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Design Alternatives

Design Alternatives. Patient Positioning Aid E. Vargas, E. Kordeih, M. Britan December 2, 2005. Outline. Brief Background Patient Specifications MRI Machine Dimensions Applications Design Alternatives Our Design Decision Future Direction References / Acknowledgements.

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Design Alternatives

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  1. Design Alternatives Patient Positioning Aid E. Vargas, E. Kordeih, M. Britan December 2, 2005

  2. Outline • Brief Background • Patient Specifications • MRI Machine • Dimensions • Applications • Design Alternatives • Our Design Decision • Future Direction • References / Acknowledgements

  3. Patient Specifications • Bruce • Renal failure, manual wheelchair • Joan • Heart failure, old, weak, hard of hearing • Lloyd • Type II Diabetes, overweight • Sophia • On heparin, limited right arm function, uses a cane • Arnold • Parkinson’s, Diabetes, suffers from slight to moderate tremors • Dave • Limited use to right arm and leg, may use a scooter.

  4. Imaging: MRI Machine • Phillips Achieva 3.0T • Sets the standard in comfort and image quality • Provides strength through partnership with other coil manufacturers • Complements SENSE™ functionality for super-fast imaging and exceptional resolution • Dimensions: • Bed: 8’ L x 4’ W x 2” H • Current pad: 2” thick (all around) • Contour: 1.5” dip in center in ‘bed-frame’

  5. How does it work? MRI Procedure

  6. MRI Applications

  7. Design Alternatives • #1 - Bead filled mattress (original idea) • #2 - Star / ROHO Cushion • #3 – Otto Bach Cloud • #4 – Varilite ‘Pro-Form’ Concept

  8. Design Alternative #1 Protocol for Bead Filled Mattress: • Initially filled with air • Patient lays down • Beads contour body • Deflation occurs • Contour stays as a solid entity • Clinician allows air back into the system • Ready for the next patient

  9. Bead Filled Mattress • What kind of beads? • (material, size) • Covering? • (Softness, elongation, tension, strength) • Encapsulation? • (Grid blocking the inlet/out let of air)

  10. Beads

  11. Purpose of beads • Vibrations damper • Dissipate excess energy • Rapid response • Provide rigid support • High surface friction • High resilience characteristics

  12. Purpose of Covering • Create tension • Squeeze beads together • High surface friction • Provide system/patient barrier • Externally pleasant to touch • Impermeable to fluids

  13. Cover • Naugahyde • Darlex • Knit • Water resistant • Impermeable to air • Polar Fleece • Rubatex – ‘Scuba Gear’ • Vinyl • Assortment of Colors

  14. Encapsulation • Purpose • Prevent the beads from entering the tubes • Cylindrical cap at end of the inlet/out tube • High surface area • Plastic or strong polymer

  15. Pros and Cons • Pros: • Not extremely expensive. • Imaging compatible. • Retains shape and fixed positioning of any patient. • Can absorb minimal amount of unavoidable movement • Cons: • Encapsulation of beads • Method of suction • Long tubing • Extra stress on frightened patients

  16. Design Alternative #2 • Star / ROHO Cushion Concept Synthesis of Floatation Technology (SOFT) • Robert H. Graebe, the inventor of the ROHO cushions • Uses the principle of Flotation • Archimedes' Principle • The surface forces it to behave the way seawater envelops and supports a sea mammal • Floatation is designed on the concept that blood flow is primarily compromised as a function of deformation of the vascular bed. In total immersion, i.e., scuba divers.

  17. Principles of Floatation • F    =    hdg . A            [where A = base area]      =    (Ah). d . g      =    V . d . g            [where V is the immersed volume]      =    m/g[where m' is the mass of the displaced liquid] • The upthrust is thus the weight of the displaced liquid.. • Archimedes' Principle states that any body partly or wholly immersed in a liquid experiences an upthrust which is equal to the weight of the liquid displaced. Let volume of body = VBLet volume of displaced liquid = VLLet density of body = rhoBLet density of liquid = rhoL – in our case air

  18. Stability of Floatation Buoyant force acts on the object at the center of gravity of displaced liquid

  19. Star / ROHO (cont’d)

  20. Technology Explained

  21. Technology Explained (cont’d) Features and benefits

  22. Material Properties • Neoprene Rubber Physical Properties NEOPRENE is a synthetic rubber material designed to act flexibly, durably, and to resist breakdown by water. It is form fitting and resilient. Because air and water become isolated in its unique molecular structure, Neoprene is temperately stable. The many uses of Neoprene include: wet suits, waders, insulated can holders, sports gloves, mouse pads, pet collars, elbow and knee pads, orthopedic braces, tack gear.

