Medium dispenser

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6367473
  • Patent Number
    6,367,473
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, August 3, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, April 9, 2002
    22 years ago
Abstract
For discharging a medium, such as a powder, a film/foil seal (16) of a reservoir chamber (24) is pierced by a tool (40) in a first axial movement, after which the medium is suctioned via an orifice (9) in feeding a delivery flow via passageways (55) from the chamber (24). On completion of a return stroke and twisting the tool (40) relative to the reservoir body (6) a further chamber (24) may be emptied in the same way, thus enabling e.g. a pharmaceutical active substance to be administered in two individual doses as expedient for nasal treatment.
Description




The invention relates to a dispenser or discharge apparatus for media, more particularly for flowable media which may be gaseous, pasty or liquid, preferably powdery. Expediently in using it or in discharging the medium the dispenser is to be held or actuated single-handedly such that it is preferably suitable for suction or inhalation of the pharmaceutical active substances contained therein, so that they can be delivered e.g. to the mucous membrane of the nose. The dispenser may be made entirely of injection-molded or plastics parts.




The invention is based on the object of providing a dispenser which obviates the drawbacks of known configurations and which permits microvolume delivery by a dispenser which is simple to manufacture, assemble, handle, keep, or the like.




In accordance with the invention the individual delivery dose of the medium may be provided in a cupped or similar reservoir chamber substantially hermetically presealed so that it may be agitated as thoroughly as possible by an inlet/delivery flow on discharge of the medium to ensure the medium being emptied in one go totally from the reservoir cup exclusively through the medium orifice remote therefrom. The inlet flow may be formed by a medium of the aforementioned kind, more particularly however air, which flows into the dispenser from without, gaining access via passageways to the reservoir cup where a swirl or rotary flow is generated to mixingly entrain the medium stored therein and thus emerge as the delivery flow through the medium orifice into the atmosphere. Although the delivery flow could be generated by a pressure source or pump of the dispenser, a particularly simple configuration materializes when the inlet flow is generated by a suction flow in the outlet passage or in the reservoir cup, namely e.g. solely by the user inhaling through the medium orifice.




The reservoir chamber may comprise—like a blister pack—a cupped body and as the reservoir seal a plastics film or metal foil, or the like, secured to the face side about the reservoir opening in the reservoir body, this film/foil possibly being configured single or multi-ply and secured expediently by bonding, such as hot sealing to produce a hermetic seal to prevent the medium from gaining access between the adjacent surface areas of the reservoir body and the sealing wall from the reservoir chamber. However, the reservoir chamber may also be a pump cylinder with or without a prefitted plunger into which on actuation a finger with or without plunger enters.




Prior to discharge of the stored dose of the medium this seal is opened by being ruptured, but without destroying the bonding or seal connection, more particularly so that it is merely slitted open without any debris of the seal becoming detached, i.e. instead all parts of the seal remaining securely attached to the reservoir body after opening so that they cannot be entrained in the flow to the outlet passage. For this opening action the dispenser comprises instead of the plunger, or in addition thereto, a tool, provided preferably at the inflow end of the outlet passage and able to work in two phases in sequence. In the first phase only the center of the sealing wall is urged into the interior of the reservoir chamber until it ruptures, after which the sealing wall is slit open radially to form several radial flaps of the sealing wall which in the second phase are splayed or defined by being clamped in place relative to the reservoir body, thus ensuring that even in the case of a highly flexible sealing film/foil a sufficiently large passage cross-section for the inlet flow materializes without the risk of the seal flaps reclosing or restricting the passage cross-section once the flow action is effective.




