This application is a national stage entry of PCT/EP2015/080223 filed Dec. 17, 2015, which claims convention priority from Swiss provisional patent application 01993/14 filed on Dec. 19, 2014, the contents each of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
This invention relates to a protective cap having an associated container or bottle for liquid or pasty media, thus for closures, dosage systems or application systems such as sprays or droppers of bottles with arbitrary contents, among other things also pharmaceutical preparations which should be stored in a child-resistant way. This means such a protective cap should ensure that the container or the bottle cannot opened by an infant's hand at all. It is to be accomplished by this protective cap not being normally removable by an infant's hand, at least not straightaway, from a closure or dosage system of the container or the bottle so that the content is inaccessible to the infant.
Many pharmaceutical substances and preparations, which are dosed and output by application systems like nasal sprays or eye droppers, contain substances which are potentially dangerous to children. Of course every closure, which is ultimately openable, will at some point be opened by resourceful older children, primarily if they have the necessary physical strength for this. If, however, a closure requires a certain expenditure of physical force for opening, it can be designed in such a way that it is definitely not openable by infants, and can be opened by larger children only very unlikely or at least with difficulty.
Such application systems, for example drip bottles for outputting countable drops, are comparatively small bottles of few centimeters in height and a diameter of likewise only about 2 cm, to give an order of magnitude. They are employed for all kinds of liquid or viscous chemicals or drugs, which are required in small amounts and are therefore applied by dripping. Eye-drop liquid is typically dispensed in such a dripping bottle. The liquid can be dripped into the eye a drop at a time. For nasal sprays, the application system contains a pump for generating a spray jet which for applying is directed into the nose. In a similar manner and with still further closure systems, other substances can also be dispensed in such bottles, for instance toxic chemicals, glues, colors, lacquers, solvents and the like.
In the case of drip bottles for eye drops, these have a conically tapered nozzle spout in the form of a dosing tube. This nozzle spout is sealingly inserted into the bottle mouth, which is slightly tapered compared to the bottle. The bottle mouth itself is externally equipped with a screw thread. The associated bottle closure forms a thimble-type cover with an inside thread, which can be screwed onto this outside thread at the bottle mouth. This closure, however, does not offer guarantee that the bottle cannot be opened straight away by a child or infant if it unintentionally gets into their hands. If the child then possibly sucks or drinks from the bottle, serious health problems can result. To preclude children's access to these substances or to at least impede it substantially, a system should be found which makes it distinctly more difficult for children to attain the corresponding substance or to utilize the application system.
The object of the present invention is thus to provide a child-resistant protective cap for an associated container or bottle for liquid or pasty media, so that application system belonging to the container or bottle is not accessible to infants and is accessible by larger children only highly unlikely and is thus not activatable or a lock is not openable. In a variant, the protective cap should moreover have an initial-opening guarantee device and it should be executed in such a way that it counteracts an unintentional evaporation of the container's content. It should be designable in different variants so that, depending on the embodiment, more or less physical force is required for removing said protective cap.
This object is achieved in detail by a child-resistant protective cap having an associated container for liquid or pasty media, in particular also for pharmaceutical application systems which are characterized in that the protective cap and the container are each equipped with at least one thread, which engage each other by the one thread (6) being bead-like outwardly protrudingly shaped and the other thread (15) being recessed in a groove-like manner, and wherein at the lower end of the thread (6) on the protective cap (1) or bottle (9) there is configured on the bead-like thread (6) a widened region (7) which is screwable in the groove-like thread (15) along the same and at its back end forms a stop face (8), and wherein said widened region (7), in the end position of screwing on the protective cap (1), engages a wider region (17) in the groove-shaped thread (15) on the bottle (5) or protective cap (1), which wider region (17) forms an undercut (18), so that the stop face (8) on the bead-like thread catches behind the undercut (18), and the stop face (8) is squeezable under the undercut (18) only by pressing the protective cap (1) toward the bottle (9) with slight elastic deformation of its walling in the mouth region, and is hereinafter unscrewable upon simultaneous rotation.
