US3348536A - Heart-lung resuscitator - Google Patents

Heart-lung resuscitator Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3348536A
US3348536A US501680A US50168065A US3348536A US 3348536 A US3348536 A US 3348536A US 501680 A US501680 A US 501680A US 50168065 A US50168065 A US 50168065A US 3348536 A US3348536 A US 3348536A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
compressor
cylinder
stroke
plunger
valve
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
US501680A
Inventor
John J Tambascia
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.)
MEDI TECH LAB
MEDI-TECH LABORATORIES
Original Assignee
MEDI TECH LAB
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 MEDI TECH LAB filed Critical MEDI TECH LAB
Priority to US501680A priority Critical patent/US3348536A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3348536A publication Critical patent/US3348536A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61HPHYSICAL THERAPY APPARATUS, e.g. DEVICES FOR LOCATING OR STIMULATING REFLEX POINTS IN THE BODY; ARTIFICIAL RESPIRATION; MASSAGE; BATHING DEVICES FOR SPECIAL THERAPEUTIC OR HYGIENIC PURPOSES OR SPECIFIC PARTS OF THE BODY
    • A61H31/00Artificial respiration or heart stimulation, e.g. heart massage
    • A61H31/008Supine patient supports or bases, e.g. improving air-way access to the lungs
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61HPHYSICAL THERAPY APPARATUS, e.g. DEVICES FOR LOCATING OR STIMULATING REFLEX POINTS IN THE BODY; ARTIFICIAL RESPIRATION; MASSAGE; BATHING DEVICES FOR SPECIAL THERAPEUTIC OR HYGIENIC PURPOSES OR SPECIFIC PARTS OF THE BODY
    • A61H31/00Artificial respiration or heart stimulation, e.g. heart massage
    • A61H31/004Heart stimulation
    • A61H31/006Power driven
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61HPHYSICAL THERAPY APPARATUS, e.g. DEVICES FOR LOCATING OR STIMULATING REFLEX POINTS IN THE BODY; ARTIFICIAL RESPIRATION; MASSAGE; BATHING DEVICES FOR SPECIAL THERAPEUTIC OR HYGIENIC PURPOSES OR SPECIFIC PARTS OF THE BODY
    • A61H2201/00Characteristics of apparatus not provided for in the preceding codes
    • A61H2201/12Driving means
    • A61H2201/1238Driving means with hydraulic or pneumatic drive
    • A61H2201/1246Driving means with hydraulic or pneumatic drive by piston-cylinder systems
    • 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
    • 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

