Claims
- 1. A lancing device for lancing the skin to sample blood or interstitial fluid, comprising:
a housing; a lancet carrier adapted to hold a disposable lancet, the carrier mounted adjacent a front end of the housing for movement relative thereto; a cockable spring-biased hammer mechanism for displacing the lancet carrier forwardly to lance the skin; a latch for releasably retaining the hammer mechanism in a cocked position; and a latch-releasing mechanism including a skin-contacting portion for being rearwardly displaced in response to being pressed against the skin, and a latch-releasing portion for releasing the latch in response to the rearward displacement of the skin-contacting portion.
- 2. The lancing device according to claim 1 wherein the skin-contacting portion comprises a sleeve mounted at the front end of the housing, the sleeve being spring-biased forwardly and being displaceable rearwardly in response to being pressed against the skin, to cause the latch-releasing portion to release the latch.
- 3. The lancing device according to claim 1, further comprising a safety device normally disposed in a safety position for preventing the hammer mechanism from being cocked, and being movable to a non-safety position in response to installation of the lancet carrier into the housing for enabling the hammer mechanism to be cocked.
- 4. The lancing device according to claim 3, wherein the lancet carrier carries a disposable lancet which includes a body having a skin-lancing member and a capillary tube, and further including a manually actuable pusher member for pushing the capillary tube forwardly relative to the carrier for drawing-in fluid from the lanced skin, the safety device being moved to its non-safety position by an upper end of the capillary tube.
- 5. The lancing device according to claim 4; wherein the lancet carrier comprises a sleeve mounted in the housing; the sleeve including an internal surface forming a through-passage extending from an upper end to a lower end of the sleeve; a disposable lancet seated in the through-passage; the internal surface configured to permit insertion and removal of the disposable lancet solely through the upper end; the internal surface including at least one upwardly facing seat on which the disposable lancet is supported.
- 6. The lancing device according to claim 1, wherein the lancet carrier carries a disposable lancet which included a body having a skin-lancing member and a capillary tube, and further including a pusher member for pushing the capillary tube forwardly relative to the carrier for drawing-in fluid from lanced skin.
- 7. The lancing device according to claim 1, wherein the lancet carrier comprises a sleeve mounted in the housing; the sleeve including an internal surface forming a through-passage extending from an upper end to a lower end of the sleeve; a disposable lancet seated in the through-passage; the internal surface configured to permit insertion and removal of the disposable lancet solely through the upper end; the internal surface including at least one upwardly facing seat on which the disposable lancet is supported.
- 8. The lancing device according to claim 3, wherein the lancet carrier comprises a sleeve mounted in the housing; the sleeve including an internal surface forming a through-passage extending from an upper end to a lower end of the sleeve; a disposable lancet seated in the through-passage; the internal surface configured to permit insertion and removal of the disposable lancet solely through the upper end; the internal surface including at least one upwardly facing seat on which the disposable lancet is supported.
- 9. The lancing device according to claim 6, wherein the lancet carrier comprises a sleeve mounted in the housing; the sleeve including an internal surface forming a through-passage extending from an upper end to a lower end of the sleeve; a disposable lancet member seated in the through-passage; the internal surface configured to permit insertion and removal of the disposable lancet member solely through the upper end; the internal surface including at least one upwardly facing seat on which the disposable lancet member is supported.
- 10. The lancing device according to claim 1 wherein the skin contacting portion includes a sleeve structure mounted for repeated rearward displacements to urge body fluid from lanced skin.
- 11. The lancing device according to claim 10 wherein the skin contacting portion is shaped to form a depressed ring of body tissue in surrounding relationship to an incision formed in the skin.
- 12. The lancing device according to claim 11 wherein the lancet carrier carries a disposable element having a skin-lancing member, and a capillary tube for drawing-in body fluid from an incision.
- 13. The lancing device according to claim 12, further including a pusher for pushing the capillary tube downwardly relative to the carrier.
