1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates, in general, to medical devices and, in particular, to test meters and related methods.
2. Description of Related Art
The determination (e.g., detection and/or concentration measurement) of an analyte in a fluid sample is of particular interest in the medical field. For example, it can be desirable to determine glucose, ketone bodies, cholesterol, lipoproteins, triglycerides, acetaminophen and/or HbA1c concentrations in a sample of a bodily fluid such as urine, blood, plasma or interstitial fluid. Such determinations can be achieved using a hand-held test meter in combination with analytical test strips (e.g., electrochemical-based analytical test strips).
The novel features of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. A better understanding of the features and advantages of the present invention will be obtained by reference to the following detailed description that sets forth illustrative embodiments, in which the principles of the invention are utilized, and the accompanying drawings, in which like numerals indicate like elements, of which:
The following detailed description should be read with reference to the drawings, in which like elements in different drawings are identically numbered. The drawings, which are not necessarily to scale, depict exemplary embodiments for the purpose of explanation only and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention. The detailed description illustrates by way of example, not by way of limitation, the principles of the invention. This description will clearly enable one skilled in the art to make and use the invention, and describes several embodiments, adaptations, variations, alternatives and uses of the invention, including what is presently believed to be the best mode of carrying out the invention.
As used herein, the terms “about” or “approximately” for any numerical values or ranges indicate a suitable dimensional tolerance that allows the part or collection of components to function for its intended purpose as described herein.
In general, hand-held test meters for use with an analytical test strip (e.g., an electrochemical-based analytical test strip) in the determination of an analyte (such as glucose) in a bodily fluid sample (for example, a whole blood sample) according to embodiments of the present invention include a housing, a buttons electrical circuit block, at least one user operable button in operable communication with the buttons electrical circuit block, and a first-time-on (FTO) electrical circuit block. In such hand-held test meters, the FTO electrical circuit block is disposed within the housing and includes an activation node. In addition, the FTO electrical circuit block is configured to place the hand-held test meter into a deep power conservation mode upon the direct application of an electrical signal to the activation node by an external device (e.g., a manufacturing tester) and to terminate the deep power conservation mode and place the hand-held test meter into a normal operating mode upon receiving a predetermined user triggered signal from the at least one user operable button.
Hand-held test meters according to embodiments of the present invention are beneficial in that, for example, the deep power conservation mode cannot be inadvertently activated by an end user (i.e., a health care professional demonstrating the hand-held test meter or a patient operating the hand-held test meter) as it requires the direct application of an electrical signal (such as an applied voltage from a manufacturing tester) to an activation node that is disposed within the hand-held test meter's housing (i.e., an internal activation node, also referred to as a test point). Such an internal activation node is not reasonably accessible to an end-user nor does an end-user typically have an external device that could apply the required electrical signal for activating the deep power conservation mode. Since the predetermined user triggered signal can be generated by an end-user's normal operation of the hand-held test meter including, for example, simply turning on (activating) the hand-held test meter by pushing an appropriate hand-held test meter button, termination of the deep power conservation mode is simple, intuitive and requires no dedicated actions on the part of an end user. Moreover, the deep power conservation mode enables shipment and prolonged storage of the hand-held test meter with a sealed rechargeable battery in a charged state without deleterious loss of charge. The hand-held meter is, therefore, ready for immediate operation (for example, an out-of-the-box test and demonstration) once the deep power conservation mode is terminated.
Once one skilled in the art is apprised of the present disclosure, he will recognize that an example of a hand-held test meter that can be readily modified as a hand-hand test meter according to the present invention is the commercially available OneTouch® Ultra® 2 glucose meter from LifeScan Inc. (Milpitas, Calif.). Additional examples of hand-held test meters that can also be modified are found in U.S. Patent Application Publications No's. 2007/0084734 (published on Apr. 19, 2007) and 2007/0087397 (published on Apr. 19, 2007) and in International Publication Number WO2010/049669 (published on May 6, 2010), each of which is hereby incorporated herein in full by reference.
Hand-held test meter 100 includes a display 102, a plurality of user interface buttons 104, a strip port connector 106, a USB interface 108, and a housing 110 (see
Display 102 can be, for example, a liquid crystal display or a bi-stable display configured to show a screen image. An example of a screen image may include a glucose concentration, a date and time, an error message, and a user interface for instructing an end user how to perform a test.