Definitions

  • An external heart massage and pulmonary ventilation device comprising a :base, an arm mounted for adjustable movement vertically thereof, a vertical cylinder carried by the arm, a plunger in the cylinder mounting an external sternum compressor pad, a source of gas under pressure and valved conduits connecting the source to the top and bottom of the cylinder to simultaneously supply air to one end and exhaust air from the other end of the cylinder to thereby reciprocate the plunger, means to adjustably limit the stroke of the plunger and means to deliver air or oxygen intermittently to a patientsynchronous- 1y with the stroke adjustment.
  • This invention relates to a heart-lung resuscitator and constitutes a continuation-in-part of my copending application Ser. No. 137,904, filed Sept. 13, 1961 and now Patent No. 3,241,551.
  • the primary object of the invention is to provide external heart massage and pulmonary ventilation by means of a relatively light-weight portable machine which is easily operable, even by one person alone, and is therefore especially adapted for use by first aid and paramedical personnel in hospitals, ambulances, in rescue squads, at first aid stations, on shipboard, at rail and air terminals or where any large group may gather.
  • An important object of the invention is to provide a heart-lung resuscitator employing a motor driven reciprocal sternum compressor, a means to regulate the length of its stroke to apply variable pressure on patients differing in size and age so as to minimize damage to the rib cage, a means to deliver air or oxygen to the patient and a means synchronizing the stroke adjustment with the volume of air delivered to prevent sudden increases in intna-pulmonary pressure with resultant rupture of bu-llae and alveolae.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a heartlung resuscitator of the character described wherein compressed gas, such as oxygen, nitrogen, etc., is employed to provide the energy for the motor so that the resuscitator can 'be employed at any location and needs no source of electrical energy for its operation.
  • compressed gas such as oxygen, nitrogen, etc.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a heartlung resuscitator of the character described wherein, upon initial actuation of the machine, the compressor will always move upwardly away from the patient to prevent accidental injury.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a heartlung resuscitator of the character described employing a fail-safe means so that if the compressor stroke is incorrectly adjusted or the machine functions incorrectly it will jam rather than the continue to misfunction with possible resultant injury to the patient.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the overall machine
  • FIG. 2 is a schematic view of the control system
  • FIG. 3 is a fragmentary perspective view, partly diag'rammatic, of the means to adjust the length of the compressor stroke
  • FIG. 7 is a fragmentary perspective view of the means to adjust the horizontally extending compressor arm relative to the base.
  • the machine is indicated at 10 and comprises, in general, an elongated base 12 upon which is removably mounted at a predetermined location an arcuate, preferably hard rubber, posterior fixation block or protuberance 14 adapted to engage the back of the patient opposite the sternum for proper transmission of forces to the heart.
  • An upright member 16 is secured at one end of the base and supports a generally horizontal member in the form of a housing 18 upon which is removably secured by appropriate screws 20 a cover 22 having an upright bail or handle 24.
  • a compressor 26 is operatively carried by the horizontal member vertically opposite the fixation block 14, the housing 18 and cover 22 enclosing the various means to operate and adjust the compressor and horizontal arm and the means to deliver air to the patient through a conventional flexible tube 27 which fits onto a nipple on the housing 18 and which is equipped with a face mask 28.
  • the housing 18 is an open-top member and as seen in FIG. 7, its rear wall 30 is secured as at 32 to a split block 34 whose clamping jaws 36 slidably engage vertical posts 38 which are secured upon the base in a vertical housing consisting of spaced plates 40, the posts 38 and plates 40 constituting the upright 16.
  • the block 34 carries a handle 42 which extends to the rear and beyond the plates 40.
  • a bolt 44 extends through the split block and has a sprocket 46 at its endwhich is engaged by an endless 1 chain 48 that extends through the rear wall 30 of the housing 18.
  • the chain is trained over another sprocket 50 which is rotatabl mounted on the housing wall 30 by a suitable bracket and is equipped with an operating handle 52.
  • the bolt 44 unscrews and opens the jaws 36 so that the housing, with the aid of the handle 42, can be moved up and down on the posts 38 relative to the base 12 and can be locked in an adjusted position by rotating the handle 52 in an opposite direction to tighten the jaws on the posts.
  • 'A windup spring 53 is connected between the block 34 upper and lower ports 62 and 64 which communicate with the interior.
  • Extending slidably through the lower cap and into the cylinder is a rod or plunger 66 upon whose lower end is snap mounted the compressor 26 which includes a rubber member 68 contoured to engage the lower onethird of the sternum, the plunger or rod 66 passing through a suitable opening in the bottom wall of the housing 18 above the fixation block 14.
  • the upper end of the rod mounts a piston head 70 of special construction so that annulargrooves 84 which receive suitable packing 86 so that a tight smoothly operable fit of the piston head in the cylinder is obtained without the need for a lubricant which generally degrades in the presence of oxygen.
  • a plenum chamber 88 Secured 'upon' the'bottom wall of the housing 16 adjacent its rearwall is a plenum chamber 88, see FIG. 4, which is communicative with an accordion-type bellows 90equipped witha rigid top plate 92 having upstanding ears 949A longitudinal lever bar or crank 96 is pivoted between the cars 94 about a horizontal pin 98.
  • the crank has a corner 100' intermediate its ends which carries a laterally extending rod 102 which is journaled at its ends between plates 104 and 106, see FIG. 3, which extend longitudinally rearwardly from the cylinder 60. Rearwardly'of the corner 100 towards the bellows, the crank mounts a lateral pm 108.
  • crank 96 Fixed to the plunger or rod 66 is a block through which a lateral rod 112 passes, one end of the rod extending into an elongated slot 114 adjacent the free end of the crank 96'.
  • the crank pivots about the rod 102 and thereby actuates the bellows.
