Beds – With means for relocating an invalid – Rotatable platform type
Reexamination Certificate
2002-04-19
2004-04-13
Luu, Teri Pham (Department: 3673)
Beds
With means for relocating an invalid
Rotatable platform type
C005S08110C, C005S086100, C005S601000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06718571
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is directed to a patient support mechanism with a patient gurney for the delivery and removal of a patient, of the type wherein the patient gurney has a removable bed board, and the support has a stationary patient bed provided for the acceptance of the bed board or a stationary supporting part provided therefor at an imaging medical system. The invention is also directed to a patient gurney.
2. Description of the Prior Art
In order to assure gentle interfacing with the patient, patient gurneys have been proposed that enable an x-ray examination of the patient without requiring a repositioning or transfer from the gurney onto some other bed, for instance onto a bed belonging to an x-ray apparatus, or onto a supporting part. For example, German OS 43 19 524 discloses a transport mechanism that has frames that are extensible drawer-like or telescope-like in the transverse direction, with which the patient lying on the bed can be laterally placed so that—undisturbed by metallic components—an x-ray image can be acquired by an x-ray detector inserted under the bed.
A similar moving mechanism is disclosed by German Utility Model 90 15 210. This has two bracket arms that are horizontally displaceable transversely to the longitudinal direction for placement onto an x-ray-transparent support mechanism.
The above-described patient support mechanisms, which are for repositioning or transfer of the patient, are known in a wide variety of embodiments for those instances wherein the patient must be transferred from the gurney—with or without a bed board—onto the patient bed or onto a supporting part of an imaging apparatus, the patient being able to be moved into the apparatus with the assistance thereof. Without such a repositioning or transfer, for example, the patient could not be introduced into the narrow opening of a computed or magnetic resonance tomography apparatus. The patient bed can in turn have a supporting part and a bed board.
A simplification achieved in the patient support mechanism proposed in German OS 30 34 932, wherein the bed board can be completely lifted off from the supporting part of the apparatus, so that it can be optionally employed as a bed board of the patient gurney. German OS 42 24 036 discloses that the bed board in such an arrangement be fashioned so as to be lifted completely off from a stationary patient bed and to be placed onto the patient bed. In both instances, this provides the possibility of moving the patient to an imaging apparatus on the bed board with the assistance of the patient gurney and to transfer the patient with the bed board onto the patient bed or the supporting part of the apparatus. In order to avoid the difficulty or needing several persons for transferring the patient, the patient gurney is fashioned U-shaped, i.e. it has U-shaped supports framing an opening toward one side, so that the gurney can be moved under the patient bed or the supporting part from the side.
This arrangement, however, has the disadvantage that the patient can only be transferred proceeding from one side, which is not possible at all in many instances due to constricted or other impeded spatial conditions, so that such a system cannot be utilized everywhere.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
An object of the present invention is to provide a patient support mechanism of the type initially described which allows the patient gurney to be brought or coupled to the patient bed or the supporting part in a simple way proceeding from both sides. A further object is to provide a patient gurney which can be brought to or coupled to a bed or supporting part from both sides.
For achieving this object, carriages are inventively provided at the patient gurney for accepting the bed board and for shifting the bed board from the patient gurney onto the patient bed or onto the supporting part and vice versa, with the carriages being transversely displaceable toward both sides proceeding from a position of the bed board that is not transversely shifted.
The carriages can have brackets that are extensible in telescoping fashion.
As a result of the inventive, transversely displaceable carriage, it is no longer necessary that the entire gurney—as in the case of known U-shaped gurneys—move completely under the patient bed proceeding from the side in order to be able to shift the patient bed or the supporting part thereover. On the contrary, the gurney can be brought next to the patient support table at the left or right in a simple way, dependent on the given space conditions, in order to accomplish a shifting of the patient onto the bed board both from the left as well as from the right. The carriage or its telescopingly extensible brackets are displaceable toward the left as well as toward the right relative to the supporting frame of the gurney, in order to be able to accomplish shifting of the bed board with the assistance of only one attendant regardless of the side at which the gurney approaches the patient bed.
The inventive patient bearing mechanism has an especially simple form when the bed board is lengthened relative to the stationary patient bed or the stationary supporting part, so that two correspondingly spaced acceptance carriages at the patient gurney can have the projecting ends move under them. Due to the long length of the bed board that should generally not be significantly longer then the length of the stationary supporting part of the patient bed, problems arise with respect to the length of the patient gurney, so that the maneuverability thereof in the frequently narrow passages in hospitals is unsatisfactory.
In order to avoid these difficulties, the bed board can be mounted so as to be liftable at the patient bed or at the supporting part via at least one plunger or the like or, groove-shaped transverse recesses being provided in the supporting part into which the carriages or the telescopically extensible brackets of the carriages can be introduced in order to transfer a bed board onto the supporting part of the patient bed or remove it therefrom.
In an embodiment the patient gurney has supports that are preferably essentially I-shaped or double T-shaped, and preferably longitudinally strutted, whose upper transverse leg or transverse strut carries the carriages and whose lower transverse legs or transverse struts carry the running wheels. Such an I-shaped or double T-shaped gurney can be built far simpler and more torsionally stiff, because of the shorter load bearing length of the struts, than can the known U-shaped gurneys serving the purpose of being moved under a patient bed at one side.
The above object is also inventively achieved in a patient gurney that has supports connected to one another via a longitudinal carrier, preferably centrally, that each have an upper transverse strut and a lower transverse strut, the lower transverse struts carrying running wheels, and the upper transverse struts and the lower transverse struts projecting beyond the longitudinal carrier toward both sides—at least in a front view—, so that the supports are essentially I-shaped or double T-shaped.
In particular, the lower transverse struts are centrally connected to one another to form a travel frame, so that, for example, the ends of the transverse struts only carry the running wheels without having other connecting elements proceeding from these ends.
Preferably, the upper transverse struts have transversely displaceable carriages for accepting a bed board and for shifting the bed board onto a stationary supporting part and vice versa.
In particular, the carriages have brackets that can be extended in telescoping fashion. For example, the carriages have brackets seated inside one another that are essentially U-shaped and limited relative to one another in both directions.
REFERENCES:
patent: 2565761 (1951-08-01), Dean
patent: 2691782 (1954-10-01), West
patent: 2937765 (1960-05-01), Shank
patent: 3339503 (1967-09-01), Flodell
patent: 3504386 (1970-04-01), Rossi
patent: 3606112 (1971-09-01), Cheshi
Luu Teri Pham
Schiff & Hardin LLP
Siemens Aktiengesellschaft
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