting blood vessels.
Another object is to compensate very exactly and in a precisely controlled manner for the inflow impedance of an artificial implantable blood pump.
Another object is to provide an artificial implantable blood pump that is simple, reliable, efficient and that automatically accommodates to variable blood flow rates and volume demands of a physiological system under normal levels of physical activity.
Another object is to provide an artificial implantable blood pump including a piston having a constant rate of reciprocation and stroke length and that is driven with a rotary drive capable of load averaging that is, conserving energy while providing the exact instantaneous driving force required no more and no less.
Another object is to provide an expandable piston with a flexible driving end that includes a nonfolding wall.
Other objects and advantageous features of the invention will be apparent in a description of a specific embodiment thereof, given by way of example only, to enable one skilled in the art to readily practice the invention, and described hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. I is a cross-sectional side view of a piston actuated artificial implantable blood pump with the piston shown at the end ofa discharge stroke, according to the invention.
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional siide view of the pump of FIG. I with the piston shown partway through a filling stroke.
FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional side view of the pump of FIG. I with the piston shown at the end of a filling stroke.
FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional side view of the pump of FIG. I with the piston shown partway through a discharge stroke.
FIG. 5 is a side view, partially in cross-section, of an electric motor and a cylindrical groove cam for reciprocating the piston of FIG. l.
FIG. 6 is an end view of the cam follower for the cam of FIG. 5.
DESCRIPTION OF AN EMBODIMENT Referring to the drawing there is shown in cross section in FIG. I an artificial implantable blood pump It) including an expandable piston l2 mounted within a flexible membrane 14 but separated therefrom by means of a protective liquid lid. The membrane I4 and piston 12 are mounted within a housing I8 having an upper chamber 20 for pumping blood from an inlet port 21 to an outlet port 23 and a lower chamber 24 that is provided with perforations 26 to expose the lower part of the membrane 14 to body fluids which are adjacent the space in which the pump is implanted. There body fluids are naturally at ambient body pressure. The piston 12 normally is driven to successive positions, shown in FIGS. 2, 3 and 4, at a constant rate of reciprocation over a fixed-length stroke by means of an electric motor 27 (FIG. 5) and a cylindrical groove drum cam 29 mounted in a hermetically sealed housing 34). The motor conveniently may be a brushless dc motor using permanent magnets of samarium-cobalt in the rotor and an ironless stator designed to run at a constant speed of 9,000 rpm in the housing 30 on selfenergizing compliant plastic-coated multifoil type gas bearings. A hermetic aluminum seal 32 separates the motor 27 from the cam 29. Rotary motion is coupled through the seal 32 by means of a double-plate magnetic coupling 33 which drives a compound planetary gear train 35. The cam 29 is driven by the gear train at a reduced speed. As a typical example, the inputoutput ratio may be l which provides a cam rotation of RPM for a 9,000 RPM motor speed. The cam runs in a set of combined radial-thrust bearings 36 which conveniently may be made of porous bronze. The rotary motion of the cam 29 is converted to reciprocating motion by means of a continuous single-turn elliptical slot 38 machined in the inner surface of the cam over the length of the cam. A shuttle 39 (FIGS. 5 and 6) is provided with a guide pin 411 which rides in the slot 38 and is further provided with grooves 42 which mate with linear stationary guides 44 that are made integral with the housing 30 to prevent rotation of the shuttle. The continuous elliptical configuration of the slot 38 is such that the shuttle 39 is moved smoothly through one back-and-forward cycle or reciprocation for each revolution of the cam 29. A bellows 45 has an outer end sealed to the housing 30 and at the other end to the bottom of the shuttle 39. Also attached to and integral with the bottom of the shuttle is a connector 47 to which the lower end of a cable 48 connects. The cable is covered with a plastic sheath 49 that is sealed at the edges of a hole in the housing 30. The cable is reciprocated within the sheath by means of the shuttle 39, the hermetic seal of the housing 30 being ensured by the bellows 45. The upper end of the cable 48 is secured to the piston 12 by means of a hub 50 to reciprocate the piston with the cable.
The piston 12 includes an upper portion comprising flexible double membrane walls; an outer wall 51 and an inner wall 52 enclosing a space 53 that is filled with a liquid or a light grease. The piston also includes a single-wall membrane lower portion 55. At the top and bottom positions of the piston I2, shown respectively in FIGS. II and 3, the inner membrane 52 is pulled almost flat, while the outer membrane SI is deflected into a slightly convex or bulged shape by the liquid in the space 53. In the mid-positions of the piston I2, such as shown in FIGS. 2 and 4, walls 51 and 52 both bulge due to their being pulled into the diameter of a stiff rib 56 of the lower membrane portion 55, the liquid in the space 53 smoothly bowing the walls 51 and 52 to prevent any folding or wrinkling and consequent wear during reciprocation of the piston.
The piston I2 encloses an inner space 58 that is filled with a gas such as nitrogen or carbon dioxide to maintain a fullness in the shape of the piston as it is reciprocated. Compression of the gas during reciprocation is partially accommodated at the lower end of the piston by expansion of the membrane 14 into a make-up reservoir 59 provided in the lower end of the housing 18. The reservoir 59 is filled with body fluids at the end of a discharge stroke (FIG. I), and at the end of a filling stroke, the fluids are discharged from the reservoir through perforation in the housing lb.
The piston 12 may be driven with a push-pull force through the cable 48, or, alternatively, a spring 61 may be mounted between the hub 50 and a supporting web 62 so that only a pulling force is required to be transmitted through the cable. This permits the use of a more flexible cable and thereby allows greater freedom of placement of the motor and pump in a body.