- 14. The lancing device according to claim 13, further including a safety device normally disposed in a safety position for preventing the hammer mechanism from being cocked, and being movable to a non-safety position by a rear-end of the capillary tube.
- 15. The lancing device according to claim 11, further including a safety device normally disposed in a safety position for preventing the hammer mechanism from being cocked, and being movable to a non-safety position in response to installation of the lancet carrier into the housing for enabling the hammer mechanism to be cocked.
- 16. A lancing device for lancing skin to sample blood or interstitial fluid, comprising;
a housing; a lancet carrier adapted to carry a disposable lancet and installable into a front end of the housing and being movable relative thereto; a cockable spring-biased hammer mechanism for displacing the lancet carrier forwardly to lance the skin; a latch-releasing mechanism for releasing the latch; and a safety device normally disposed in a safety position for preventing the hammer mechanism from being cocked, and being movable to a non-safety position in response to installation of the lancet carrier into the housing for enabling the hammer mechanism to be cocked.
- 17. The lancing device according to claim 16, wherein the lancet carrier carries a disposable lancet which includes a body having a skin-lancing member and a capillary tube, and further including a pusher member for pushing the capillary tube forwardly relative to the carrier for drawing-in fluid from the lanced skin.
- 18. The lancing device according to claim 17, wherein the lancet carrier comprises a sleeve mounted in the housing; the sleeve including an internal surface forming a through-passage extending from an upper end to a lower end of the sleeve; the internal surface configured to permit insertion and removal of the disposable lancet solely through the upper end; the internal surface including at least one upwardly facing seat on which the disposable lancet is supported.
- 19. The lancing device according to claim 16, wherein the lancet carrier comprises a sleeve mounted in the housing; the sleeve including an internal surface forming a through-passage extending from an upper end to a lower end of the sleeve; a disposable lancet seated in the through-passage; the internal surface configured to permit insertion and removal of the disposable lancet solely through the upper end; the internal surface including at least one upwardly facing seat on which the disposable lancet is supported.
- 20. A lancing device for lancing skin to sample blood or interstitial fluid, comprising:
a housing; a carrier carrying a disposable lancet, the disposable member including a body having a skin-lancing member and a capillary tube; a spring-biased hammer for pushing the carrier forwardly so that the lancet lances the skin; and a pusher member for pushing the capillary tube forwardly relative to the carrier for drawing-in fluid from lanced skin.
- 21. The lancing device according to claim 20, wherein the carrier comprises a sleeve mounted in the housing; the sleeve including an internal surface forming a through-passage extending from an upper end to a lower end of the sleeve; the internal surface configured to permit insertion and removal of the disposable lancet solely through the upper end; the internal surface including at least one upwardly facing seat on which the disposable lancet is supported.
- 22. In combination, a disposable lancet and a carrier therefore; the carrier comprising a sleeve adapted to be mounted in a housing; the sleeve including an internal surface forming a through-passage extending from an upper end to a lower end of the sleeve; the disposable lancet seated in the through-passage; the internal surface configured to permit insertion and removal of the disposable lancet solely through the upper end; the internal surface including at least one upwardly facing seat on which the disposable lancet is supported.
- 23. The combination according to claim 22 wherein the seat includes a plurality of the upwardly facing shoulders, the lancet including vertically spaced projections extending outwardly therefrom and bearing against respective ones of the upwardly facing shoulders.
- 24. The combination according to claim 23 wherein the upwardly facing shoulders comprise a pair of downwardly inclined ramps and a slot disposed below the ramps.
- 25. A lancet carrier adapted to carry a disposable lancet, the lancet carrier comprising a sleeve adapted to be mounted in a housing, the sleeve including an internal surface forming a through-passage extending from an upper end to a lower end of the sleeve and configured to permit insertion and removal of a disposable lancet solely through the upper end, the internal surface including an upwardly facing seat adapted to support a disposable lancet.