  • a rod 118 carrying an operating'handle 120.
  • the rod carries a toothed member 122 and'a leaf spring 124 with a detent 126 therein mounted on the side wall and is urged into the teeth so that the handle can operate as a releasable selector.
  • the rod 118 is connected by means of a universal coupling 128 to a further rod 130 which passes through vertical slots-132 in the wall members'104 and 106, the rod 130 mounting'an arcuate toothed cam 134 which is located immediately above the pin 108.
  • the distance between the pin 108'and cam 134 may be varied to ultimately adjust the length of the stroke of the compressor as willbe' more evident hereinafter.
  • the valve body has a port 142 which is communicative with the exhaust arm 136, another port 144 which is communicative with the face mask hose 26, and a third port 146 which is'comrnunicative with the plenum chamber 88.
  • the valve is vertically reciprocal in the body and hasa stem 150'with head 152 on its free end.
  • the stem on the inside of the body has a pair of spaced piston heads 154 and 156.
  • valve 140 is a mechanicallyoperated two-way valve. In the position where air is delivered to the face mask, the reverse occurs as seen in FIG. 5.
  • longitudinal bar 160 is provided adjacent theforward end of the housing 18 which is pivoted to the plate 106 as at 162 about a horizontal pivot intermediate its ends, its rear end being notched as at 164.
  • the front end-of the bar is pivotally connected as at 166 to a substantially L-shaped vertical arm 168 whose upper end .is pivotally connected as at 170 to a yoke member 172 which is vertically reciprocal on the plate 106 and is guided in its motion-by-a headed pin 174 which extends between the forks, there being a spring 176 which is terminally secured between the yokemember 172 and the arm.168--acting, to. urge the front end of the bar 160 4 upwardly and the notch 164 downwardly towards the rod 112.
  • Pivoted centrally to the plate 106 about a horizontal axis as at 178 is an indexing member in the form of a plate 179 having laterally extending pins 180 which are 90 apart.
  • the yoke member 172 has a depending arm 182 With a hook 184 which is adapted to engage each rod 180 and upon continued downward movement of the yoke member cause the indexing plate 179'to rotate in a clockwise direction.
  • a longitudinal bar 186 with a curved front end 188 is pivoted about a horizontal axis as at 190 to the other side of the indexing plate 179 adjacent one of the pins 180.
  • the rear end of the bar 186 has a longitudinal slot 192.
  • Secured to the rear wall 30 of the housing 18 is a bracket 194 to which is pivoted about a horizontal axis as at 196 an L-shaped link 198, one arm of which secures a longitudinal angle bar 200 with a slot 202 which slidably receives the valve stem 150 beneath the head 152, the width of theslot being less than the diameter of the head 152, the other arm of thebar 198 carries a headed pin 204, the shank of which extends slidably through the slot 192 of bar 186.
  • the housing 18 mounts a manifold 206 which is operatively connected to one of the compressed air cylinders via line 208 which contains.
  • a pressure guage 210 there being a pressure regulator 212 which is set to open when the pressure at the gas input supply exceeds 75 p.s.i.
  • a pilot-operated, springbiased, normally open, valve 214 is operatively connected as at 215 to the manifold and to a similar, normally closed, two-way, spring-biased valve 216 via conduit 218.
  • Valve 216 is also connected to the manifold as at 219 and by line 220 to the lower port 64 of the cylinder 60.
  • a T- connector 222 is interposed in line 220, one arm of which is operatively connected to another pilot-operated, normally open, two-Way valve 224, the latter being connected as at 226 to the upper port 62 of the cylinder 60 and' via line 228 back to the manifold, there being a throttle valve 230 with an operating handle 232 in line 228 to vary the gas flow to the top of the cylinder 60 and therefore the speed of the downstroke of the plunger 66.
  • the valves 216 and 224 are the same as valve 140 except that they are pilot rather than mechanically operated.
  • valves 234, 236 and 238 Three mechanically-operable, spring-biased, normally closed, valves 234, 236 and 238 are provided; the valve 234 being connected via line 240 to the manifold and via line 242' to valve 214; the valve 236 being connected to line 242; and the valve 238 being connected via line 244 to line 218, there being an on-off-push button valve 246 in line 244 which can be locked in the open position by pushing down and rotating the button in a given direction.
  • Valves 234, 236 and 238 are similar tovalve 246 except that the latter has no spring bias.
  • the valves herein described are all conventional and can be purchased commercially, as for example, from Humphrey Products Division of General Gas Light Company, Kalamazoo, Mich.
  • valves 216, 224, 236 and 238 can beconnected to a silencer 248 if desired.
  • a nipple 250 may be secured to the plenum chamber 88 for connection to an oxygen cylinder if oxygen enrichment of the pulmonary ventilation is desired.
  • the base 12 is slid under the patient so that the fixation block 14 bears against the patients back opposite the sternum and the patients sternum is directly beneath the compressor pad 68.
  • the handle 52 is turned to loosen the clamping jaws 36 and with the aid of the handles 24 and 42, the member mounting the sternum compressor is moved vertically to the desired position and there fixed by tightening up on the handle 52.
  • the throttle valve 230 is then adjusted by turning the handle 232 so that the rate of the plunger can be regulated up to one hundred and twenty strokes per minute.
  • the handle 120 the length of the stroke of the plunger 66 can be regulated from one-half to two inches depending on the size and age of the patient.
  • the face mask is placed over the mouth of the patient and the button on the on-off valve 246 is depressed, turned and locked in the on position whereby the sternum is rythmically compressed and a predetermined volume of air (or oxygen enriched air) is automatically delivered to the face mask on every fourth stroke.
  • the pneumaticand mechanical operations are as follows. Gas from the manifold 206 flows through valve 214 and directly to valve 216 via line 218 opening valve 216. Gas from the manifold then flows through line 220 to the bottom of the cylinder 60 raising the piston head 70 and plunger while the gas actuates the pilot of valve 224 to close off line 228 and permit venting of air from the top of the cylinder to exhaust.
  • the first stroke of the plunger is always upward away from the patient thereby minimizing any possible damage to the patient which might occur if the initial stroke were downward.