In operation of the pump 10, when the pump begins to fill, the upper portion of the membrane M extends maximally into the space (FIG. I), the lower portion of the membrane M is maximally compressed by the body fluids in the space 59, the piston 12 is beginning its downward reciprocation, annd the membrane 14 is being urged out of the space 20 by the piston I2. As the pressure in the space 20 drops slightly below ambient, a check valve (which may either be artificial or an atrial remnant and is not shown) at the input port 2l opens to admit blood to the space 20. Should the pressure in the space Ztl drop over a predetermined differential below ambient pressure, the membrane l4 (FIG. 2) in the lower chamber 24 is moved away from the housing ill by the movement of body fluids at ambient pressure through the perforations 26. The force of the piston 12 on the upper portion of the membrane M in the space 20 is thereby alleviated so that the pressure of the blood within the space 26 does not drop to a dangerous level below ambient. Moreover, the amount of body fluids that enter the housing through the perforations 26 is a function of sustained venous pressure during the downstroke of the piston l2. For a very high physiological demand for blood, venous pressure will be at or slightly above ambient at all times, and there will be no entry of body fluids through perforations 26. The membrane 14 thereby is pulled out of the chamber 20 to a maximum extent. A maximum amount of blood will therefore enter the chamber 20 during such a downstroke. For a very low physiological demand for blood, normal venous pressure cannot be sustained and the pressure in the upper chamber will drop slightly below ambient early in the downstroke, the body fluids will enter the housing through the perforations 26, and the membrane 114 will be pulled out of the chamber to a minimum extent. Thus, the chamber 20 is automatically filled to the extent necessary to supply physiological demands yet the piston is actuated at a constant rate to travel over a constant stroke length, the pump being designed to supply maximum and minimum blood volme demands of the physiological system in which it is to be used.
At the completion of a typical downstroke, the chamber 20 will be partially filled in correspondence with physiological demands and the lower portion of the membrane 114 may be partially deflected by body fluids that entered the housing 1% through perforations 26. This condition of the pump 18 is illustrated in FIG. 3.
As the piston 12 begins its upstroke, any body fluids in the lower portion of the housing I8 are ejected through the perforations 26 until the lower portion of the membrane I4 is against the housing 18 (FIG. 4). As the piston continues upward, it drives the membrane 14 into the chamber 20 to increase the pressure of the blood therein. This causes the check valve at the input port 21 to close and a check valve (not shown) at the output port 23 to open. During the remaining part of the upstroke, blood is forced from the chamber 20 through the output port 23 and into the arteriovenous system.
The piston 12 is designed to fit closely behind but separated from the membrane Ml at all times by means of the protective liquid 16, except at its lower end where it is connected and sealed to the membrane 14 and housing 18 in a lip 64 in the housing, thereby providing a bearing for reciprocation of the piston. Such an arrangement prevents damage to the membrane 14 by direct contact with the moving portions of the piston 12 during either upstroke or downstroke and avoids stress concentrations within the membrane.
While an embodiment of the invention has been shown and described, further embodiments or combinations of those described herein will be apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the invention.
What I claim is:
T. An artificial blood pump for implantation in a physiological body at a site including fluids at ambient pressure, said body including a system of blood vessels through which blood is forced by said pump, comprismg:
a housing having an upper chamber and a lower chamber, said upper chamber including a blood inlet port for receiving blood from said blood vessel system and a blood outlet port for supplying blood to said blood vessel system, said lower chamber being provided with a multitude of openings to allow passage of said body fluids into and out of said lower chamber;
a flexible membrane mounted within said housing an extending into said upper and lower chambers, said membrane having a central area sealed to said housing to separate said upper and lower chambers; and
expandable means mounted within said membrane;
actuating means for periodically expanding an contracting said expandable means to actuate said flexible membrane to pump blood from said inlet port to said outlet port; and
a protective liquid separating said membrane and said expandable means, the pressure within said upper chamber being maintained at a constant predetermined lower differential pressure with respect to the pressure of said body fluids during contraction of said expandable means, said predetermined differential pressure being maintained constant by movement of said membrane in said lower chamber away from said housing in response to a drop in pressure in said upper chamber below said pre determined differential pressure.
2. The pump of claim 1, wherein said expandable means is a piston having upper and lower wall portions and including a compressible gas enclosed by said wall portions, said upper wall portion flexing outward and inward durinng expansion and contraction of said piston to actuate said membrane.
3. The pump of claim 2, wherein said upper wall portion is adjacent the portion of said membrane extending into said upper chamber and includes double walls enclosing a space, and a viscous liquid filling said space, said viscous liquid opposing a tendency of said double walls to fold during expansion and contraction of said piston.
4. The pump of claim 2, further including a flexible wall defining an expandable reservoir, said expandable reservoir being open to said gas enclosed by said piston walls, said reservoir wall being exposed to said body fluids at ambient pressure for expansion and contraction therein during contraction and expansion respectively of said piston, to minimize the degree of compression of said gas during contraction of said piston.
5. The pump of claim 4, wherein said expandable reservoir is an extension of said lower piston wall portion and is mounted within said housing, said housing being provided with perforations adjacent said reservoir to allow passage of said fluids into and out of said housing adjacent said reservoir during expansion and contraction of said reservoir.
6. The pump of claim 2, wherein said actuating means includes a cable attached to said piston for contracting said piston, and a spring for expanding said piston.
7. The pump of claim 2, wherein said actuating means includes an electric motor, a cylindrical groove drum cam driven by said motor, a follower reciprocated by said cam to pull said cable against the force of said spring to contract said piston and to release said cable under control of said spring to expand said piston.
8. The pump of claim 7, wherein said motor is operable to run at a constant speed and said piston is reciprocated over a constant length.
9. The pump of claim 2, wherein said lower wall portion includes a stiff annular rib at the connection of said upper and lower wall portions for flexure of said upper portion thereabout during expansion and contraction of said piston.
10. The pump of claim 2, further including a lip in said housing, said lower wall portion of said piston being connected to said lip to provide a bearing for ex pansion and contraction of said piston.