The volume of the reservoir chamber may be several times, e.g. at least two or three times, larger than the volume of the discharge dose stored therein so that already on commencement of discharge of the medium suitably large spaces are available for developing a swirl flow and the passage inlet or the inlet openings thereof are not fully covered by the medium on plunging into the reservoir chamber. The inlet flow gains access directly to the medium expediently through an annular passage defined by the reservoir chamber and/or an outlet nozzle, whereby on leaving the annular passage the inlet flow is directed as a kind of annular roller radially inwards and then back in the opposite direction into the outlet passage. The bottom of the reservoir cup which is concave over the full width of the reservoir chamber as well as the conically tapered end of the outlet passage serve as curved or inclined guiding surface areas for the reverse flow. During discharge of the medium these guiding surface areas are defined centered and stopped relative to each other to have so little freedom of movement that the definition of the cup chamber or bottom thereof remains out of contact. The flaps of the sealing wall define the passageways for the inlet flow within the reservoir chamber, however, from the opening of the reservoir up to the region of the guiding surface areas so that their ends are free to flutter in the air flow, whirling up the medium mechanically.




The dispenser receives the reservoir cup expediently totally in a housing which may be permanently fixed or movable relative to the medium orifice. Expediently the reservoir chamber is movable relative to the medium orifice, the outlet passage, the opening tool or the like, e.g. by being shiftable parallel to the centerline of the cup or pivotable about an axis parallel to the cup centerline. This pivoting or twisting axis is located radially totally outside of the reservoir chamber so that it may be translated from a location in line with the outlet passage into a location remote therefrom. It is this axial movement that enables the reservoir seal to be opened and the rotary movement enables the reservoir cup to be translated from a resting position into an operating position, the reservoir cup being unable to come into contact with the outlet passage in the resting position when the outlet passage is axially shifted.




The dispenser may comprise on a common reservoir body two or more reservoir chambers the same or differing in size which may be translated into the operating position or discharge position in sequence by one of the cited movements and thus emptied each separately in one go. These reservoir chambers are distributed to advantage uniformly about the axis of rotation, whereby between them a supporting or mounting appendage may be provided protruding beyond the bottoms of the cups and transmitting axial actuating forces directly to the reservoir body.




To facilitate piercing the reservoir wall or actuation for discharge of the medium the parts movable relative to each other for this purpose are expediently loaded via a pressure point, after the defeat of which the forces counteracting the actuation are substantially diminished throughout up to the stop so that the dispenser may be translated at relatively high speed into the end position of the stroke. The self-releasing resistive forces of the pressure point may be formed by a spring latch, a design break point or the like. The members releasing for this purpose by interengagement or by the actuating force may be, like anti-twist members, located in the region of the outer circumference of the reservoir body or be formed by the outermost circumference thereof so that the reservoir body requires no separate appendages or the like for this purpose.




The anti-twist members, by means of which the reservoir body is prevented from twisting out of place from the inner end of the outlet passage on discharge of the medium, may act positively throughout from the starting position of the reservoir body up to the end position of the stroke whilst still being releasable, e.g. by the two actuating units of the dispenser being telescopically extensible up to the mutual stop. In this arrangement the pressure point may be defeated in the opposite direction so that the actuating units are then located in the starting position in which they are stop-defined in both opposite directions, namely against being telescopically extended by a stop which is very difficult to defeat and against being telescopically retracted by the contacting sliding surface areas of the pressure point control which is substantially easier to defeat.




The dispenser may be configured miniature, e.g. fully clasped single-handedly circumferentially or surrounded lengthwise so that the discharge nozzle freely protrudes between two fingers of the hand. Its largest radial width is maximally 60 mm or 50 mm and its length maximally twice as large as compared to the latter may be maximally 90 mm or 70 mm. These dimensions like all mutual locational definitions may apply to both the starting position as well as the end position after the dispenser has been actuated.




These and further features also read from the description and the drawings, each of the individual features being achieved by themselves or severally in the form of sub-combinations in one embodiment of the invention and in other fields and may represent advantageous aspects as well as being patentable in their own right, for which protection is sought in the present.











Example embodiments of the invention are explained in more detail in the following and illustrated in the drawings in which:





FIG. 1

is an illustration of the dispenser in accordance with the invention, shown partly in axial section,





FIG. 1



a


is a vertical section view of the embodiment of

FIG. 1

in the pre-actuation position;





FIG. 1



b


is a vertical section view of the embodiment of

FIG. 1

in the actuated position;





FIG. 2

is a plan view of the dispenser as shown in

FIG. 1

,





FIG. 3

is an illustration of a further embodiment shown the same as in

FIG. 1

, and





FIG. 4

is a partly sectioned plan view of the dispenser as shown in FIG.