  • the bracket 252 on the crank 96 has engaged the stems 254 and 256 of the valves 234 and 238 to keep them open whereas the stem 258 of valve 236 is completely down keeping that valve closed.
  • valve 246 is turned to the on position and gas passes from line 218 through line 244 into valve 238 and out to exhaust.
  • This causes the pilot of valve 216 to close the valve and allow gas from the bottom of the cylinder 60 to vent through the exhaust of valve 216.
  • This also actuates valve 224 so that it is closed to exhaust but open .to the manifold whereby gas enters the top of the cylinder to cause the plunger 66 to descend.
  • crank 96 rocks around rod 102 lowering bracket 252 and the valves 234 and 238 close. Gas is thereby trapped in the line 242 from the valve 234 to valve 214 keeping valve 214 closed during the complete pro-adjusted descent of the plunger otherwise the plunger would reverse immediately.
  • valve 108 raises the cam 134 until it engages the stern 258 and opens valve 236 exhausting gas from line 242. This in turn opens valve 214 allowing gas to flow into and actuate the pilot of valve 216 and start the cycle over again.
  • the bellows 90 contracts on the upstroke to expel air into the plenum chamber 88 and thence, to the face mask and expands on the downstroke to take in air from the plenum chamber. Since the distance between the lower surface of the cam 134 and the pin 108 is adjusted and this determines both the length of the stroke and the degree of expansion of the bellows, the amount of air delivered through the face mask for pulmonary ventilation is synchronous with the length of the stroke. Thus for an adult, a stroke of two inches is desirable and a delivery of approximately 1050 cc. of air or oxygen. For an infant, a stroke of one-half inch is desirable and a delivery of approximately 150 cc. of air or oxygen.
  • Air or oxygen is delivered via the face mask to the patient on every fourth stroke as the respiration rate is generally one-fourth that of the pulse rate. This is accomplished mechanically as follows. Assume the bar 186 is at the 3 oclock position of the indexing plate 179. At this point the pin 204 is in the extreme forward end of the slot 192 and the angle bar 200 has pushed up on the head 152 raising the stem 150 until the lower head 156 closed off the exhaust port 142 and opened the face mask port 144 so that air or oxygen-enriched-air from the plenum chamber 88 was expelled to the face mask. As the plunger 66 moves up, the rod 112 causes the bar 160 to pivot about pin 166 thereby pulling yoke member 172 down.
  • the hook 184 bears down on the pin 180 causing the plate 179 to rotate in a clockwise direction so that the attachment of the bar 186 to the plate 179 reaches the 6 6 oclock position. In so doing, the hook 184 has cleared the pin 180 and its upper cam surface engages the next pin to come along and clears it so that the yoke member 172 returns to its original position with the hook engaging the said next pin 180.
  • the stem has dropped so that the lower head 156 has opened the exhaust port 142 and the upper head 154 has closed the face mask port 144 but the pin 204 has still retained its position at the front end of the slot 192.
  • the pin 204 On the next rotation from the 12 oclock to the original 3 oclock position, the pin 204 retains its position in the extreme forward end of the slot 192 but acts to raise the angle bar 200 and hence the valvestem so that the exhaust port 142 is closed and the face mask port 144 is opened. Thus for three of the positions of the indexing plate 179, air is expelled to the atmosphere and for the fourth position it is expelled into the face mask.
  • An external heart massage and pulmonary ventilation device comprising a base, a horizontally extending member, means mounting said member above said base for adjustment vertically towards and away from said base, a sternum compressor carried by said member, means to reciprocate said sternum compressor vertically, adjustable means limiting the downward stroke of said sternum compressor and means operatively connected to said stroke adjusting means to deliver air or oxygen intermittently to a patient synchronously with said stroke adjustment, said compressor includes a plunger having a piston head at one end and a pad at its other adapted to engage the sternum and said means to reciprocate said compressor includes a cylinder in which said piston head and plunger are slidable, a source of gas under pressure and valved conduits operatively connected to the top and bottom of said cylinder so that gas is supplied to the bottom of the cylinder beneath said piston head while it is simultaneously exhausted from the top of the cylinder above said piston head to raise said compressor and at the top of the stroke the operation is reversed to lower said compressor and the cycle is repeated.
  • said stroke adjusting means includes a bar pivoted intermediate its ends and operatively connected at one of its ends to said plunger, a rod extending laterally above said bar and mounted for limited vertical movement, a cam having a generally arcuate surface carried by said rod, :1 pin extending laterally from said bar beneath said arcuate surface, said rod being rotatable to vary the distance between said arcuate surface and said pin and a normally closed valve in one of said conduits having a vertically reciprocable stern above said cam so that at a pre-adjusted downstroke position of said plunger said pin will engage said cam which will in turn depress said stern and open said valve to cause gas to be supplied to the bottom of said cylinder and to be exhausted from the top to cause said piston to reverse and move in an upstroke.
  • said means to deliver air or oxygen to the patient includes a plenum chamber, a tube carrying a face mask connected to said chamber and a bellows communicative with said chamber, said bar being pivotally attached to said bellows at its end opposite said plunger whereby said bellows contracts on the upstroke of said plunger and expands on the downstroke.
  • said means to deliver air or oxygen to the patient further includes a two-way valve including a body communicating with said plenum chamber and ports to atmospheric exhaust and to said face mask tube and including a stern extending outside of said body, and linkage including an indexing member operatively connected between said stem and said plunger whereby for three successive contractions of said bellows said exhaust port remains open and said face mask tube port remains closed and on the fourth contraction of said bellows said face mask tube port opens and said exhaust port closes so that pulmonary ventilation is provided for every fourth stroke of said plunger.

