Four commonly-owned U.S. patent applications with related subject matter include the following:
Ser. No. 10/210,643, filed Jul. 31, 2002 for “Intravenous Fluid Warming Cassette with Stiffening Member and Integral Handle”, published as US 2002/0193739 on Dec. 19, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,010,221, issued Mar. 7, 2006;
Ser. No. 10/214,966, filed Aug. 8, 2002 for “Fluid Warming Cassette with Tensioning Rod”, published as US 2004/0026068 on Feb. 12, 2004, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,232,457, issued Jun. 19, 2007;
Ser. No. 10/304,809, filed Nov. 25, 2002 for “IV Fluid Warming System with Detection of Presence and Orientation of an IV Fluid Heat Exchanger”, published as 2003/0077079 on Apr. 24, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,775,473, issued Aug. 10, 2004; and
Ser. No. 10/397,942; filed Mar. 25, 2003 for “Fluid Warming Cassette and System Capable of Operation under Negative Pressure”, published as 2004/0190885 on Sep. 30, 2004.
These four patent applications are incorporated herein by this reference.
In addition, the following commonly-owned U.S. patent applications with related subject matter are currently pending:
Ser. No. 11/257,831, filed Oct. 25, 2005 for “Intravenous Fluid Warming Cassette with Stiffening Member and Integral Handle”, published Jul. 26, 2007 as US 2007/173759;
Ser. No. 11/818,880, filed Jun. 15, 2007 for “Fluid Warming Cassette and System Capable of Operation under Negative Pressure;
Ser. No. 11/789,515, filed on Apr. 24, 2007 for “Heat Exchanger for High Flow Rate Infusion”;
Ser. No. 11/789,523, filed on Apr. 24, 2007 for “High Flow Rate Infusion Unit and Heat Exchanger”; and,
Ser. No. 11/789,752, filed on Apr. 24, 2007 for “Bubble Trap for High Flow Rate Infusion”.
This invention is generally related to parenteral fluid warming systems and, more particularly, to the structure of a fluid warming cassette used with a warming apparatus, in which the structure of the cassette includes a fluid container with rails and a stiffening member near the proximal end of the cassette.
Fluid warming apparatuses, designed to warm and administer parenteral fluids and blood products (hereinafter “fluids”), are in common use. Generally, such fluids are heated and administered using fluid warming systems. A parenteral fluid warming system usually includes a warming unit into which a fluid warming cassette is placed. The fluid warming cassette includes a fluid container with a structure designed for handling and for being received and supported in the warming unit. The fluid container includes a fluid channel and is typically made of plastic film material and/or thin metal.
In use, the cassette is placed into the warming unit to heat the fluids as they flow through the fluid channel. Heat is transferred to the fluid through the fluid container from a heat source such as heated metal plates, heated liquid, or heated gas. Metal plate, “dry heat” exchanger warming units are widely known.
In such systems, heat transfer from the warming unit to the fluid warming cassette is typically by conduction, with the heat source including, for example, one or more metal plates brought into contact with the warming cassette. There are systems that operate by conduction between a bath of heated water and a fluid warming cassette; some systems use induction for heating; others use micro-waving means. Still other systems operate by convection, disposing a fluid warming cassette in a flow of heated air. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that heat transfer in such systems is a complex process that actually compounds conduction, radiation, and convection. Therefore, characterization of a mode of heat transfer to a fluid warming cassette actually denotes the principal mode of transfer and does not necessarily exclude contribution by one or more additional modes.
To increase the thermal efficiency and temperature responsiveness of a fluid warming system in which a fluid warming cassette is disposed for conductive heat transfer from warming plates, the distance between the heater plates is usually very small. This implies that a fluid warming cassette should be a thin, flat container, constructed from selected materials. Plastic film materials are commonly used in the manufacture of disposable fluid warming containers. Such designs are disclosed in the four above-referenced patent applications.
Since these fluid containers are thin, it would be difficult to insert one into a conductive warming unit simply by sliding it between the warming plates. The container may kink or tear when being slid into or out of such a narrow space. As a result, the fluid container needs some type of structural support, usually a frame, although a tensioning rod may also be used. A frame stiffens the fluid container so that the fluid warming cassette can be handled, and also inserted into and removed from the warming unit. Together, the fluid container and frame constitute a fluid warming cassette, a modular unit of equipment designed to be received in, or inserted into, a larger warming unit. A flexed tensioning rod disposed in a fluid container exerts a tension between the sides of the container thereby imparting the desired stability and handleability to a fluid warming cassette.
