Pheumatic alarm for respirator
First Claim
1. An alarm system for a respirator fed from a supply of gas under pressure, the system comprising:
- a control valve having a pilot port, an alarm port, and an input port and displaceable between an open position permitting fluid flow between the alarm and input ports and a closed position preventing such flow;
a pilot line connected to the pilot port and operatively connected to the respirator for feeding pressure from the respirator to the pilot port and urging the valve into the closed position;
a spring braced against the valve and urging same into the open position;
a pneumatically actuatable acoustic alarm connected to the alarm port and comprisinga chamber;
a diaphragm subdividing the chamber into two compartments, one of the compartments being vented and the other unvented;
respective branch lines extending from the compartments to the alarm port of the control valve;
a variable resistance in the branch line extending from the vented compartment; and
a fixed resistance in the branch line extending from the unvented compartment; and
means for feeding gas under pressure substantially continuously to the input port, whereby when the pilot line pressure drops the valve moves into the open position and the alarm is actuated.
1 Assignment
0 Petitions
Accused Products
Abstract
An alarm system for a respirator fed from a supply of gas under pressure comprises a control valve having a pilot port and feed ports displaceable between an open position permitting fluid flow between the feed ports and a closed position preventing such flow. A pilot line connected to the pilot port is also operatively connected to the respirator for feeding gas under pressure from the respirator to the pilot port and urging the valve into one of the positions, the pressure in this pilot line being the pressure being applied to the patient. A spring is braced against the valve and urges same into the other position. A pneumatically actuatable acoustic alarm is connected to one of the feed port. Gas is fed substantially continuously under pressure to the other feed port. Thus when the pilot line pressure drops the valve moves into the other position and the alarm is either actuated or its actuation is stopped. Normally such a drop in pressure, which is indicative of equipment failure, the patient coming disconnected, or the supply running out, causes the valve to open and the alarm to sound.
81 Citations
5 Claims
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1. An alarm system for a respirator fed from a supply of gas under pressure, the system comprising:
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a control valve having a pilot port, an alarm port, and an input port and displaceable between an open position permitting fluid flow between the alarm and input ports and a closed position preventing such flow; a pilot line connected to the pilot port and operatively connected to the respirator for feeding pressure from the respirator to the pilot port and urging the valve into the closed position; a spring braced against the valve and urging same into the open position; a pneumatically actuatable acoustic alarm connected to the alarm port and comprising a chamber; a diaphragm subdividing the chamber into two compartments, one of the compartments being vented and the other unvented; respective branch lines extending from the compartments to the alarm port of the control valve; a variable resistance in the branch line extending from the vented compartment; and a fixed resistance in the branch line extending from the unvented compartment; and means for feeding gas under pressure substantially continuously to the input port, whereby when the pilot line pressure drops the valve moves into the open position and the alarm is actuated. - View Dependent Claims (2, 3, 4)
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5. An alarm system for a respirator fed from a supply of gas under pressure, the system comprising:
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a control valve having a pilot port, an input port, and an alarm port and displaceable between an open position permitting fluid flow between the alarm and input ports and a closed position preventing such flow; a pilot line connected to the pilot port and operatively connected to the respirator for feeding pressure from the respirator to the pilot port and urging the valve into the closed position; a spring braced against the valve and urging same into the open position; and a pneumatically actuatable acoustic alarm connected to the alarm ports, the input port being connected to the supply, whereby when the pilot line pressure drops the valve closes and the alarm sounds.
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Specification