Description

1967 J. J. TAMBASCIA 3,348,536
HEART-LUNG RESUSCITATQR Filed 001;. 22, I965 4 Sheets-Sheet 1 INVENTOR JOHN JQSEPH TAMBASCIA ATT RNEYS Oct. 24, J. J. TAMBA'SCIA HEART-LUNG RESUSCITATOR' Filed Oct. 22, 1965 4 Sheds-Sheet 2 I NVENTOR JOHN JOSEPH TAMBASCIA ATTORNEYS -24,19 7 J.'J.TAMBASC.A 3,348,536
' HEART-LUNG RESUSCITATOR Filed Oct. 22, 1965 4 Sheets-Sheet s INVENTOR Q, 7 JOHN JOSEPH TAMBASCIfi ATTORNEYS 1967 J. J. TAMBASCIA 3,348,536 I I HEART-LUNG RESUSCITATOR 4 Sheets-Sheet 4 Filed Oct. 22, 1965 INVENTOR JOHN JOSEPH TAMBASCIA BY I ATTORNEYS 3,348,536 HEART-LUNG RESUSCITATOR John J. Tambascia, Kendall Park, N.J., assignor to Medigech Laboratories, Summit, NJ a corporation of New ersey Filed Oct. 22, 1965, Ser. No. 501,680 6 Claims. (Cl. 128-53) ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE An external heart massage and pulmonary ventilation device comprising a :base, an arm mounted for adjustable movement vertically thereof, a vertical cylinder carried by the arm, a plunger in the cylinder mounting an external sternum compressor pad, a source of gas under pressure and valved conduits connecting the source to the top and bottom of the cylinder to simultaneously supply air to one end and exhaust air from the other end of the cylinder to thereby reciprocate the plunger, means to adjustably limit the stroke of the plunger and means to deliver air or oxygen intermittently to a patientsynchronous- 1y with the stroke adjustment.
This invention relates to a heart-lung resuscitator and constitutes a continuation-in-part of my copending application Ser. No. 137,904, filed Sept. 13, 1961 and now Patent No. 3,241,551.
The primary object of the invention is to provide external heart massage and pulmonary ventilation by means of a relatively light-weight portable machine which is easily operable, even by one person alone, and is therefore especially adapted for use by first aid and paramedical personnel in hospitals, ambulances, in rescue squads, at first aid stations, on shipboard, at rail and air terminals or where any large group may gather.
An important object of the invention is to provide a heart-lung resuscitator employing a motor driven reciprocal sternum compressor, a means to regulate the length of its stroke to apply variable pressure on patients differing in size and age so as to minimize damage to the rib cage, a means to deliver air or oxygen to the patient and a means synchronizing the stroke adjustment with the volume of air delivered to prevent sudden increases in intna-pulmonary pressure with resultant rupture of bu-llae and alveolae.
Another object of the invention is to provide a heartlung resuscitator of the character described wherein compressed gas, such as oxygen, nitrogen, etc., is employed to provide the energy for the motor so that the resuscitator can 'be employed at any location and needs no source of electrical energy for its operation.
' Another object of the invention is to provide a heartlung resuscitator of the character described wherein, upon initial actuation of the machine, the compressor will always move upwardly away from the patient to prevent accidental injury.
Another object of the invention is to provide a heartlung resuscitator of the character described employing a fail-safe means so that if the compressor stroke is incorrectly adjusted or the machine functions incorrectly it will jam rather than the continue to misfunction with possible resultant injury to the patient.
These and other objects of the invention will become more apparent as the following description proceeds in con-junction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the overall machine;
FIG. 2 is a schematic view of the control system;
FIG. 3 is a fragmentary perspective view, partly diag'rammatic, of the means to adjust the length of the compressor stroke;
I United States Patent 3,348,536 Patented Oct. 24, 1967 ice plunger and pad at the bottom thereof being shown in elevation; and
FIG. 7 is a fragmentary perspective view of the means to adjust the horizontally extending compressor arm relative to the base.
Specific reference is now made to the drawings in whic similar reference characters are used for corresponding elements thoughout.
The machine is indicated at 10 and comprises, in general, an elongated base 12 upon which is removably mounted at a predetermined location an arcuate, preferably hard rubber, posterior fixation block or protuberance 14 adapted to engage the back of the patient opposite the sternum for proper transmission of forces to the heart. An upright member 16 is secured at one end of the base and supports a generally horizontal member in the form of a housing 18 upon which is removably secured by appropriate screws 20 a cover 22 having an upright bail or handle 24. A compressor 26 is operatively carried by the horizontal member vertically opposite the fixation block 14, the housing 18 and cover 22 enclosing the various means to operate and adjust the compressor and horizontal arm and the means to deliver air to the patient through a conventional flexible tube 27 which fits onto a nipple on the housing 18 and which is equipped with a face mask 28.
The housing 18 is an open-top member and as seen in FIG. 7, its rear wall 30 is secured as at 32 to a split block 34 whose clamping jaws 36 slidably engage vertical posts 38 which are secured upon the base in a vertical housing consisting of spaced plates 40, the posts 38 and plates 40 constituting the upright 16. The block 34 carries a handle 42 which extends to the rear and beyond the plates 40. A bolt 44 extends through the split block and has a sprocket 46 at its endwhich is engaged by an endless 1 chain 48 that extends through the rear wall 30 of the housing 18. The chain is trained over another sprocket 50 which is rotatabl mounted on the housing wall 30 by a suitable bracket and is equipped with an operating handle 52. Thus when the handle is rotated in one direction the bolt 44 unscrews and opens the jaws 36 so that the housing, with the aid of the handle 42, can be moved up and down on the posts 38 relative to the base 12 and can be locked in an adjusted position by rotating the handle 52 in an opposite direction to tighten the jaws on the posts.
'A windup spring 53 is connected between the block 34 upper and lower ports 62 and 64 which communicate with the interior. Extending slidably through the lower cap and into the cylinder is a rod or plunger 66 upon whose lower end is snap mounted the compressor 26 which includes a rubber member 68 contoured to engage the lower onethird of the sternum, the plunger or rod 66 passing through a suitable opening in the bottom wall of the housing 18 above the fixation block 14. The upper end of the rod mounts a piston head 70 of special construction so that annulargrooves 84 which receive suitable packing 86 so that a tight smoothly operable fit of the piston head in the cylinder is obtained without the need for a lubricant which generally degrades in the presence of oxygen.
Secured 'upon' the'bottom wall of the housing 16 adjacent its rearwall is a plenum chamber 88, see FIG. 4, which is communicative with an accordion-type bellows 90equipped witha rigid top plate 92 having upstanding ears 949A longitudinal lever bar or crank 96 is pivoted between the cars 94 about a horizontal pin 98. The crank has a corner 100' intermediate its ends which carries a laterally extending rod 102 which is journaled at its ends between plates 104 and 106, see FIG. 3, which extend longitudinally rearwardly from the cylinder 60. Rearwardly'of the corner 100 towards the bellows, the crank mounts a lateral pm 108.
Fixed to the plunger or rod 66 is a block through which a lateral rod 112 passes, one end of the rod extending into an elongated slot 114 adjacent the free end of the crank 96'. Thus as the plunger reciprocates, the crank pivots about the rod 102 and thereby actuates the bellows.
Extending through one side wall 116 is a rod 118 carrying an operating'handle 120. The rod carries a toothed member 122 and'a leaf spring 124 with a detent 126 therein mounted on the side wall and is urged into the teeth so that the handle can operate as a releasable selector. The rod 118 is connected by means of a universal coupling 128 to a further rod 130 which passes through vertical slots-132 in the wall members'104 and 106, the rod 130 mounting'an arcuate toothed cam 134 which is located immediately above the pin 108. Thus by rotating the handle 120, the distance between the pin 108'and cam 134 may be varied to ultimately adjust the length of the stroke of the compressor as willbe' more evident hereinafter.
