1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an automatic analyzer for performing qualitative and quantitative analyses of biological samples such as blood and urine, and more particularly to an automatic analyzer equipped with pipetting probes for isolating prescribed amount of samples to be examined or reagents, and with mechanisms for washing the pipetting probes.
2. Description of the Related Art
An automatic analyzer for use in hospital laboratories and the like has a probe for pipetting samples and a probe for pipetting reagents. The automatic analyzer pepets samples to be examined or reagents to reaction cells with these probes to make them react and then measures the quantity of materials to be measured, or the density and activity of enzymes in the samples. The measurement is carried out by measuring the color change caused by the reaction on the basis of absorbance. It is indispensable for these probes to be washed in the inside and outside every time samples to be examined or reagents are changed in order to prevent contamination between samples to be examined or carry-over between reagents.
In an attempt to meet such necessity, automatic analyzers in the past were provided with a washing tub between sample containers and a reaction disk, or between reagent containers and a reaction disk. The washing tub is so constructed and arranged as to store washing water or produce a running water state. A pipetting probe is washed in the tub with every pipetting operation through its insertion in the tub and immersion in running water. In recent years, in addition to a wash by running water, there is devised such a method as is described in JP-A No. 2002-340913 (Patent Document 1). In the method, a washing tub is provided with a suction mechanism to effectively remove droplets of washing water remained on the tip of a pipetting probe by suction force as well as strengthening washing power to the probe.
Patent Document 1: JP-A No. 2002-340913
Automatic analyzers in the past were designed to pour washing water on the tip of a pipetting probe, thereby letting a natural flow of the water wash away samples or reagents adhered to the outside of the probe. Such washing mechanism, however, lacked washing power strong enough to remove firmly adhered substances without a residue or could not wash thoroughly away samples or reagents splashed around the probe, resulting in a risk of carry-over.
Another problem is that, while such art as is disclosed in the patent document 1 may remove droplets of washing water remained on the tip of a probe during the washing process, it fails to remove droplets of reagents adhered to the tip of a probe when the probe pipettes reagents for want of washing process. If a sample examination should be performed with droplets of reagents or samples as well as washing water remaining on the tip of a probe, the remained droplets will come to be mixed in a sample to be examined awaiting the following measurement. This will have an influence on a reaction system and make it impossible to obtain accurate measurements. There may also happen a problem that droplets of reagents, which are adhered to the tip of a probe, enter into reaction liquid, resulting in a change in the amount of reagents to be used for reaction. In particular, as the amount of reaction liquid in an automatic analyzer becomes smaller and smaller these days, even to bring in a small amount of droplets has come to have a risk of badly affecting measurement result. Thus there still remains a problem that inconvenience caused by the droplets remained on a pipetting probe cannot be completely dissolved.
Further, as the processing speed of an automatic analyzer becomes faster and faster these days, there is a growing demand for shorter cycle time of pipetting. To meet such demand, there is proposed a method in which, every time a pipetting probe detects droplets, the probe is inserted into a washing tub capable of removing droplets to remove them. Such method, however, has a possibility of causing slower processing speed. Another method, in which a pipetting probe is moved down for a wash, has the same problem as the former one has.
The present invention was made in the light of the aforementioned problems, and an object of the present invention is to provide an automatic analyzer that can effectively and efficiently remove the dirt from probes with the operation of probes kept minimized. At the same time, the present invention aims at providing an automatic analyzer that can remove droplets of samples and reagents as well as washing water remained on the tip of probes as much as possible. Thus it will be possible to solve the problem that droplets on the tip of probes get mixed into containers of samples to be examined, reaction cells, and containers of reagents, resulting in inaccurate measurements.
To solve the aforementioned problems, the present invention has means as follows.
An automatic analyzer including one or more pipetting probes for pipetting reagents or samples to be examined, one or more pipetting-probe-transferring means for transferring the probes and one or more washing tubs installed on the transfer paths and having structure permitting the probes to pass therethrough, the washing tub having washing-water-discharging orifices for discharging washing water and air-jetting orifices for jetting out air.
One of other preferable device arrangement of the present invention is an automatic analyzer including a probe for discharging or sucking/discharging reagents or samples to be examined, a transfer-control means for controlling the transfer of the probe, and a washing tub installed on the passing path of the probe and having structure permitting the probe to pass therethrough. The washing tub has orifices shared for jetting out washing water therethrough and for jetting out air therethrough respectively at the probe that is passing through the tub under control of the transfer-control means and a switching mechanism for switching a means for feeding washing water and a means for feeding air in the middle of feeding pipes.