Claims (10)

1. An artificial blood pump for implantation in a physiological body at a site including fluids at ambient pressure, said body including a system of blood vessels through which blood is forced by said pump, comprising: a housing having an upper chamber and a lower chamber, said upper chamber including a blood inlet port for receiving blood from said blood vessel system and a blood outlet port for supplying blood to said blood vessel system, said lower chamber being provided with a multitude of openings to allow passage of said body fluids into and out of said lower chamber; a flexible membrane mounted within said housing an extending into said upper and lower chambers, said membrane having a central area sealed to said housing to separate said upper and lower chambers; and expandable means mounted within said membrane; actuating means for periodically expanding an contracting said expandable means to actuate said flexible membrane to pump blood from said inlet port to said outlet port; and a protective liquid separating said membrane and said expandable means, the pressure within said upper chamber being maintained at a constant predetermined lower differential pressure with respect to the pressure of said body fluids during contraction of said expandable means, said predetermined differential pressure being maintained constant by movement of said membrane in said lower chamber away from said housing in response to a drop in pressure in said upper chamber below said predetermined differential pressure.
2. The pump of claim 1, wherein said expandable means is a piston having upper and lower wall portions and including a compressible gas enclosed by said wall portions, said upper wall portion flexing outward and inward durinng expansion and contraction of said piston to actuate said membrane.
3. The pump of claim 2, wherein said upper wall portion is adjacent the portion of said membrane extending into said upper chamber and includes double walls enclosing a space, and a viscous liquid filling said space, said viscous liquid opposing a tendency of said double walls to fold during expansion and contraction of said piston.
4. The pump of claim 2, further including a flexible wall defining an expandable reservoir, said expandable reservoir being open to said gas enclosed by said piston walls, said reservoir wall being exposed to said body fluids at ambient pressure for expansion and contraction therein during contraction and expansion respectively of said piston, to minimize the degree of compression of said gas during contraction of said piston.
5. The pump of claim 4, wherein said expandable reservoir is an extension of Said lower piston wall portion and is mounted within said housing, said housing being provided with perforations adjacent said reservoir to allow passage of said fluids into and out of said housing adjacent said reservoir during expansion and contraction of said reservoir.
6. The pump of claim 2, wherein said actuating means includes a cable attached to said piston for contracting said piston, and a spring for expanding said piston.
7. The pump of claim 2, wherein said actuating means includes an electric motor, a cylindrical groove drum cam driven by said motor, a follower reciprocated by said cam to pull said cable against the force of said spring to contract said piston and to release said cable under control of said spring to expand said piston.
8. The pump of claim 7, wherein said motor is operable to run at a constant speed and said piston is reciprocated over a constant length.
9. The pump of claim 2, wherein said lower wall portion includes a stiff annular rib at the connection of said upper and lower wall portions for flexure of said upper portion thereabout during expansion and contraction of said piston.
10. The pump of claim 2, further including a lip in said housing, said lower wall portion of said piston being connected to said lip to provide a bearing for expansion and contraction of said piston.
US00401730A 1973-09-28 1973-09-28 Implantable blood pumping system Expired - Lifetime US3831203A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US00401730A US3831203A (en) 1973-09-28 1973-09-28 Implantable blood pumping system