Mounted on and communicative with the plenum chambar-88. is an L-shaped coupling, the horizontal arm 136 of which going to exhaust and the vertical arm 138 of which enclosing a ventilation directing valve 140. As seen in FIG. 5, the valve body has a port 142 which is communicative with the exhaust arm 136, another port 144 which is communicative with the face mask hose 26, and a third port 146 which is'comrnunicative with the plenum chamber 88. The valve is vertically reciprocal in the body and hasa stem 150'with head 152 on its free end. The stem on the inside of the body has a pair of spaced piston heads 154 and 156. Normally, a spring 158 urges the stem downwardly so that the upper head 154 closes off port 144- to the maskand the lower head 156 exposes port 142 to exhaust. Thus, valve 140 is a mechanicallyoperated two-way valve. In the position where air is delivered to the face mask, the reverse occurs as seen in FIG. 5.
Referring to FIG. 4, longitudinal bar 160 is provided adjacent theforward end of the housing 18 which is pivoted to the plate 106 as at 162 about a horizontal pivot intermediate its ends, its rear end being notched as at 164. The front end-of the bar is pivotally connected as at 166 to a substantially L-shaped vertical arm 168 whose upper end .is pivotally connected as at 170 to a yoke member 172 which is vertically reciprocal on the plate 106 and is guided in its motion-by-a headed pin 174 which extends between the forks, there being a spring 176 which is terminally secured between the yokemember 172 and the arm.168--acting, to. urge the front end of the bar 160 4 upwardly and the notch 164 downwardly towards the rod 112.
Pivoted centrally to the plate 106 about a horizontal axis as at 178 is an indexing member in the form of a plate 179 having laterally extending pins 180 which are 90 apart. The yoke member 172 has a depending arm 182 With a hook 184 which is adapted to engage each rod 180 and upon continued downward movement of the yoke member cause the indexing plate 179'to rotate in a clockwise direction.
A longitudinal bar 186 with a curved front end 188 is pivoted about a horizontal axis as at 190 to the other side of the indexing plate 179 adjacent one of the pins 180. The rear end of the bar 186 has a longitudinal slot 192. Secured to the rear wall 30 of the housing 18 is a bracket 194 to which is pivoted about a horizontal axis as at 196 an L-shaped link 198, one arm of which secures a longitudinal angle bar 200 with a slot 202 which slidably receives the valve stem 150 beneath the head 152, the width of theslot being less than the diameter of the head 152, the other arm of thebar 198 carries a headed pin 204, the shank of which extends slidably through the slot 192 of bar 186.
Referring now to FIG. 2, the housing 18 mounts a manifold 206 which is operatively connected to one of the compressed air cylinders via line 208 which contains.
a pressure guage 210, there being a pressure regulator 212 which is set to open when the pressure at the gas input supply exceeds 75 p.s.i. A pilot-operated, springbiased, normally open, valve 214 is operatively connected as at 215 to the manifold and to a similar, normally closed, two-way, spring-biased valve 216 via conduit 218. Valve 216 is also connected to the manifold as at 219 and by line 220 to the lower port 64 of the cylinder 60. A T- connector 222 is interposed in line 220, one arm of which is operatively connected to another pilot-operated, normally open, two-Way valve 224, the latter being connected as at 226 to the upper port 62 of the cylinder 60 and' via line 228 back to the manifold, there being a throttle valve 230 with an operating handle 232 in line 228 to vary the gas flow to the top of the cylinder 60 and therefore the speed of the downstroke of the plunger 66. It should be noted that the valves 216 and 224 are the same as valve 140 except that they are pilot rather than mechanically operated.
Three mechanically-operable, spring-biased, normally closed, valves 234, 236 and 238 are provided; the valve 234 being connected via line 240 to the manifold and via line 242' to valve 214; the valve 236 being connected to line 242; and the valve 238 being connected via line 244 to line 218, there being an on-off-push button valve 246 in line 244 which can be locked in the open position by pushing down and rotating the button in a given direction. Valves 234, 236 and 238 are similar tovalve 246 except that the latter has no spring bias. The valves herein described are all conventional and can be purchased commercially, as for example, from Humphrey Products Division of General Gas Light Company, Kalamazoo, Mich.
The exhausts from valves 216, 224, 236 and 238 can beconnected to a silencer 248 if desired. Also, a nipple 250 may be secured to the plenum chamber 88 for connection to an oxygen cylinder if oxygen enrichment of the pulmonary ventilation is desired.
In operation, the base 12 is slid under the patient so that the fixation block 14 bears against the patients back opposite the sternum and the patients sternum is directly beneath the compressor pad 68. The handle 52 is turned to loosen the clamping jaws 36 and with the aid of the handles 24 and 42, the member mounting the sternum compressor is moved vertically to the desired position and there fixed by tightening up on the handle 52. The throttle valve 230 is then adjusted by turning the handle 232 so that the rate of the plunger can be regulated up to one hundred and twenty strokes per minute. By turning the handle 120 the length of the stroke of the plunger 66 can be regulated from one-half to two inches depending on the size and age of the patient. The face mask is placed over the mouth of the patient and the button on the on-off valve 246 is depressed, turned and locked in the on position whereby the sternum is rythmically compressed and a predetermined volume of air (or oxygen enriched air) is automatically delivered to the face mask on every fourth stroke.
The pneumaticand mechanical operations are as follows. Gas from the manifold 206 flows through valve 214 and directly to valve 216 via line 218 opening valve 216. Gas from the manifold then flows through line 220 to the bottom of the cylinder 60 raising the piston head 70 and plunger while the gas actuates the pilot of valve 224 to close off line 228 and permit venting of air from the top of the cylinder to exhaust. Thus it will be seen that the first stroke of the plunger is always upward away from the patient thereby minimizing any possible damage to the patient which might occur if the initial stroke were downward. At the top of the stroke the bracket 252 on the crank 96 has engaged the stems 254 and 256 of the valves 234 and 238 to keep them open whereas the stem 258 of valve 236 is completely down keeping that valve closed.
Then the on-olf valve 246 is turned to the on position and gas passes from line 218 through line 244 into valve 238 and out to exhaust. This causes the pilot of valve 216 to close the valve and allow gas from the bottom of the cylinder 60 to vent through the exhaust of valve 216. This also actuates valve 224 so that it is closed to exhaust but open .to the manifold whereby gas enters the top of the cylinder to cause the plunger 66 to descend. The instant the plunger descends, crank 96 rocks around rod 102 lowering bracket 252 and the valves 234 and 238 close. Gas is thereby trapped in the line 242 from the valve 234 to valve 214 keeping valve 214 closed during the complete pro-adjusted descent of the plunger otherwise the plunger would reverse immediately.
Depending upon the pre-adjnsted position of the cam 134, at a particular point in the descent of the plunger, the pin 108 raises the cam 134 until it engages the stern 258 and opens valve 236 exhausting gas from line 242. This in turn opens valve 214 allowing gas to flow into and actuate the pilot of valve 216 and start the cycle over again.
