The invention resides in a rigid salt container of plastic material for the hemodialysis which is sealed in an airtight manner and includes a coupling arrangement for communication with a dialysis apparatus.
Such containers are one-way devices which contain the amount of bicarbonate salt required for a hemodialysis procedure and which, during use, are connected to a hemodialysis apparatus by way of the coupling arrangement. The hemodialysis apparatus then conducts dialysis liquid through the salt container for the absorption of the salt.
Such salt containers are known in the form of flexible bags (for example WO 99/06083A1, DE 696 16 073 T2) and also in the form of rigid containers (for example, EP 0 112 295 A2).
At the end of the procedure, the dialysis apparatus sucks the dialysis liquid out of the salt container. With salt containers in the form of flexible bags, the bag is compressed because of the vacuum generated therein so that it is emptied without problems. With rigid containers, which have certain advantages over flexible bags, the emptying is problematic because the rigid container cannot collapse. As a result, the liquid can only be partially sucked out.
It is the object of the present invention to provide a rigid salt container for the hemodialysis in such a way that it can be emptied without problems by the vacuum generated by the dialysis apparatus.
In a rigid hemodialysis salt container of plastic material including a venting valve formed in a container wall with a venting opening extending through the container wall, a seal member covers the venting opening at the inside of the container wall and is connected to the container wall by cementing or welding such that, with the occurrence of a predetermined pressure difference between ambient air pressure and a vacuum generated in the container, the seal member is at least locally ripped off.
The vent valve which is designed taking into consideration that the salt container is a one-way container that is in such a way that it can be produced inexpensively and is accommodated in the container in an unobtrusive manner.
The invention will be described below in greater detail on the basis of particular embodiments which is shown in the accompanying drawings.
The
The construction of the bottom part, the cover and the co-axial plug-in coupling are known per se and will therefore not be described in detail.
The bottom part 1 is provided with a venting valve 4 arranged at the bottom wall in order to facilitate the total emptying of the salt container when the dialysis liquid is sucked out of the container after the salt filling is flushed out of the salt container connected to a dialysis apparatus by permitting ambient air to enter when a vacuum is formed in the container.
It is essential that such a venting valve for a one-way salt container is easy and inexpensive to manufacture and that it operates reliably.
As apparent from
During operation of the salt container in connection with a dialysis apparatus during flushing of the salt container with dialysis liquid for the absorption of the bicarbonate salt the seal member 42 is sealingly pressed by the pressure existing in the salt container onto the venting opening 41 in addition to being attached by the cement or weld joint. When the dialysis liquid is sucked out of the container however, a vacuum is generated in the salt container. If the vacuum in the salt container reaches a certain threshold value, the seal member 42 is automatically released from the bottom wall under the force of the ambient air pressure which is effective on the seal member via the venting opening 41, as shown in
In representations similar to those of
While in the embodiment according to
The arrangement according to the invention forms a venting valve which is reliably closed up to the venting event, which is easy to manufacture, which has no moving parts and which does not project into the container interior, so that it is not detrimentally affected by shaking of the salt filling (for example, during transport or handling procedures) nor by the flushing of the salt container with the dialysis liquid or that it affects in any way the filling of the container with salt.
For the person skilled in the art, it is quite clear that the venting valve 4 may be arranged anywhere on the container wall, that is, instead of being arranged in the bottom part 1 of the container, it could be arranged on the cover 2. It is clear that the location for the venting valve is selected depending on the orientation of the salt container in its use position when coupled to a dialysis apparatus such that, in the use position of the salt container, the venting valve is as far as possible at the upper end of the container.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2005 060 290 | Dec 2005 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2440462 | Cooper | Apr 1948 | A |
4115629 | Dey et al. | Sep 1978 | A |
4366051 | Fischel | Dec 1982 | A |
5045077 | Blake, III | Sep 1991 | A |
5908129 | Schutz | Jun 1999 | A |
6866056 | Scott | Mar 2005 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
696 16 073 | Jan 1997 | DE |
101 00 549 | Jul 2002 | DE |
0 112 295 | Jun 1984 | EP |
WO 9906083 | Feb 1999 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070138183 A1 | Jun 2007 | US |