  23. Pros and Cons • Cons • Leakage • Needs proper inflation • Pros • Easy of use • Uses Air instead of water • Custom contour all times • Normal body or abnormal body shape • Equal pressure throughout the contact area • No power pump need • Allows blood flow

  24. Prices of Neoprene Rubber Full Neoprene Sheets (51" x 83")

  25. Design Alternative #3 Otto Bock – The Cloud • The design / concept

  26. The Cloud • Benefits: • Produces clinically acceptable levels of pressure distribution. • Eliminates the risk of bottoming out and the potential for catastrophic failures due to punctures or leak. • Easy to use. No need to frequently check air fill levels or fluid position. • Easily modifies to individual's requirements for a customized fit. • Highly stable.

  27. Disadvantages – The CLOUD • Self corrects to automatically and quickly adjust to the dynamic conditions • Thus, does not have fixed posture positioning. • Requires a knowledgeable technician, clinician, and/or therapist.

  28. Design Alternative #4 Varilite ProForm NX • An easy-to-customize, off-the-shelf product. • Original concept: Seating Cushion • Expand it to a larger size: mattress

  29. Air-Foam Flotation Cushion • Designed for pelvic obliquities and other asymmetrical conditions. • Air-Foam Flotation cushion contains two self-inlfating, independently-adjustable chambers (patent pending). • Adjustments are made using two-way air valves that release air to immerse the user in the foam. • The foam contours to the user and the user’s weight is distributed over the surface of the cushion. • ProForm NX is also available in a single chamber configuration.

  30. Pros Fixed posture Comfortable Easy-to-use Patient specific No pump necessary Inexpensive MRI Safe Cons For efficient positioning may require 6-10 air valves. Anaylsis – ProForm NX

  31. Which One is Best? • RERC 2005-2006 • Aim:Versatile, low-cost, easy-to-adjust patient positioning aid that works with a range of examination table…and meets the customer needs.

  32. Which One is Best? Customer Needs • Bruce • Renal failure, manual wheelchair • Joan • Heart failure, old, weak, hard of hearing • Lloyd • Type II Diabetes, overweight • Sophia • On heparin, limited right arm function, uses a cane • Arnold • Parkinson’s, Diabetes, suffers from slight to moderate tremors • Dave • Limited use to right arm and leg, may use a scooter.

  33. Which One is Best?

  34. Our Decision: ProFormNX • Integrates both air and foam. • Requires no true expertise in air quantity. • Will never bottom out • Durable (up to 5 years) Meets our RERC 2005-2006 aim!!!

  35. Contoured platform Eliminate contour via a solid wedge. Mattress topper will lay flat. Thus can go on most, if not all imaging tables. Abide by the conditions set by the MRI machine Our Design - Envisioned

  36. Future Direction • Decisions must be made: • Foam • Coverings • Type of air valves • Sizes of wedges using the same technology.

  37. References • www.varilite.com • www.ottobockus.com • www.plus2physics.com • www.roho.com • www.starcushion.com • www.systam.com • www.columbianchemicals.com • JPO – Journal of Prosthetics and Orthotics • Medical Design New – Sept/Oct 2001 • Vibrating powder beds: a comparison of experimental and DistinctElement Method simulated data. A.J. Matchett. Powder Technology, 1999. • Efficient Computation of Particle Motions in Discrete Element Modelingof Particle Damping, Michael Yu Wang.

  38. Acknowledgements • Dr. Strey – our advisor • Dr. Wagshul – Radiology Department • Rabson Rehab Sales • David Rabbiner • Tom Sonntag • BioDynamics Ltd • Raul Vargas

  39. Thank You. Any questions?

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