Thermal surgical drape

Surgery – Body protecting or restraining devices for patients or infants – Drapes

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C128S853000, C128S854000, C002S458000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06820622

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates, generally, to medical appliances. More particularly, it relates to means and methods for avoiding hypothermic conditions in a patient undergoing surgery.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Surgical procedures are typically performed in operating rooms where the temperature is maintained at about sixty three degrees Fahrenheit (63° F.) to inhibit the growth of bacterial infections. Although the medical staff can dress appropriately for the cool temperature, the patient is usually in a state of undress and can experience hypothermia if not provided with a warming means. Surgical drapes are not intended to and do not function as a warming means. A conventional blanket can do the Job, but it is not cost effective to sterilize and re-use blankets or to purchase a new blanket for each surgical procedure.
Accordingly, inventors have developed light-in-weight, disposable articles that perform the function of a conventional blanket. One popular blanket means is sold under the trademark Bair Hugger® blanket. It performs patient temperature management by distributing warm air from a blower means throughout a structure that looks something like a swimming pool raft when inflated. It is placed in transverse relation to a supine patient so that its main body or medial part covers and warms the patients chest area and its opposite ends cover the patient's outstretched arms. The abdomen and legs of the patient are not covered. Thus, the blanket does not serve as a surgical drape.
The conventional use of surgical drapes and blanket means results in the patient being billed for both items. It would therefore be highly advantageous and more economical from a patient's perspective if a structure could be provided that combined the respective functions of surgical drapes and blanket means.
The Bair Hugger® blanket and others like it also provide a rectangular plastic shield that covers the patient's face. One end of the shield is attached to the blanket means in the upper chest region thereof and the two corners of the free end of the shield are tied to upstanding poles positioned on opposite sides of the head of the operating table, such poles typically being used to support items such as intravenous feeding bottles. The shield protects the patient's face from dropped surgical instruments and the like.
There are numerous times throughout the course of an operation where a surgeon needs to lay one tool down and to pick up another. Having an assistant take the relinquished tool and supply the new tool is burdensome on both the surgeon and the assistant. The above-mentioned plastic shield is positioned at an angle relative to a horizontal plane and therefore cannot be used to deposit tools thereupon. Thus, a platform for the support of such tools would be desirable.
One drawback of the known blanket means is that they are quite thick when inflated with warm air. Their bulk can interfere with the movements of the surgical team. Thus, a blanket that is less bulky when inflated and that does not sacrifice patient temperature control would overcome that particular shortcoming.
One member of the surgical team, the anesthesiologist, monitors the urine output of the patient during surgery, among other duties. In most cases, a Foley® catheter or equivalent connects the patient's bladder to an elongate tube that extends from the foot of the operating table to the head thereof where the urine collection bag is positioned for the convenience of the anesthesiologist. When conventional surgical drapes and blanket means are used, no provision is made for accommodation of the Foley® catheter or the elongate tube. The Foley® catheter must therefore be disconnected from the patient and from the elongate tube when the operation is over so that the patient can be taken to the recovery room. In some cases, the Foley® catheter must then be reinserted into the bladder and the elongate tube reconnected. Thus, a blanket means that would enable a patient to remain attached to the Foley® catheter even after removal of the blanket means at the conclusion of a surgical procedure would be highly advantageous.
However, in view of the prior art considered as a whole at the time the present invention was made, it was not obvious to those of ordinary skill in the pertinent art how the perceived needs could be fulfilled.
SUMMARY OF INVENTION
The long-standing but heretofore unfulfilled need for a combination surgical drape and blanket means for patient temperature management is met by a construction that includes a substrate formed of a flexible material having a main body adapted to overlie a patient. The substrate has a width and length sufficient to cover the shoulders, chest, torso, and legs of a patient, and it includes a pair of arm-covering members connected to and extending from the main body on opposite sides thereof. A flexible sheet of material overlies the main body and the arm-covering members. A plurality of interconnecting members interconnect the substrate and the flexible sheet of material. Each interconnecting member joins the substrate and the flexible sheet of material together at a point so that the substrate and flexible sheet of material are unconnected to one another around that point. An air inlet admits air into a space between the substrate and the flexible sheet of material. The air inlet is adapted to admit warm compressed air from a remote source of warm compressed air into the space between the substrate and the flexible sheet of material. A plurality of small vent holes are formed in the flexible sheet of material to enable warm compressed air in the space to flow therefrom.
A removably mounted panel is formed in the main body and includes a section of substrate and flexible sheet of material bonded to one another at a peripheral edge of the panel so that the panel is not in fluid communication with the inlet means so that when the removable panel is removed, compressed warm air continues to flow throughout the arm-covering members and all parts of the main body outside the boundary of the removable panel.
The combination surgical drape and blanket performs the function of a surgical drape when disposed in overlying relation to patient, and performs the function of a blanket when warm compressed air is admitted into the space. Removal of the removable panel exposes a part of the patient's body to which access is needed for a surgical procedure.
A concavity adapted to receive a patient's head is formed in the main body in a transversely disposed edge thereof. A flexible shield of rectangular construction is connected at a first edge to the main body just below that concavity, i.e., at the upper chest area, and has a second edge opposite to the first edge adapted to be connected to a support means at a point above the patient's head so that the shield is disposed at an angle over the patient's head. A rigid platform member is disposed in overlying relation to the flexible shield and at least one clamp is secured to the platform. The at least one clamp is adapted to hold a tool deposited atop the platform. A tool deposited atop the platform therefore does not roll down the platform so that it is available for use at any time. The at least one clamp includes at least one pair of laterally spaced apart clamps so that a first end of a tool is supported by a first clamp and so that a second end of the tool is supported by a second clamp. Each clamp of each pair of laterally spaced apart clamps is hingedly mounted to the rigid platform so that it is storable atop the rigid platform in a folded configuration when not in use and is positioned in upstanding relation to the rigid platform when disposed in an operable configuration.
In a further embodiment, a pair of bifurcated leg-covering members extend from the main body. Each leg member has a structure like that of the main body and the arm-covering members so that the legs of the patient are individually covered and draped.
The combination surg

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