This invention generally relates to medical syringes and more specifically to safety devices which may be used with or added to conventional medical syringes to solve problems related to containing hazardous drug emissions or to reducing effects of cross contamination of materials which might be displaced from one side of a syringe plunger to the other side.
It is well known by those skilled in the art of medical fluid infusion that use of conventional syringes can pose safety challenges when used to deliver hazardous drugs and when used to fill and deliver IV fluids to patients. When drawing a dose into a syringe from a vial containing a hazardous drug, it is well known that dangerous emissions of aerosols and liquids can occur upon spiking a vial. However, there are secondary effects not as well publicized which should also be considered. For example, while a plunger moved within the syringe to draw and expel a dose appears to wipe interior walls of the syringe barrel clean, trace amounts may be left on the barrel wall and thereafter exposed across the wiped face of the barrel. Similarly, for more conventional syringe use in drawing and delivering an IV dose to a patient, any contaminant on a syringe barrel over which a plunger is drawn in a filling process may be communicated in small amounts to liquid drawn into the syringe. For these reasons, cross contamination occurring due to back and forth displacement of a plunger within a syringe barrel is a concern. Such contamination may occur as a result of simply touching an associated barrel rod used to displace the plunger.
Further, each syringe, before delivery of a liquid, must be purged of gas (air) so that only liquids are delivered into a patient IV line. For this reason, it is common practice to prime air from each syringe prior to drug delivery into a patient IV line. This task, while performed so often that it has become transparent to clinicians, requires time and now that needleless connectors are commonly used, there may be increased danger of contamination due to liquid coming in contact with parts of a luer-lock fitting which surrounds the male insertion site of the fitting.
The cross contamination issue has been addressed by art which is exemplified by U.S. Pat. No. 7,175,609 issued Feb. 13, 2007 to Robin Scott Gray (Gray), U.S. Pat. No. 6,485,471 issued Nov. 26, 2002 to Maury Zivitz (Zivitz) and U.S. Patent Application US 2003/0097115 A! Filed Nov. 19, 2001 by Michael Gruenberg (Gruenberg). However, none of the cited art addresses a solution involving use of conventional syringes by which most drug transfer is performed.
The instant inventions disclosed herein address and provide solutions for both problems associated with hazardous drug delivery and cross contamination in conventional syringe use.
In the following table 1 is a list of terms and associated definitions provided to improve clarity and understanding of precepts of the instant invention:
In brief summary, novel inventions disclosed herein provide answers for known issues related to cross-contamination and priming of medical syringes. While problems associated with priming and cross contamination are separable, they are part of a combined set of syringe operations which must be carefully performed to assure safety in delivery of fluids to a patient.
While gas in a syringe is visually evident and traditionally purged for safety prior to dispensing liquid from the syringe to a patient IV line, material which is communicated across a plunger in a syringe as it is displaced to draw and dispense fluids from the syringe is usually communicated in trace amounts and is not so easily detected. However, it is well known in the medical art that cross-contamination along the inner wall of a syringe barrel does occur when a syringe plunger is displaced inside the syringe barrel.
For this reason, it is highly desirable to provide a barrel shield to maintain an enclosure for a syringe barrel so that no contaminating material is available for communication to the external environment from inside the closed chamber of a syringe as the plunger is displaced, or, in opposite manner, no contaminating material which may become resident on the inner barrel wall proximal to the plunger is available to be transmitted into the closed chamber across the plunger barrel wall interface. For these reasons, it is desirable to provide a barrel shield to provide safety from trace amounts of material resulting from a displaced plunger left on either side of the plunger. An instant invention, as disclosed herein, provides a sheath about the proximal barrel opening and displace-able plunger and rod assembly to guard against barrel contamination and exposure of trace material not wiped from the barrel wall as a plunger is displaced.
The shield, according to the instant invention disclosed herein, is a balloon-like device having a body made of elastic material. The body has a cross-section which is elongated toward a closed end and has a length which permits complete displacement of plunger and rod assembly along the syringe barrel wall. The body has a throat section which is sized and shaped to fit snugly about the exterior of the syringe barrel and yet be stretched about flanges which extend outward from the syringe barrel for digital access and a button which is generally affixed to the rod of the plunger and rod assembly. When the plunger is disposed well within the barrel, the shield is folded in accordion style between the button and flanges to permit ready access to flanges and button for displacing the plunger.
With the shield in place, the inner surface of the barrel, the rod and button are fully protected by the shield cover and tortuous path provided by the tightly affixed throat section distal from the flanges. Thus, the barrel inner surface and therefore the plunger remain contamination free after the shield is fully disposed upon the syringe. Of course, the inner portion of the shield should be sterilized as is the syringe, prior to being made ready for use.