Strip port connector 106 is configured to operatively interface with the analytical test strip (not depicted in the figures) such as an electrochemical-based analytical test strip configured for the determination of glucose in a whole blood sample. Therefore, the analytical test strip is configured for operative insertion into strip port connector 106. The analytical test strip can be any suitable analytical test strip including an electrochemical-based analytical test strip such as the commercially available OneTouch® Ultra® glucose test strip from LifeScan Inc. (Milpitas, Calif.). Examples of analytical test strips can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,708,247; 5,951,836; 6,241,862; 6,284,125; 6,413,410; 6,733,655; 7,112,265; 7,241,265; and 7,250,105, each of which is hereby incorporate herein in full by reference.
USB Interface 108 can be any suitable interface known to one skilled in the art. Moreover, USB interface 108 can configured such that battery 112 of hand-held test meter 100 is recharged via USB interface 108 using, for example, recharging techniques that are well known to those of skill in the art. USB Interface 108 is essentially a passive component that is configured to power and provide a data line to communications port block 122 of hand-held test meter 100.
Once an analytical test strip is interfaced with hand-held test meter 100, or prior thereto, a bodily fluid sample (e.g., a whole blood sample) is dosed into a sample-receiving chamber of the analytical test strip. The analytical test strip can include enzymatic reagents that selectively and quantitatively transforms an analyte into another predetermined chemical form. For example, the analytical test strip can include an enzymatic reagent with ferricyanide and glucose oxidase so that glucose can be physically transformed into an oxidized form.
Battery 112 can be any suitable battery including, for example, a rechargeable battery permanently sealed within housing 100. Power supply circuitry block 118 includes, for example, Low Drop-out Regulator (LDO) and voltage regulation circuits well known to those skilled in the art. FTO electrical circuit block 114 and buttons electrical circuit block 116 are described in detail below with respect to
FTO circuit block 114 is configured to place hand-held test meter 100 into a deep power conservation mode (also referred to as a deep sleep mode) only upon the direct application of an electrical signal to the activation node by an external device. The external device can be, for example, a manufacturing tester that is also employed to test the hand-held meter's functionality during manufacturing and prior to shipment to storage. Alternatively as an optional configuration, FTO electrical circuit block 114 can be configured to also place hand-held test meter 100 into a deep power conservation mode upon a user simultaneously pressing an “up” button and a “down” button of the hand-held test meter as explained further below.
FTO electrical circuit block 114 is also configured to terminate the deep power conservation mode and place hand-held test meter 100 into a normal operating mode upon receiving a predetermined user triggered signal from at least one user operable button.
The predetermined signal can be generated by buttons electrical circuit block 114, for example, by an end user pushing the OK button depicted in
In the deep power conservation mode, hand-held test meter 100 consumes less than approximately 15 nA of power as power is only being consumed by battery 112 itself through any naturally occurring battery discharge mechanism and momentarily by the buttons electrical circuit block upon pressing of a button and not be any other blocks of the hand-held test meter (such as the FTO electrical circuit block, power supply block, microcontroller block, display control block communications port block and memory block).
Referring to
Sub-block 202 of FTO electrical circuit block 114 is configured as the activation node that places hand-held test meter 100 into the deep power conservation mode when an electrical activation signal is applied thereto. This activation node is also labeled TP95 in
Sub-block 206 is configured to translate an active high signal from sub-block 204 into an active low signal. The active low signal (labeled nMR on the right-hand side of
Sub-block 210 (see
Sub-block 214 is configured to decouple the approximately 2 second time constant of sub-block 212 from the remainder of FTO electrical circuit block 114. Sub-block 216 is configured to lower the voltage level of battery 112 (for example, 4.2 volts) to suitable for use in the remainder of FTO electrical circuit block 114 (such as a 3.3V compliant voltage for flip-flop circuit U6 of
Sub-block 218 includes a pair of Schottky diodes and is configured to power-OR flip-flop U6. Any suitable Schottky diode can be employed including those commercially available from On Semiconductor. Flip-flop U6 can be any suitable flip-flop including, for example, a commercially available low power flip-flop from NXP as part number 74AUP1G175. Such a configuration enables FTO electrical circuit block 114 to provide for hand-held test meter 100 to terminate the deep power conservation mode upon either receipt of a predetermined user triggered signal or when the hand-held test meter receives power via USB interface 108 and communications port block 122. In this regard, it should be noted that hand-held test meter 100 is configured such that connecting a powered USB cable to USB interface 108 results in the powering of VSO, which is connected to flip-flop U6 via sub-block 218 (see
Sub-block 220 is configured to trigger flip-flop U6 to change its output only when the power is set to a predetermined level. Sub-block 222 is configured to convert an active high signal to an active low signal. Sub-block 224 is configured connect battery 112 to an LDO circuit of power supply circuitry block 118.