As for preferable construction of a washing tub, the washing tub may be so constructed as not to hinder the transfer of a probe, to enclose the probe with its block wall to the extent that the wall does not touch droplets adhered to the tip of the probe, and to keep a splash of liquid within the tub when the splash occurs by jetting out washing water or air at the probe from the position higher than the level where the washing water hits the probe.
As for a preferable washing mechanism, a plurality of washing-water-jetting orifices may be installed with them directed not only to the tip of a probe but also to the whole probe inclusive of the upper part thereof.
Also, as for a preferable mechanism for removing droplets by the jet of air, an air-jetting orifice may be situated at least higher than the horizontal direction with respect to the tip of a probe and the air-jetting orifice is directed to the tip of the probe.
Further, one of the most preferable device operation of the automatic analyzer having aforementioned construction according to the present invention is that, during the probe washing process, a probe has only to move horizontally and then halt before the jet of washing water starts. When the jet of washing water is over, droplets of washing water are removed from the probe by the jet of air. In addition to this process, while a probe passes through the washing tub after it has isolated a reagent or a sample to be examined, air is jetted out through an air-jetting orifice at the tip of the probe, thereby removing droplets there all the time. It would be preferable to provide a droplet-detecting sensor on the tip of a probe and jet out air thereat only when the sensor detects droplets to remove them.
Here, it should be noted that a pipetting probe according to the present invention is the one consisting of a canalicular nozzle and capable of sucking liquid into the nozzle by putting its inside under negative pressure. The nozzle is made of stainless steel, for example.
According to the present invention, a probe has only to move horizontally during the probe washing process, thereby helping increase washing speed. The invention also makes it possible to wash probes more powerfully than the washing way using natural flow of water by jetting out washing water. The present invention further makes it possible to remove not only washing water on probes but also droplets on the tip of probes for want of washing process by jetting out air. These droplets include ones of, for example, samples or reagents adhered to pipetting probes during the process of isolating samples or reagents. Thus the present invention can reduce the influence such adhered liquid to a probe has on measurements when it is brought into reaction liquid, samples to be examined, reagent containers and the like.
Embodiment (s) of the present invention will be described in detail based on the following figures, wherein:
An operation for washing a reagent-pipetting probe in an automatic analyzer of the past will be described as an example with reference to the sectional view of the washing tub disposed between the sample disk and the reaction disk as illustrated in
It should be noted that, while the supply of washing water for washing the inside and outside of a reagent-pipetting probe 105 is suspended upon the passage of prescribed time allocated for washing among a reagent-pipetting cycle, pouring of washing water on the outside of the probe 105 lasts until the probe 105 moves up before it leaves the washing tub 108. Thus the upward moving of the reagent-pipetting probe 105 and the flow of washing water that takes the opposite direction to the movement of the probe 105 combine to help reduce washing water remained on the outside of the probe 105.
The inventors, as a result of making various examinations about the way of washing the tip of a probe in an automatic analyzer and removing droplets therefrom, have come up with the present invention as the most effective way of washing and removing droplets. Hereinafter, embodiments of the present invention will be described with reference to the following drawings. The present invention relates to improvements in an automatic analyzer in use mainly for a clinical examination. The invention is put into practice through the device arrangement illustrated in
To begin with,
The sample disk 2, reagent disk 4 and reaction disk 6 are respectively rotated by drive units. A reagent required for measurement is pipetted into one of the reaction cells 5 on the reaction disk 6 from one of the reagent containers 3 on the reagent disk 4 using the pipetting arm 8 and pipetting probe 9.
Also, a sample to be examined in one of the sample containers 1 on the sample disk 2 is pipetted into a reaction cell 5 on the reaction disk 6 using the pipetting arm 7 and pipetting probe 9. The reaction cell 5, into which a sample to be examined and a reagent have been pipetted, moves to an agitating station by the rotation of the reaction disk 6 to have the mixture of a sample to be examined and a reagent therein agitated by an agitating unit 11. Then a photometric system 12 analyzes components in the sample to be examined through the measurement of absorbance change in the mixture caused by irradiating light against the reaction cell 5 that has moved to a photometric measuring station. After the analysis is over, the mixture in the reaction cell 5 is scrapped and then the cell 5 is washed by a washing unit 11.
Although
Hereinafter, the details will be made with reference to an embodiment illustrated in
Further, as is illustrated in
The following paragraphs will describe one embodiment about the working of the present invention at the time of washing a pipetting probe and at the time of removing droplets from the probe by air with reference to
On one hand, washing procedure of the present invention, which is illustrated in
On the other hand, droplet-removing procedure of the present invention, which is illustrated in
It should be understood by those skilled in the art that various modifications, combinations, sub-combinations and alterations may occur depending on design requirements and other factors insofar as they are within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2007-207343 | Aug 2007 | JP | national |