A frame for a fluid warming cassette comprehends numerous elements, including a quadrilateral frame structure with a handle portion that extends outside of the warming unit when the cassette is seated in the unit in order to provide something that can be grasped to manipulate the cassette for insertion and extraction. The frame type of construction adds steps to the process for manufacturing fluid warming cassettes, leading to lower yields and higher manufacturing costs. In this regard, the frame is preferably made by a vacu-form process which can yield frames with dimensional variations that are not accommodated by the narrow space between warming plates. Relatively expensive materials must be used for tensioned rods in order to achieve acceptable shelf lifetimes for fluid warming cassettes which incorporate them.
It would be advantageous if a simplified, effective, low cost fluid warming cassette were made available for a parenteral fluid warming system in which the cassette is received between heating plates of a warming unit for conductive heat transfer therefrom.
It would be advantageous if a fluid container could be invested with enough stiffness for insertion between close-set warming plates of a warming unit, yet be thin enough to efficiently transfer heat by conduction from the plates to the fluid, without the requirement of an expensive frame.
It would be advantageous if the fluid warming cassette were provided with a keying mechanism that prevents it from being inserted either upside down, or backwards in a warming unit.
A fluid warming cassette useful in a system for warming parenteral fluids is described. The cassette comprises a thermally conductive, flexible fluid container with a fluid channel. Rails are disposed in the fluid container near its periphery, and a stiffener is disposed in the fluid container near an end of the cassette. Together, the rails and stiffener impart structural rigidity to the fluid container. The fluid container, rails and stiffener cooperate to provide an integrated structure called a “fluid warming cassette” or, simply, a “cassette”.
The rails are elongate members that impart longitudinal stiffness to the fluid container. They are also shaped and positioned to act as a keying mechanism, preferably one constituted of lands, which orients the cassette with respect to a counterpart mechanism in a fluid warmer to prevent incorrect insertion of the cassette into the warmer.
The stiffener may include a relatively stiff, shaped planar member lying between the rails near an end of the fluid container that imparts transverse stiffness to the fluid container. The stiffener and its disposition provide a flat, relatively stiff handle portion at the end of the cassette for being grasped so that the cassette may be manipulated for insertion into and extraction from a warming unit.
Inlet and outlet ports to the fluid channel are provided on the fluid container, at respective ends of the channel.
When the cassette is oriented for use with a warming unit, one end faces a thin laminar space in the unit. With the cassette oriented so that the rails engage corresponding grooves in the warming unit space, the cassette may be pushed into the warming unit. Then, fluid flows through a tube into the fluid channel, where it is heated by the warming unit, and out of the cassette through another tube for delivery.
A fluid warming cassette is intended for use with a fluid warming unit to warm fluids for intravenous infusion. For example, the cassette may be used with a “dry heat” warming unit in which heater plates are disposed in an opposing, spaced-apart configuration, separated by a thin laminar space. In this case, the cassette is received in the space between the heater plates, in close contact with the heater plates for transfer of heat by conduction from the plates to the cassette.
The fluid warming cassette includes a fluid container. Rails are disposed in the fluid container near its periphery, and a stiffener is positioned in the fluid container near a proximal end of the cassette. The fluid container is made of two or more sheets of thermally conductive plastic film material. The sheets of plastic film material are bonded or otherwise joined in a pattern which creates a fluid channel between the sheets. A fluid channel with a serpentine pattern is illustrated, although other patterns are contemplated. Preferably each of the plastic sheets is a film 0.1 mm thick, or less. The rails are elongate members, with at least one of the rails having a multi-lateral shape in cross section to provide keying of the cassette with respect to one or more counterpart grooves in a warming unit. A handle portion of the fluid warming cassette is constituted of the stiffener and a portion of the fluid container which sandwiches the stiffener, near a proximal end of the cassette.