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US00401730A US3831203A (en) 1973-09-28 1973-09-28 Implantable blood pumping system

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3831203A true US3831203A (en) 1974-08-27

Family

ID=23588983

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US00401730A Expired - Lifetime US3831203A (en) 1973-09-28 1973-09-28 Implantable blood pumping system

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3831203A (en)

Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4177523A (en) * 1978-03-15 1979-12-11 Lande Arnold J Artificial heart
US4427470A (en) 1981-09-01 1984-01-24 University Of Utah Vacuum molding technique for manufacturing a ventricular assist device
FR2530838A1 (en) * 1982-07-26 1984-01-27 Sagem SEQUENTIAL PNEUMATIC CONTROL DEVICE, SUPPLIED WITH ELECTRICAL ENERGY, FOR TOTAL HEART PROSTHESIS CONSISTING OF A BIVENTRICULAR MONOBLOCK ASSEMBLY WITH PNEUMATIC OPERATION
US4473423A (en) 1982-05-03 1984-09-25 University Of Utah Artificial heart valve made by vacuum forming technique
US4838889A (en) * 1981-09-01 1989-06-13 University Of Utah Research Foundation Ventricular assist device and method of manufacture
FR2802429A1 (en) * 1997-11-26 2001-06-22 Vascor Inc APPARATUS FOR OPERATING A BLOOD PUMP AT A CONTROLLED FLOW RATE
WO2001097877A1 (en) * 2000-06-22 2001-12-27 Biomedlab Co., Ltd Implantable left ventricular assist device with cylindrical cam
US6422990B1 (en) * 1997-11-26 2002-07-23 Vascor, Inc. Blood pump flow rate control method and apparatus utilizing multiple sensors
US20060252977A1 (en) * 2004-01-08 2006-11-09 Sullivan Paul J Nondestructive fluid transfer device
US20120130353A1 (en) * 2003-06-25 2012-05-24 Gibson Scott R Medication infusion device using negatively biased ambient pressure medication chamber
US20130041203A1 (en) * 2011-02-18 2013-02-14 Marlin Stephen Heilman Blood flow assist devices, systems and methods
CZ304170B6 (en) * 2009-08-05 2013-12-04 Diaphragm pump, particularly blood pump
CZ304230B6 (en) * 2009-08-11 2014-01-15 Vysoké učení technické v Brně, Fakulta strojního inženýrství Piston pump, particularly blood pump

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3097366A (en) * 1963-07-16 Winchell
US3099260A (en) * 1960-02-09 1963-07-30 Davol Rubber Co Heart pump apparatus
US3568214A (en) * 1968-07-24 1971-03-09 Univ Utah Artificial heart system and method of pumping blood by electromagnetically pulsed fluid
US3633217A (en) * 1969-07-01 1972-01-11 Westinghouse Electric Corp Electromagnetic energy converter for pulsing an implantable blood pump
US3635607A (en) * 1970-04-20 1972-01-18 Novelty Tool Co Inc Vacuum pump

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3097366A (en) * 1963-07-16 Winchell
US3099260A (en) * 1960-02-09 1963-07-30 Davol Rubber Co Heart pump apparatus
US3568214A (en) * 1968-07-24 1971-03-09 Univ Utah Artificial heart system and method of pumping blood by electromagnetically pulsed fluid
US3633217A (en) * 1969-07-01 1972-01-11 Westinghouse Electric Corp Electromagnetic energy converter for pulsing an implantable blood pump
US3635607A (en) * 1970-04-20 1972-01-18 Novelty Tool Co Inc Vacuum pump

