The invention relates to a disposable that is suitable for application in a device for heating a physiological fluid, in particular blood, and is provided with a conduit for conducting fluid, which conduit comprises conduit sections that are arranged next to each other and bends that connect the conduit sections.
A device for heating a physiological fluid using such a disposable is described in applicants' earlier patent application NL-A-1015999, which is not pre-published.
In such a device for heating a physiological fluid the conduit is accommodated in an element that can be exchanged after use as disposable. The conduit is further embodied such that at least one side is permeable to infrared radiation to facilitate heating by means of, for example, an infrared lamp or another source of infrared radiation.
When heating the physiological fluid in the conduit in this manner, so-called ‘hot spots’ should be avoided. In the case of heating blood plasma, such hot spots may cause the disintegration of the heated blood cells. The conduit through which the physiological fluid to be heated is conducted, is relatively wide and shallow, so that heating will produce only a moderate temperature gradient in the fluid.
It is the object of the invention to further improve the disposable referred to in the preamble so as to avoid the occurrence of temperature variations, in particular (but not exclusively) hot spots, and to effectively mix the physiological fluid in order to allow said fluid in the conduit to acquire a substantially uniform temperature.
This is realised in various aspects of the invention by using a disposable that complies with one or more of the appended claims.
In a first aspect of the invention the disposable is characterized in that in at least one of the bends a first turbulence-inducing obstruction is placed, preferably a baffle having a height of at least approximately 20% of the height of the conduit at the position of that baffle. Such a baffle causes a turbulence in the fluid stream such as to prevent the occurrence of hot spots. The invention is certainly not limited to a baffle of this kind, rather it is aimed at such obstructions in general that are suitable for producing sufficient turbulence. However, in order to be able to properly understand the invention, the same will be further explained with reference to the proposed use of a baffle or baffles. An important advantage of the embodiment with baffles is, moreover, that the disposable can be manufactured simply and at limited costs by injection moulding.
The first baffle (the first obstruction) is optimally effective if the same has a top edge which, viewed from the outer side of the at least one bend, slopes downward.
It is also shown to be advantageous that the first baffle is placed in the at least one bend at an angle in relation to the local direction of flow.
The effectiveness of the measures proposed in accordance with the invention is further assisted by embodying the bends succeeding the conduit sections such that their width is substantially the same as their height, and by placing the first baffle in the at least one bend near the connection with the conduit portion preceding this bend and in its extended direction. More preferably said bends are embodied with a circular cross section. This sustains the turbulence in the bends as effectively as possible.
It is further desirable to provide the disposable with a second baffle in the at least one bend.
Preferably the second baffle also has a top edge which, viewed from the outer side of the at least one bend, slopes downward, and is this second baffle also placed at an angle in the at least one bend.
Viewed in the direction of flow of the bend, the second baffle is placed after the first baffle, in a manner so as to be positioned in the curve and exactly before the part of the bend that is succeeded in its extended direction by a further conduit section.
The invention will now be further elucidated with reference to the drawing or to a non-limiting exemplary embodiment.
The drawing shows in
Identical reference numbers in the figures indicate identical parts.
Referring first to
Basically, all bends are embodied the same but this is, of course, no prerequisite for the invention and it is also possible to embody just one or some of the bends in the manner explained hereafter in more detail, referring just to bend 6.12. As can be seen in
Viewed from the outside of the bend 6.12, both the first baffle 7 and the second baffle 8 preferably have top edges that slope downward. This is clearly shown in
The second baffle 8, which viewed in the direction of flow of the disposable 5 succeeds the first baffle 7, is placed in the curve of the bend 6.12, just before the portion that in its extended direction forms the succeeding conduit portion 6.2.
As will be clear from the above explanation, various modifications of the disposable elucidated with reference to the exemplary embodiment shown in the drawing are possible. This explanation merely serves to clarify the appended claims, without limiting them to the specific design of the exemplary embodiment.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1019347 | Nov 2001 | NL | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5117903 | Oshiyama et al. | Jun 1992 | A |
5254259 | Bellhouse et al. | Oct 1993 | A |
5381510 | Ford et al. | Jan 1995 | A |
6689315 | Linker et al. | Feb 2004 | B2 |
20010009610 | Augustine et al. | Jul 2001 | A1 |
20010011585 | Cassidy et al. | Aug 2001 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0253479 | Jun 1986 | EP |
253479 | Jan 1988 | EP |
2740687 | May 1997 | FR |
2 117 101 | Oct 1983 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050055074 A1 | Mar 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | PCT/NL02/00706 | Nov 2002 | US |
Child | 10837390 | US |