Refer now to
During a process of making the cassette, the rails 24, 25 are parallel with each other and aligned with respective edges 30 and 31 of the base sheet 22, while the stiffener 26 is aligned with an end 33 of the base sheet, and disposed transversely between the rails. The ports 27, 29 are received in respective openings 35, 36 in the covering sheet 20 and joined by flange welds, at their bases, to the inner surface of the covering sheet 20 which faces the base sheet 22. To assemble the cassette shown in
As best seen in
As best seen in
The proximal end 48 provides a handle portion 64 of the fluid warming cassette. The handle portion 64 is generally the portion of the fluid container 40 near the proximal end 48 of the cassette which sandwiches the elongate portion 55 of the stiffener 26. The handle portion 64 is provided to accommodate finger purchase. When the cassette 10 is engaged with warming device 12 (see
The handle portion 64 provides a label surface area 62 which may be used for labeling (see
The rails 24, 25 may each be a filament formed from a material selected from the group consisting of polyolefin, polyethylene, polypropylene, polyvinyl chloride (PVC), and polyurethane, or any other equivalent plastic capable of providing the appropriate stiffness to the cassette. Other suitable rail materials include spring steel, aluminum, and any suitable metal capable of providing the appropriate stiffness. In addition, composite materials may be used for the rails 24, 25. For example, the rails may be similar in construction to a composite fishing pole, made from fiberglass or other composite materials capable of providing the appropriate stiffness. The rails can be manufactured by extrusion, die cutting, injection molding, thermal processes or other processes compatible with the materials selected. The rails not only stiffen the cassette, they also provide a keying mechanism requiring proper orientation of the cassette 10 with respect to the warming plates of the warming unit 12. One preferred shape for each rail is that of a rectangle in order that the rails may also constitute lands on the cassette that are received in corresponding grooves of the warming plates.
The planar stiffener 26 is preferably constituted of a high density polyethylene (HDPE) material of non specific color. Other materials of which the stiffener may be formed include other stiff synthetic plastic materials such as polycarbonate, ABS, PVC, and other equivalents, various metals, and cardboard or card stock. The stiffener is preferably about 0.75 mm in thickness, although a thickness in the range of 0.35 to 1.5 mm is useful. The factors influencing the thickness of the stiffener include the stiffness of the material of which it is made, the thicknesses of the first and second sheets, and the thickness of the space into which the cassette must fit.
The first sheet 20 and second sheet 22 which are joined to form the fluid container 40 may be made from one or more materials selected from the group consisting of polyester, polyamide (Nylon®, DuPont), polyethylene glycol terephthalate (Mylar®, DuPont), metal foils, ionomer resins (Surlyn®, DuPont), polyolefin (polyethylene, polypropylene), polyvinyl chloride (PVC), polyurethane, and ethyl vinyl acetate (EVA) co-polymer.
The fluid container 40 includes the fluid channel 52 and at least a first port in fluid communication with a first end of the fluid channel 52, which is outlined with cross-hatched lines in
As discussed, the handle portion 64 may include a label surface area 62, highlighted with cross-hatched lines in
The cassette 10 may also include a stop mechanism. In the example shown in
In some cases, a multi-layer construction provides advantages such as tailoring the sheets of which the fluid container is formed for optimum strength so that the container can accommodate substantial fluid pressures, such as those encountered with use of an IV pump. A multi-layer construction is disclosed in applicants U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/415,558 filed on Oct. 8, 1999, which is incorporated in its entirety by this reference. In an alternative construction, the first sheet 20 or the second sheet 22, or both, may have a multi-layer construction. As shown in
Refer to
In another embodiment, the top 20 and bottom 22 sheets are constructed using materials with a low coefficient of friction. In a multi-layer sheet design, the outside layers 20b, 22b of sheets 20 and 22, respectively are constructed using materials with a low coefficient of friction. The lower coefficient of friction permits the fluid warming cassette 10 to be more easily inserted between warming plates 14 and 16 (see
The fluid warming cassette 10 can be inserted into the warming unit 12 by a user grasping the handle portion 64, orienting the warming cassette 10 so that the lands 86 are aligned with the grooves 84, inserting the distal end 46 between the plates 14 and 16 and sliding the warming cassette 10 inwardly between the plates 14 and 16 until the stopping mechanism 27, 29 halts further insertion.
A fluid warming kit is illustrated in
Other variations and embodiments of the fluid warming cassette will occur to those skilled in the art with reflection upon the disclosed examples. The only limitations on the scope of exclusive rights to the inventions described are in the following claims.
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