In the deep power conservation mode, no power is consumed by the FTO electrical circuit block 114 or other circuit blocks of hand-held test meter 100 other than buttons electrical circuit block 116 in the event a button is pushed. Buttons electrical circuit block 116 is configured to only consume power when a button is pressed, typically for a duration of milliseconds to a few seconds (i.e., momentarily) to generate the predetermined user generated signal, Buttons electrical circuit block 116, therefore, only consumes an insignificant amount of power. The only notable power consumption in the deep power conservation mode is that associated with natural self-discharge of battery 112, and any battery protection circuit included in battery 112. During use, FTO electrical circuit block 114 is only powered in its entirety for the few seconds required to terminate the deep power conservation mode by electrically connecting battery 112 to power supply circuitry block 118. Once the deep power conservation mode is terminated, only flip-flop U6 and resistors R95 and R28 of FTO electrical circuit block 114 consume power.
Solid state switch Q11 (of sub-block 224) is employed to connect and to disconnect the power from battery 112. Once hand-held test meter 100 is placed into the deep power conservation mode or the normal operating mode, flip-flop U6 maintains the hand-held test meter in that state until an event occurs that changes the state. As explained above, in the embodiment of
When a negative nMR signal is sensed by flip-flop U6, pin Q goes low. This low signal is converted into a high signal by sub-block 222 and switch Q11 is opened, thus placing hand-held test meter 100 into the deep power conservation mode. Such a negative nMR signal is obtained with a high signal on TP95 that closes component Q8 of sub-block 206, thereby connecting nMR to ground.
Upon a predetermined user triggered signal (i.e., BUTTON_OK_BATTERY) from at least one user operable button for a duration exceeding 2 seconds or provision of power (VSO) via USB interface 108, pin Q goes high. Sub-block 222 (a level shifter), translates this high signal to a low signal that closes switch Q11, thus terminating the deep power conservation mode.
Method 600 also includes, at step 620, terminating the deep power conservation mode and placing the hand-held test meter into a normal operating mode based on the FTO electrical circuit block receiving a predetermined user triggered signal from a user operable button of the hand-held test meter, and subsequently at step 630 operating of the hand-held test meter by an end user.
In methods according to embodiments of the present invention, the hand-held test meter can be, for example, shipped from a hand-held test meter manufacturing site following the preparing step and prior to the terminating step. In addition, the hand-held test meter can, if desired, be stored following the preparing step and prior to the terminating step. Since the preparing step has placed the hand-held test meter into a deep power conservation mode, such shipping and storage can occur over relatively long durations without complete discharge of a battery included in the hand-held test meter.
Methods according to embodiments of the present invention can, if desired, also include the steps of (i) applying a bodily fluid sample to an electrochemical-based analytical test strip; (ii) measuring an electrochemical response of the electrochemical-based analytical test strip using the hand-held test meter; and (iii) determining the analyte based on the measured electrochemical response.
Once apprised of the present disclosure, one skilled in the art will recognize that method 600 can be readily modified to incorporate any of the techniques, benefits and characteristics of hand-held test meters according to embodiments of the present invention and described herein.
While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes, and substitutions will now occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the invention. It should be understood that various alternatives to the embodiments of the invention described herein may be employed in practicing the invention. It is intended that the following claims define the scope of the invention and that devices and methods within the scope of these claims and their equivalents be covered thereby.
This application claims priority pursuant to 35 U.S.C. §119 to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/359,236, entitled “Hand-Held Test Meter With Deep Power Conservation Mode,” filed on Jun. 28, 2010, the entirety of this application being incorporated herein by reference thereto.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61359236 | Jun 2010 | US |