Nasal mask

Surgery – Respiratory method or device – Face mask covering a breathing passage

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C128S206240

Reexamination Certificate

active

06626177

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a nasal mask. Known nasal masks of which the applicant is aware have suffered from various disadvantages. For example, known nasal masks do not prevent leakage of gas such as air or oxygen from the mask efficiently, and do not distribute forces evenly on the face of the user. With known masks, an undesirably high tensile force has to be exerted by the straps or other mask retaining devices that hold the mask to the user's head, and as a result excessive pressure tends to be exerted on the user's face, causing breakdown of the skin, for example, on the bridge of the nose. Further, known masks interfere with use of eye glasses while wearing the mask, and may present the difficulty that a gas tube may become pinched or obstructed when the user lies on one side, for example when the user is sleeping.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides a shell portion and an interface member for a nasal mask comprising a shell portion defining a hollow enclosure with a rearwardly facing opening defined by edge portions of the shell portion, and a resiliently deformable endless interface member engaging with and extending around said edge portion of the opening and adapted to form a seal between the shell portion and the user's face, and wherein the shell portion and the interface member are at least generally symmetrical about a median plane, and said shell portion has two gas inlet orifices disposed one on each side of the median plane. With this arrangement, the mask may be supplied with gas through two relatively small diameter flexible tubes coupled to the orifices, respectively. The small diameter tubes exert only relatively small tensile forces away from the user's face, and therefore only relatively small forces need to be exerted by retaining straps to retain the mask, and as a result, excessive application of force to the user's face and problems such as breakdown of skin on the bridge of the nose can be avoided. Further, the smaller tubes can be easily oriented in any desired position relative to the mask. For example, they may be positioned downwardly below the mask to facilitate wearing of eye glasses, or may be positioned centrally of the top of the user's head so that they are not obstructed if the user lies on one side.
In a preferred form, the gas inlet orifices are positioned symmetrically with respect to the median plane, and the inner side of the shell adjacent each orifice is provided with an inwardly extending tubular portion for engaging deformable nasal pillows that may form a seal between each orifice and a nostril of the user.
Preferably, the edge portions defining the rearwardly facing opening of the shell are re-entrant edge portions so that the pressures within the mask tend to provide a rearwardly directed component of force tending to resist movement of the mask away from the face of the user. This allows the force applied by the retaining devicesto be still further decreased, so that the effects of pressure on the skin of the face of the user may be further alleviated.


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