Phase modulation spectrophotometric apparatus

Surgery – Diagnostic testing – Measuring or detecting nonradioactive constituent of body...

Reexamination Certificate

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C600S310000, C600S316000, C600S326000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06708048

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a wearable tissue spectrophotometer for in vivo examination of tissue of a specific target region.
Continuous wave (CW) tissue oximeters have been widely used to determine in vivo concentration of an optically absorbing pigment (e.g., hemoglobin, oxyhemoglobin) in biological tissue. The CW oximeters measure attenuation of continuous light in the tissue and evaluate the concentration based on the Beer Lambert equation or modified Beer Lambert absorbance equation. The Beer Lambert equation (1) describes the relationship between the concentration of an absorbent constituent (C), the extinction coefficient (&egr;), the photon migration pathlength <L>, and the attenuated light intensity (I/I
o
).
log

[
I
/
I
o
]
<
L
>
=

ε
i

C
i
(
1
)
The CW spectrophotometric techniques can not determine &egr;, C, and <L> at the same time. If one could assume that the photon pathlength were constant and uniform throughout all subjects, direct quantitation of the constituent concentration (C) using CW oximeters would be possible.
In tissue, the optical migration pathlength varies with the size, structure, and physiology of the internal tissue examined by the CW oximeters. For example, in the brain, the gray and white matter and the structures thereof are different in various individuals. In addition, the photon migration pathlength itself is a function of the relative concentration of absorbing constituents. As a result, the pathlength through an organ with a high blood hemoglobin concentration, for example, will be different from the same with a low blood hemoglobin concentration. Furthermore, the pathlength is frequently dependent upon the wavelength of the light since the absorption coefficient of many tissue constituents is wavelength dependent. Thus, where possible, it is advantageous to measure the pathlength directly when quantifying the hemoglobin concentration in tissue.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In one aspect, the present invention is a pathlength corrected oximeter that utilizes principles of continuous wave spectroscopy and phase modulation spectroscopy. The oximeter is a compact unit constructed to be worn by a subject on the body over long periods of activity. The oximeter is also suitable for tissue monitoring in critical care facilities, in operating rooms while undergoing surgery or in trauma related situations.
The oximeter is mounted on a body-conformable support structure placed on the skin. The support structure encapsulates several light emitting diodes (LEDs) generating light of different wavelengths introduced into the examined tissue and several photodiode detectors with interference filters for wavelength specific detection. Since both the LEDs and the photodiodes are placed directly on the skin, there is no need to use optical fibers. The distance between the LEDs and the diode detectors is selected to examine a targeted tissue region. The support structure also includes a conformable barrier, located between the LEDs and the diode detectors, designed to reduce detection of light that migrates subcutaneously from the source to the detector. The support structure may further include means for preventing escape of photons from the skin without being detected; the photon escape preventing means are located around the LEDs and the photodiode detectors.
The LEDs, the diode detectors, and the electronic control circuitry of the oximeter are powered by a battery pack adapted to be worn on the body or by the standard 50/60 Hz supply. The electronic circuitry includes a processor for directing operation of the sources, the detectors and for directing the data acquisition and processing. The data may be displayed on a readout device worn by the user, sent by telemetry to a remote location or accumulated in a memory for later use.
The oximeter is adapted to measure the attenuation of light migrating from the source to the detector and also to determine the average migration pathlength. The migration pathlength and the intensity attenuation data are then used for direct quantitation of a tissue property.
In another aspect, the invention is a spectrophotometer for tissue examination utilizing a measured average pathlength of migrating photons, including an oscillator adapted to generate a carrier waveform of a selected frequency comparable to an average migration time of photons scattered in tissue on paths from an optical input port to an optical detection port; a light source, operatively connected to the oscillator, adapted to generate light of a selected wavelength that is intensity modulated at the frequency and introduced to a subject at the input port; a photodiode detector adapted to detect, at the detection port, light of the selected wavelength that has migrated in the tissue of the subject between the input and detection ports; a phase detector, operatively connected to receive signals from the oscillator and the diode detector, adapted to measure a phase shift between the introduced and the detected light; and a processor adapted to calculate pathlength based on the phase shift, and determine a physiological property of the examined tissue based on the pathlength.
In another aspect, the invention is a spectrophotometer for tissue examination utilizing a measured average pathlength of migrating photons, including an oscillator adapted to generate a carrier waveform of a selected frequency comparable to an average migration time of photons scattered in tissue on paths from an optical input port to an optical detection port; a light source, operatively connected to the oscillator, adapted to generate light of a selected wavelength that is intensity modulated at the frequency and introduced to a subject at the input port; a photodiode detector adapted to detect, at the detection port, light of the selected wavelength that has migrated in the tissue of the subject between the input and detection ports; a phase splitter adapted to produce, based on the carrier waveform, first and second reference phase signals of predefined substantially different phase; first and second double balanced mixers adapted to correlate the reference phase signals and signals of the detected radiation to produce therefrom a real output signal and an imaginary output signal, respectively; and a processor adapted to calculate, on the basis of the real output signal and the imaginary output signal, a phase shift between the introduced light and the detected light, and determine a physiological property of the examined tissue based on the phase shift.
In another aspect, the invention is a spectrophotometer for tissue examination utilizing a measured average pathlength of migrating photons, comprising a first oscillator adapted to generate a carrier waveform of a first selected frequency comparable to an average migration time of photons scattered in tissue on paths from an optical input port to an optical detection port; a light source, operatively connected to the oscillator, adapted to generate light of a selected wavelength, intensity modulated at the first frequency, that is introduced to a subject at the input port; a photodiode detector adapted to detect, at the detection port, light of the wavelength that has migrated in the tissue of the subject between the input and detection ports, the detector producing a detection signal at the first frequency corresponding to the detected light; a second oscillator adapted to generate a carrier waveform of a second frequency that is offset on the order of 10
4
Hz from the first frequency; a reference mixer, connected to the first and second oscillators, adapted to generate a reference signal of a frequency approximately equal to the difference between the first and second frequencies; a mixer connected to receive signals from the second oscillator and the detection signal and adapted to convert the detection signal to the difference frequency; a phase detector, operatively connected to receive signals from the reference mixer and the converted detection signal

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