- 26. A sampling device for sampling body fluid, comprising:
a housing defining a longitudinal axis; incision-forming means mounted in the housing for forming an incision through a skin surface; a stimulator member mounted at a forward end of the housing and being depressible against the skin to depress a ring of body tissue in surrounding relationship to the skin for urging body fluid toward and outwardly through the incision to form a drop of body fluid at an open end of the incision; and a pusher member for moving the capillary tube forwardly relative to the lancet carrier for drawing-in the body fluid.
- 27. The lancing device according to claim 26 wherein the incision forming means comprises:
a lancet carrier carrying a disposable lancet, the lancet including a skin-lancing member and a capillary tube, the lancet carrier mounted adjacent a front end of the housing for longitudinal movement relative thereto; and means for driving the lancet carrier forwardly and then rearwardly in a substantially continuous motion to form an incision through the skin surface and retract the lancet from the incision.
- 28. The lancing device according to claim 27, further including a cockable spring biased hammer mechanism in the housing for displacing the lancet carrier forwardly; and a safety device disposed in the housing normally in a safety position for preventing the hammer mechanism from being cocked, and being movable to a non-safety position by a rear end of the capillary tube.
- 29. A method of taking a sample of body fluid, comprising the steps of:
A) abutting a forward end of a housing against a skin surface of a user's body; B) forming an incision through the skin surface; C) pressing the housing against the skin surface to repeatedly depress a ring of body tissue in surrounding relationship to the incision to urge body fluid toward and outwardly through the incision to form a drop of body fluid at an open end of the incision; D) extending the capillary tube forwardly relative to the carrier; and E) inserting a forward end of the capillary tube into the drop of body fluid to draw-in the body fluid.
- 30. The method according to claim 29 wherein step A comprises abutting the housing against a surface of the user's body other than a finger tip thereof.
- 31. The method according to claim 29 wherein step A comprises abutting the housing against the user's forearm.
PRIOR APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/128,780 filed Apr. 23, 2002, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/528,097 filed Mar. 17, 2000, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/204,909 filed Dec. 3, 1998 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,056,701, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/857,680 filed May 16, 1997 now U.S. Pat. No. 5,879,311, which claims benefit of applications Serial No. 60/017,133 filed May 17, 1996; No. 60/019,918 filed Jun. 14, 1996; No. 60/023,658 filed Aug. 1, 1996; No. 60/025,340 filed Sep. 3, 1996; No. 60/092,121 filed Sep. 16, 1996; No. 60/064,856 filed Sep. 17, 1996; and No. 60/044,406 filed Oct. 8, 1996; the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference. The present invention is related to inventions disclosed in the following concurrently filed, commonly assigned U.S. applications: Ser. No. 08/858,045, entitled “Methods and Apparatus For Sampling Body Fluid” (attorney docket no. 018176-057); Ser. No. 08/857,335, entitled “Disposable Element for Use in a Body Fluid Sampling Device” (attorney docket 018176-058); Ser. No. 08/858,043 entitled “Methods and Apparatus for Sampling and Analyzing Body Fluid” (attorney docket 018176-059); and Ser. No. 08/858,043, entitled “Methods and Apparatus for Expressing Body Fluid from an Incision” (attorney docket 018176-060). The disclosures of those applications are incorporated herein by reference.
Provisional Applications (5)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60017133 |
May 1996 |
US |
|
60019918 |
Jun 1996 |
US |
|
60023658 |
Aug 1996 |
US |
|
60025340 |
Sep 1996 |
US |
|
60092121 |
Sep 1996 |
US |
Continuations (4)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
10128780 |
Apr 2002 |
US |
Child |
10753973 |
Jan 2004 |
US |
Parent |
09528097 |
Mar 2000 |
US |
Child |
10128780 |
Apr 2002 |
US |
Parent |
09204909 |
Dec 1998 |
US |
Child |
09528097 |
Mar 2000 |
US |
Parent |
08857680 |
May 1997 |
US |
Child |
09204909 |
Dec 1998 |
US |