It will be seen that the bellows 90 contracts on the upstroke to expel air into the plenum chamber 88 and thence, to the face mask and expands on the downstroke to take in air from the plenum chamber. Since the distance between the lower surface of the cam 134 and the pin 108 is adjusted and this determines both the length of the stroke and the degree of expansion of the bellows, the amount of air delivered through the face mask for pulmonary ventilation is synchronous with the length of the stroke. Thus for an adult, a stroke of two inches is desirable and a delivery of approximately 1050 cc. of air or oxygen. For an infant, a stroke of one-half inch is desirable and a delivery of approximately 150 cc. of air or oxygen.
Air or oxygen is delivered via the face mask to the patient on every fourth stroke as the respiration rate is generally one-fourth that of the pulse rate. This is accomplished mechanically as follows. Assume the bar 186 is at the 3 oclock position of the indexing plate 179. At this point the pin 204 is in the extreme forward end of the slot 192 and the angle bar 200 has pushed up on the head 152 raising the stem 150 until the lower head 156 closed off the exhaust port 142 and opened the face mask port 144 so that air or oxygen-enriched-air from the plenum chamber 88 was expelled to the face mask. As the plunger 66 moves up, the rod 112 causes the bar 160 to pivot about pin 166 thereby pulling yoke member 172 down. By the action of spring 176, the hook 184 bears down on the pin 180 causing the plate 179 to rotate in a clockwise direction so that the attachment of the bar 186 to the plate 179 reaches the 6 6 oclock position. In so doing, the hook 184 has cleared the pin 180 and its upper cam surface engages the next pin to come along and clears it so that the yoke member 172 returns to its original position with the hook engaging the said next pin 180. At the same time the stem has dropped so that the lower head 156 has opened the exhaust port 142 and the upper head 154 has closed the face mask port 144 but the pin 204 has still retained its position at the front end of the slot 192. On the next upstroke of the plunger the bellows contracts sending airout into the atmosphere via exhaust port 144 and the hook 184 again causes the indexing plate to rotate clockwise so that the connection of the bar 186 to the plate assumes the 9 oclock position. In so doing the bar 186 moves so that the pin 204 occupies the extreme rear end of the slot 192 but the valve stem 150 remains in its lowered unchanged position. In the next rotation from the 9 oclock to the 12 oclock position, the bar 186 shifts so that the pin 204 occupies the extreme forward end of the slot 192 without changing the position of the valve stem, so that on the upstroke of the plunger air is again expelled to the atmosphere. On the next rotation from the 12 oclock to the original 3 oclock position, the pin 204 retains its position in the extreme forward end of the slot 192 but acts to raise the angle bar 200 and hence the valvestem so that the exhaust port 142 is closed and the face mask port 144 is opened. Thus for three of the positions of the indexing plate 179, air is expelled to the atmosphere and for the fourth position it is expelled into the face mask.
While a preferred embodiment of the invention has been shown and described herein, skilled artisans may make variations without departing from the spirit of the invention and the scope of the appended claims.
I claim:
1. An external heart massage and pulmonary ventilation device comprising a base, a horizontally extending member, means mounting said member above said base for adjustment vertically towards and away from said base, a sternum compressor carried by said member, means to reciprocate said sternum compressor vertically, adjustable means limiting the downward stroke of said sternum compressor and means operatively connected to said stroke adjusting means to deliver air or oxygen intermittently to a patient synchronously with said stroke adjustment, said compressor includes a plunger having a piston head at one end and a pad at its other adapted to engage the sternum and said means to reciprocate said compressor includes a cylinder in which said piston head and plunger are slidable, a source of gas under pressure and valved conduits operatively connected to the top and bottom of said cylinder so that gas is supplied to the bottom of the cylinder beneath said piston head while it is simultaneously exhausted from the top of the cylinder above said piston head to raise said compressor and at the top of the stroke the operation is reversed to lower said compressor and the cycle is repeated.
2. The combination of claim 1 wherin said gas is oxygen and said piston head includes a rigid disk extending to the inner wall of said cylinder made of a material which is not attacked by oxygen.
3. The combination of claim 1 and a throttle valve in the conduit operatively connected to the top of said cylinder to adjust the speed of reciprocation of said compressor.
4. The combination of claim 1 wherein said stroke adjusting means includes a bar pivoted intermediate its ends and operatively connected at one of its ends to said plunger, a rod extending laterally above said bar and mounted for limited vertical movement, a cam having a generally arcuate surface carried by said rod, :1 pin extending laterally from said bar beneath said arcuate surface, said rod being rotatable to vary the distance between said arcuate surface and said pin and a normally closed valve in one of said conduits having a vertically reciprocable stern above said cam so that at a pre-adjusted downstroke position of said plunger said pin will engage said cam which will in turn depress said stern and open said valve to cause gas to be supplied to the bottom of said cylinder and to be exhausted from the top to cause said piston to reverse and move in an upstroke.
5. The combination of claim 4 wherein said means to deliver air or oxygen to the patient includes a plenum chamber, a tube carrying a face mask connected to said chamber and a bellows communicative with said chamber, said bar being pivotally attached to said bellows at its end opposite said plunger whereby said bellows contracts on the upstroke of said plunger and expands on the downstroke.
6. The combination of claim 5 wherein said means to deliver air or oxygen to the patient further includes a two-way valve including a body communicating with said plenum chamber and ports to atmospheric exhaust and to said face mask tube and including a stern extending outside of said body, and linkage including an indexing member operatively connected between said stem and said plunger whereby for three successive contractions of said bellows said exhaust port remains open and said face mask tube port remains closed and on the fourth contraction of said bellows said face mask tube port opens and said exhaust port closes so that pulmonary ventilation is provided for every fourth stroke of said plunger.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,209,748 10/1965 Thomas 128-53 3,254,645 6/1966 Rand et al. 12852 3,277,887 10/1966 Thomas 128-53 3,291,124 12/1966 Jennings et al 128-53 3,307,541 3/1967 Hewson 128-53 RICHARD A GAUDET, Primary Examiner.
CHARLES F. ROSENBAUM, Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. AN EXTERNAL HEART MASSAGE AND PULMONARY VENTILATION DEVICE COMPRISING A BASE, A HORIZONTALLY EXTENDING MEMBER, MEANS MOUNTING SAID MEMBER ABOVE SAID BASE FOR ADJUSTMENT VERTICALLY TOWARDS AND AWAY FROM SAID BASE, A STERNUM COMPRESSOR CARRIED BY SAID MEMBER, MEANS TO RECIPROCATE SAID STERNUM COMPRESSOR VERTICALLY, ADJUSTABLE MEANS LIMITING THE DOWNWARD STROKE OF SAID STERNUM COMPRESSOR AND MEANS OPERATIVELY CONNECTED TO SAID STROKE ADJUSTING MEANS TO DELIVER AIR OR OXYGEN INTERMITTENTLY TO A PATIENT SYNCHRONOUSLY WITH SAID STROKE ADJUSTMENT, SAID COMPRESSOR INCLUDES A PLUNGER HAVING A PISTON HEAD AT ONE END AND A PAD AT ITS OTHER ADAPTED TO ENGAGE THE STERNUM AND SAID MEANS TO RECIPROCATE SAID COMPRESSOR INCLUDES A CYLINDER IN WHICH SAID PISTON HEAD AND PLUNGER ARE SLIDABLE, A SOURCE OF GAS UNDER PRESSURE AND VALVED CONDUITS OPERATIVELY CONNECTED TO THE TOP AND BOTTOM OF SAID CYLINDER SO THAT GAS IS SUPPLIED TO THE BOTTOM OF THE CYLINDER BENEATH SAID PISTON HEAD WHILE IT IS SIMULTANEOUSLY EXHAUSTED FROM THE TOP OF THE CYLINDER ABOVE SAID PISTON HEAD TO RAISE SAID COMPRESSOR AND AT THE TOP OF THE STROKE THE OPERATION IS REVERSED TO LOWER SAID COMRESSOR AND THE CYCLE IS REPEATED.
US501680A 1965-10-22 1965-10-22 Heart-lung resuscitator Expired - Lifetime US3348536A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US501680A US3348536A (en) 1965-10-22 1965-10-22 Heart-lung resuscitator