Also, as disclosed herein, such a shield may be affixed to a syringe after sterilization of both components (field assembly of a conventional syringe and a protective shield). A method for affixing the shield to a conventional syringe involves providing access to the exterior of the shield without contaminating contact with either an inner sterile surface of the shield or critical sterile parts of the syringe during the act of engaging the shield. For facilely accomplishing attachment of the shield to the syringe while maintaining desired stability and sterility, a portion of the throat of the body is folded upon itself to provide a cuff into which a rigid tool may be inserted to stretch the body about syringe barrel, flanges and rod button.
Of course, the shield may be affixed to a syringe in production. In such a case, the shield may be used to protect barrel and plunger and rod assembly of a pre-filled syringe. As is well known in the pre-filled syringe art, such syringes are sometimes provided without external packaging to protect proximal parts of the syringe. If a plunger of such a syringe is displaced proximally (for example to test for patency of blood flow), the plunger may be drawn over a contaminated surface permitting cross-contamination without jeopardy.
Problems related to assuring no gas is transmitted to a patient line from a syringe are separately solved by two instant inventions as disclosed herein. In one inventive embodiment, gas resident in the closed syringe chamber is trapped therein and retained. Such is accomplished by an elongated tube affixed to and inwardly directed from the distal orifice of the syringe barrel to provide a closed flow path for liquid through the orifice from a liquid only zone within the barrel. As is known in the syringe art and disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,789,862 (issued to Gale H. Thorne, Jr. et al., see
In a second inventive embodiment, a special plunger assembly permits gas in the chamber adjacent the plunger to exhaust gas through the plunger. The special plunger assembly comprises a plunger part having a distally disposed hydrophobic material which provides an interface to fluid inside the chamber from which it is desired to exhaust gas. Proximal from the hydrophobic material part, the plunger further comprises a one-way valve which in combination with the hydrophobic part permits one flow of gas outwardly from the chamber when the plunger is acted upon by a force which increases pressure within the chamber to force gas through the hydrophobic part and one way valve. Note that no gas can enter into the chamber as all matter in the gaseous state is restricted to travel along outer surfaces of the inner wall of the syringe barrel and cylinder enclosing ends.
Accordingly, it is a primary object to provide a prime free pre-filled syringe.
It is also a primary object to provide a plunger for a syringe whereby gas may be extracted from the syringe chamber through a plunger proximal to the chamber.
It is another primary object to provide a barrel protector for a conventional syringe.
It is an object that the barrel protector be able to be assembled to the syringe in a field environment.
These and other objects and features of the present invention will be apparent from the detailed description taken with reference to accompanying drawings.
In this description, the term proximal is used to indicate the segment of the device normally closest to a user of the device. The term distal refers to the other end. Primes of numbers are used for parts which a similar, but not exactly the same as parts referenced by the base number. Reference is now made to the embodiments illustrated in
For the most part, instant inventions disclosed herein are associated with and designed to augment function and performance of conventional syringes. An example of a conventional syringe 10 is seen as PRIOR ART in
While it was stated supra that plunger 42 is sized and shaped to wipe fluid from inner wall 34, such wiping is not always complete and trace amounts of material have been found to be left as plunger 42 is moved back and forth in barrel 20. In such a case, any material which may be deleterious proximal to plunger 42 might be left for contamination of contents of the syringe between plunger 42 and orifice 38 as plunger 42 traverses the place of contamination when drawing fluid into syringe 10. Similarly, as plunger 42 traverses parts of inner wall 34, when dispensing fluid, trace amounts of the fluid may be left to contaminate portions of inner wall 34 proximal to plunger 42. Such contamination may represent significant danger in the case of Hazardous Drug handling and dispensing.
For these reasons, it is prudent to provide a shield for barrel 20 (and plunger and rod assembly 30). Such a shield 50 is seen in
Shield 50 comprises an elastic (preferably non-latex rubber), balloon-like sack having an elongated body 52 which is sized to slip over button 46. At an open or mouth end 54, shield 50 has a rolled section 56, similar to that of a balloon. As seen in
An important consideration is the need to retain a sterile condition inside shield 50 as such parts may contact elements of barrel 20 and plunger and rod assembly 30 which are and should remain uncontaminated. For this reason, shield 50 is provided sterilized with end 54 folded back upon itself, as seen in
Reference is now made to
One flange 40 of barrel 20 is inserted into mouth 58′ of shield 50 as seen in
To satisfy the need for prime free operation of a syringe, a modification at orifice 38 may be made as seen by example in
Rather than inserting a special part, such as part 100, an elongated, hollow tube which communicates with orifice 38 may be molded into a barrel 20′ as seen in
Another embodiment which is similar to embodiments seen in
Note, in
Instead of using a fluid pathway which only communicates with liquid from a liquid only zone as seen in
The invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. The present embodiment is therefore to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, the scope of the invention being indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description, and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore intended to be embraced therein.