Inlet port plug

Surgery: light – thermal – and electrical application – Light – thermal – and electrical application – Thermal applicators

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C215S200000, C215S295000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06666879

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to devices for warming a patient during a medical procedure, and more particularly, to an apparatus for restricting air flow through an inlet port in an inflatable thermal blanket used to warm a patient during a medical procedure.
2. Description of the Related Art
Hypothermia, a condition in which a person's body temperature drops below normal, presents serious potential consequences to a patient. Studies have shown that hypothermia occurs in nearly 75 percent of all patients who undergo surgical procedures. Based on recent numbers, this means that 14 million patients a year in the United States alone suffer from hypothermia during surgical procedures. Hypothermia during surgery may be caused by anesthesia, air conditioning within the operating room, infusion of cold blood, IV solutions, and/or irrigation fluids, in addition to other factors.
One well known method for reducing hypothermia during surgical procedures is to place an inflatable thermal blanket over a patient during a surgical procedure. The thermal blanket is inflated with a warmed airstream, exhausting warmed inflating air onto the patient. An inflatable thermal blanket was first disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,572,188 assigned to Augustine Medical, Inc., the assignee of the present application. U.S. Pat. No. 5,405,371, also assigned to Augustine Medical, Inc., is directed to an inflatable thermal blanket that extends transversely across the arms and chest of a patient's body, and is for use during surgery at or below the patient's chest. These patents disclosed an airstream inlet: In later products, the airstream inlet port comprises a cardboard structure adhesively attached to the surface of the thermal blanket. A hole provided through the inlet port is sized to accept the end or nozzle of an inflation hose. In some thermal blankets, a plurality of inlet ports are provided to allow an inflation hose to be attached at any one of a plurality of locations on the blanket. When an operator inserts the inflation hose into an inlet port, the port is closed about the hose. The surface material of the thermal blanket which coincides with the inlet port is either removed or perforated in order to allow a warmed airstream to pass from the hose through the port to the interior of the thermal blanket. The warmed airstream enters the thermal blanket and is forced out a plurality of small exhaust holes in the lower surface of the thermal blanket. Typically, the user perforates or removes that portion of the thermal blanket which covers an inlet port only when that port is to be used. Accordingly, each of the unused inlet arts remains sealed until after the first use.
One problem with this design is that if the operator decides in the middle of the procedure to move the inflation hose from one inlet port to another, the first port must be resealed or otherwise closed in order to prevent air from exiting through that port instead of through the holes on the lower surface of the blanket, as intended. A number of means have been used to reseal or close an inlet port after removal of an inflation hose. However, none of these means are completely satisfactory. For example, tape has been used to seal an open port, but is generally a nuisance to apply. The prior art suggests many other means and modes for sealing or closing an open port, including: adhesive strips, double sided tape, snaps, zippers, folding flaps, Ziplock®-type seal, hook and loop fastener strips, folding wire, or plastic bars. Each of these methods has a number of drawbacks. The method is either relatively costly, or it is inconvenient, requiring a great deal of attention or time of an operator, possibly during critical moments. Such methods and means require accommodation in manufacture of a thermal blanket, increasing production costs and decreasing manufacturability.
Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide a method and apparatus for closing inlet ports in an inflatable thermal blanket such that the port may be opened and closed conveniently and repeatedly.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
This invention is an apparatus, device, or an inlet port plug for closing open inlet ports. The inlet port is in a planar sheet of material that is flexible and/resilient. The inlet port is adapted for mounting on an inflatable device and has a shape and a structure for engaging and retaining an air hose nozzle through which air passes to inflate the inflatable device. When not engaged by an air hose nozzle, the inlet port can be closed, blocked, or sealed with the inlet port plug. The inlet port plug blocks the inlet port in order to prevent air escaping the inflatable device when inflated. The inlet port plug has a generally planar body with coplanar extensions extending radially from the body. At least two of these extensions are received into the inlet port to retain the inlet port plug against the inlet port. Typically, at least the extensions are made from a resilient material so that the extensions may be easily flexed, and be returned to a coplanar alignment with the body when the inlet port plug is removed from the inlet port. The body of the inlet port plug can be of the same material as the extensions, or have other flexibility characteristics consistent with materials such as wood or plastic.
The extensions can be circular, triangular, or rectangular in shape to improve the retention, release, and ease of use of the inlet port plug. In some aspects, the inlet port plug may include pairs of opposing extensions. The extensions may also be formed with non-planar distal ends to be received in the inlet port. In other aspects of the invention, the distal ends of the extensions may be notched.


REFERENCES:
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patent: D246698 (1977-12-01), Morris
patent: 4572188 (1986-02-01), Augustine et al.
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Augustine Medical, Inc. v. Gaymar Industries, Inc., 50 USPQ2d 1900 (CAFC 1999).
Copy of Inlet Port Plug.

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