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US501680A US3348536A (en) 1965-10-22 1965-10-22 Heart-lung resuscitator

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3348536A true US3348536A (en) 1967-10-24

Family

ID=23994582

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US501680A Expired - Lifetime US3348536A (en) 1965-10-22 1965-10-22 Heart-lung resuscitator

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3348536A (en)

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3425409A (en) * 1965-11-08 1969-02-04 Max Isaacson Resuscitator
US3461861A (en) * 1966-10-05 1969-08-19 Michigan Instr Inc Cardiac compressor and ventilation means
US3552390A (en) * 1968-04-15 1971-01-05 John T Muller Cardiopulmonary resuscitating apparatus
US3782371A (en) * 1971-06-07 1974-01-01 R Derouineau Resuscitation apparatus for simultaneous cardiac massage and artificial respiration
US3965893A (en) * 1974-05-17 1976-06-29 Franz Ragailler Artificial respiration appliance
EP0010908A1 (en) * 1978-10-19 1980-05-14 Michigan Instruments. Inc. Cardiac treatment apparatus
US4349015A (en) * 1980-11-14 1982-09-14 Physio-Control Corporation Manually-actuable CPR apparatus
US5693005A (en) * 1993-09-24 1997-12-02 Vistung; Willy Mobile cardiac massage apparatus
US5823185A (en) * 1997-04-04 1998-10-20 Chang; Tien-Tsai Manual pressing and automatic air breathing cardiopulmonary resuscitation first-aid device
US6397843B1 (en) * 2000-01-21 2002-06-04 Chang Tien-Tsai Electrical and manual pressing device of automated air blowing for first-aid cardiopulmonary resuscitation
US20140207031A1 (en) * 2002-03-21 2014-07-24 Physio-Control, Inc. Support structure for administering cardiopulmonary resuscitation

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3209748A (en) * 1963-04-19 1965-10-05 Westinghouse Electric Corp Reciprocating heart resuscitator device having fluid pressure control apparatus
US3254645A (en) * 1962-04-20 1966-06-07 Rand Dev Corp Reciprocating heart resuscitation device means for adjusting pressure
US3277887A (en) * 1963-11-21 1966-10-11 Westinghouse Electric Corp Portable heart massage apparatus
US3291124A (en) * 1963-02-21 1966-12-13 Westinghouse Electric Corp Pneumatically controlled portable heart massage apparatus
US3307541A (en) * 1963-05-01 1967-03-07 Carl E Hewson Heart and lung resuscitator

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3254645A (en) * 1962-04-20 1966-06-07 Rand Dev Corp Reciprocating heart resuscitation device means for adjusting pressure
US3291124A (en) * 1963-02-21 1966-12-13 Westinghouse Electric Corp Pneumatically controlled portable heart massage apparatus
US3209748A (en) * 1963-04-19 1965-10-05 Westinghouse Electric Corp Reciprocating heart resuscitator device having fluid pressure control apparatus
US3307541A (en) * 1963-05-01 1967-03-07 Carl E Hewson Heart and lung resuscitator
US3277887A (en) * 1963-11-21 1966-10-11 Westinghouse Electric Corp Portable heart massage apparatus

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3425409A (en) * 1965-11-08 1969-02-04 Max Isaacson Resuscitator
US3461861A (en) * 1966-10-05 1969-08-19 Michigan Instr Inc Cardiac compressor and ventilation means
US3552390A (en) * 1968-04-15 1971-01-05 John T Muller Cardiopulmonary resuscitating apparatus
US3782371A (en) * 1971-06-07 1974-01-01 R Derouineau Resuscitation apparatus for simultaneous cardiac massage and artificial respiration
US3965893A (en) * 1974-05-17 1976-06-29 Franz Ragailler Artificial respiration appliance
EP0010908A1 (en) * 1978-10-19 1980-05-14 Michigan Instruments. Inc. Cardiac treatment apparatus
US4349015A (en) * 1980-11-14 1982-09-14 Physio-Control Corporation Manually-actuable CPR apparatus
US5693005A (en) * 1993-09-24 1997-12-02 Vistung; Willy Mobile cardiac massage apparatus
US5823185A (en) * 1997-04-04 1998-10-20 Chang; Tien-Tsai Manual pressing and automatic air breathing cardiopulmonary resuscitation first-aid device
US6397843B1 (en) * 2000-01-21 2002-06-04 Chang Tien-Tsai Electrical and manual pressing device of automated air blowing for first-aid cardiopulmonary resuscitation
US20140207031A1 (en) * 2002-03-21 2014-07-24 Physio-Control, Inc. Support structure for administering cardiopulmonary resuscitation
US20170224582A1 (en) * 2002-03-21 2017-08-10 Physio-Control, Inc. Support structure for administering cardiopulmonary resuscitation
US10179087B2 (en) * 2002-03-21 2019-01-15 Physio-Control, Inc. Support structure for administering cardiopulmonary resuscitation
US10292901B2 (en) * 2002-03-21 2019-05-21 Physio-Control, Inc. Support structure for administering cardiopulmonary resuscitation

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3348536A (en) Heart-lung resuscitator
US3425409A (en) Resuscitator
US3782371A (en) Resuscitation apparatus for simultaneous cardiac massage and artificial respiration
US5628305A (en) Universal ventilation device
US4067328A (en) Lung ventilator
US2766753A (en) Apparatus for artificial respiration, in particular for purposes of anesthesia
US20030178025A1 (en) Mechanical resuscitator
US3307541A (en) Heart and lung resuscitator
US4856499A (en) Erection device
US3939830A (en) Manually operable dechoking and resuscitating device
US5711295A (en) Resuscitation device
US2770232A (en) Respirator system
JPH02503275A (en) chest compression device
US2902992A (en) Bellows mechanism for artificial respiration
GB1166749A (en) Apparatus for Intermittently Dispensing Oxygen or Other Gas Suitable for Breathing
US3336920A (en) Resuscitator apparatus
US2063043A (en) Respiration method and apparatus
US3106204A (en) Respiratory apparatus
US3461866A (en) Manually operated artificial respirator
GB433432A (en) Device for producing artificial respiration or moving the trunk of the body
US3461861A (en) Cardiac compressor and ventilation means
US2737177A (en) Life-restoring apparatus
US1177208A (en) Pulmotor.
US5009226A (en) Mechanical resuscitator
US2904034A (en) Lung ventilating apparatus