Cited By (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4177523A (en) * 1978-03-15 1979-12-11 Lande Arnold J Artificial heart
US4427470A (en) 1981-09-01 1984-01-24 University Of Utah Vacuum molding technique for manufacturing a ventricular assist device
US4838889A (en) * 1981-09-01 1989-06-13 University Of Utah Research Foundation Ventricular assist device and method of manufacture
US4473423A (en) 1982-05-03 1984-09-25 University Of Utah Artificial heart valve made by vacuum forming technique
FR2530838A1 (en) * 1982-07-26 1984-01-27 Sagem SEQUENTIAL PNEUMATIC CONTROL DEVICE, SUPPLIED WITH ELECTRICAL ENERGY, FOR TOTAL HEART PROSTHESIS CONSISTING OF A BIVENTRICULAR MONOBLOCK ASSEMBLY WITH PNEUMATIC OPERATION
FR2802429A1 (en) * 1997-11-26 2001-06-22 Vascor Inc APPARATUS FOR OPERATING A BLOOD PUMP AT A CONTROLLED FLOW RATE
US6422990B1 (en) * 1997-11-26 2002-07-23 Vascor, Inc. Blood pump flow rate control method and apparatus utilizing multiple sensors
WO2001097877A1 (en) * 2000-06-22 2001-12-27 Biomedlab Co., Ltd Implantable left ventricular assist device with cylindrical cam
US20120130353A1 (en) * 2003-06-25 2012-05-24 Gibson Scott R Medication infusion device using negatively biased ambient pressure medication chamber
US8932253B2 (en) * 2003-06-25 2015-01-13 Medallion Therapeutics, Inc. Medication infusion device using negatively biased ambient pressure medication chamber
US20060252977A1 (en) * 2004-01-08 2006-11-09 Sullivan Paul J Nondestructive fluid transfer device
US20100191036A1 (en) * 2004-01-08 2010-07-29 Sullivan Paul J Nondestructive fluid transfer device
US8246530B2 (en) 2004-01-08 2012-08-21 Sullivan Paul J Nondestructive fluid transfer device
US7691046B2 (en) 2004-01-08 2010-04-06 Pumpworks, Inc. Nondestructive fluid transfer device
CZ304170B6 (en) * 2009-08-05 2013-12-04 Diaphragm pump, particularly blood pump
CZ304230B6 (en) * 2009-08-11 2014-01-15 Vysoké učení technické v Brně, Fakulta strojního inženýrství Piston pump, particularly blood pump
US20130041203A1 (en) * 2011-02-18 2013-02-14 Marlin Stephen Heilman Blood flow assist devices, systems and methods

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3831203A (en) Implantable blood pumping system
US3860968A (en) Compact, implantable apparatus for pumping blood to sustain blood circulation in a living body
US7740575B2 (en) Fluid pressure generating means
US4173796A (en) Total artificial hearts and cardiac assist devices powered and controlled by reversible electrohydraulic energy converters
US3550162A (en) Blood pump control system
US5282849A (en) Ventricle assist device with volume displacement chamber
CA2916350C (en) Artificial ventricles
US3597766A (en) Artificial heart pumping system powered by a modified stirling cycle engine-compressor having a freely reciprocable displacer piston
US5429584A (en) Cardiac assist method and apparatus
US5397349A (en) Muscle and air powered LVAD
CN103055363B (en) Vortex type implantable pulse ventricle assisting blood pump
CA1329450C (en) Quick-connect, totally implantable cardiac prosthesis with floating membranes and removable sensitive elements
JP2000513244A (en) Pressure generator for counter-pressure heart assist device
EP0449786A1 (en) Cardiac assist device
CA1253048A (en) Blood pump
US4820300A (en) Artificial heart
US8021422B2 (en) Actuating mechanism for pneumatically-driven artificial heart
US5318501A (en) Linear motion, muscle-actuated cardiac assist device
RU201911U1 (en) Blood flow control device for extracorporeal circulatory support systems
CN102671248B (en) Implantable bionic flexible pulsatile pump
CN116271510A (en) Pulse positive and negative pressure power device and saccule counterpulsation system
US9814816B2 (en) Artificial ventricles
US11904156B2 (en) System for generating a blood circulation
KR100599986B1 (en) a blood pump actuator and a blood pump system having the same
CN219579711U (en) Positive and negative pressure driving type heart beat auxiliary system