The basic idea thus is to completely cover and enclose the closure of the container or its application system with the help of a protective cap. When in mounted position on the container, the protective cap normally prevents access to the closure or the application system and therefore also to the content of the container. To be able to use the closure or the application system, the protective cap must first be taken off. The taking-off of the protective cap is blocked by a mechanism, which must be unblocked for the purpose of using the lock or application system before the protective cap can be removed.
In the figures, an exemplary embodiment of this child-resistant protective cap is shown in several representations and its function is explained with the help of these drawings.
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The protective cap 1 rest on top in mounted position on the bottle shoulder 25 supported by the tamper-evident band 2. In this manner it is prevented that the protective cap 1 can be pressed against the bottle 9 at all as long as the tamper-evident band 2 is intact. The blocking mechanism of the threads 6, 15, however, can also not be overcome and unscrewing the protective cap 1 is impossible. Removing the protective cap 1 is blocked until the tamper-evident band 2 is removed. In order to tear away the tamper-evident band 2, this is interrupted in one place. A pull-off tab 3 is attached at this breaking point 10, at which the user can grasp the tamper-evident band 2 and pull it from the protective cap 1 and thus remove it completely from the protective cap 1. Only upon a removed tamper-evident band 2 is pressing the protective cap 1 against the bottle or the container possible, and the protective cap 1 can hereinafter be taken from the bottle 9 or the container.
In order to unscrew the protective cap 1, the tamper-evident band 2 must thus be torn off first. Then the protective cap 1 can be pressed first in axial direction against the bottle 9, which is effected with a slight elastic deformation of the walling of the protective cap mouth. In this connection, this walling of the neck 11 forms a slide-off surface and is flared conically downward in interrupted distances, and when pressing down the protective cap 1 therefore effectuates an elastic deformation of the lower region of the protective cap 1 corresponding to the pentagonal neck 11, as seen here from above, flaring conically downward. A certain force is thus required in order to press the protective cap 1 downward against the bottle and to somewhat deform it at the lower edge. The geometry of the slide-off surface can be laid out in such a way that it is made distinctly more difficult for children to apply the required force. Depending on how strong the wall thickness is configured, the elastic deformation can make a larger or smaller amount of force necessary. To remove the protective cap, it must first be pressed against the container or bottle. Only then can it be unscrewed under at first persistent pressure in counterclockwise direction, and after an initial rotation by a few angular degrees, the protective cap 1 can then be unscrewed without further pressure against the bottle. For the purpose of this unscrewing, the indentations 4 on the outside contour of the protective cap 1 are shaped so that the other wall parts form handle grooves to guarantee a better surface feel. The stripping of the tamper-evident band 2 is irreversible, by which can be ensured that the product is unutilized upon an intact tamper-evident band 2.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1993/14 | Dec 2014 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/080223 | 12/17/2015 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2016/097145 | 6/23/2016 | WO | A |
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3339770 | Weigand | Sep 1967 | A |
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20070039914 | Buono | Feb 2007 | A1 |
20080000932 | Cleary | Jan 2008 | A1 |
20180016067 | Heim | Jan 2018 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0042603 | Dec 1981 | EP |
0343778 | Nov 1989 | EP |
S5355352 | May 1978 | JP |
Entry |
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International Search Report; PCT Application No. PCT/EP2015/080223; dated Mar. 22, 2016. |
English Translation of International Search Report; PCT Application No. PCT/EP2015/080223; dated Mar. 22, 2016. |
Written Opinion of PCT Application No. PCT/EP2015/080223; dated Mar. 22, 2016. |
English Translation of Written Opinion; PCT Application No. PCT/EP2015/080223; dated Jun. 7, 2017. |
English Language Abstract of JPS5355352 Obtained From www.espacenet.com on Jun. 20, 2017. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20180016067 A1 | Jan 2018 | US |