3


.











The dispenser


1


comprises two units


2


,


3


opposingly movable by manual actuation in two directions located at right angles transversely to each other. By linear movement the units


2


,


3


are translated from a starting position or resting position with a shortening of the dispenser


1


into an actuated end position or working position as well as back into the starting position by manual force. By rotary movement the units


2


,


3


are opposingly displaced into various optional positions only in the linear resting position in opposite directions through at least 180° or more than a full turn in each case. The first unit


2


located downwards on discharge of the medium comprises a bowl-type base body


4


with an internal reservoir body


6


and the second unit


3


, located on top of the other unit on discharge of the medium, comprises a base body


5


. Each of the base bodies


4


,


5


as well as the reservoir body


6


is configured integral throughout.




The reservoir body


6


separate from the base body


4


could also be configured integral with the base body


4


and in addition the two base bodies


4


,


5


could be produced integral with each other and then, without being parted from each other, translated from the mutual production position into the starting position or operating position different thereto by being turned. As a result of this the dispenser may be made exclusively of plastics material or injection molded parts without employing any metal and also requires no springs such as control or return springs. Furthermore, the dispenser may be produced miniature, e.g. comprising a length of 10, 8 or 6 cm and a width at right angles transversely thereto of 6, 5 or 4 cm smaller as compared to the latter, whereby each of the cited dimensions may be a maximum or minimum value. The dispenser may be configured for discharging only a single dose of the medium or for discharge in sequence of at least or maximally two, three or four doses of the medium located adjacent to each other in a plane at right angles and transversely to the linear displacement or axis of rotation of the units


2


,


3


and contained in separate reservoirs


7


. The spatial volume of each reservoir


7


is substantially larger than the volume of the medium contained therein so that the medium is moved or loosened up in the reservoir


7


by shaking.




On being discharged the medium flows from the reservoir


7


directly into an outlet passage


8


linear throughout up to a medium orifice


9


, the flow cross-sections of the outlet passage continually increasing from the reservoir


7


up to the medium orifice


9


. The outlet passage


8


comprises in cross-section only a single definition formed by an inner circumference and has at both ends a maximum width which is smaller than the largest inner width of the reservoir


7


. On discharge of the medium as well as in the starting position previous thereto the reservoir


7


and the outlet passage


8


are located in a common axis


10


parallel to the direction of displacement, as compared to which the axis


11


parallel thereto for the rotational movement of the units


2


,


3


is laterally spaced away therefrom by a spacing which is smaller than a third of the maximum width of the dispenser


1


. The axis


11


forms the centerline of the dispenser


1


or of each of the units


2


,


3


and an axis of symmetry for the bodies


4


,


6


. On being discharged the medium flows from the unit


2


through the unit


3


in the direction


12


and for translation into the actuated end position the unit


3


needs to be moved relative to the unit


2


in the opposite direction


13


. For translation into the various rotary positions the units


2


,


3


are opposingly twisted in the direction


14


about the axis


11


. An actuated end position is indicated dot-dashed in FIG.


1


. On being discharged the medium detaches from the dispenser


1


as a whole at the orifice


9


.




For each reservoir


7


the reservoir body


6


comprises a separate reservoir cup


15


the plane opening of which is sealed off by a plane reservoir seal


16


, namely a diaphragm, a film, foil or the like hermetically so that the reservoir cup


15


can only be opened by destroying the seal


16


. The bottom wall of the cup


15


curved inwardly concave and outwardly convex forms internally a hemispherical reservoir bottom


17


which translates continually into a reservoir shell


18


constant in width up to the opening. The length of the shell


18


is substantially smaller than its width or the maximum width of the bottom


17


and may be smaller than a third or half of the radius of this width. The reservoir opening is located in a face surface area


19


of the body


6


plane throughout and located at right angles transversely to the axis


10


,


11


, extending up to outermost circumference of the unit


2


,


4


and permanently forming the surface area of this unit


2


,


4


,


6


nearest to the orifice


9


.




All reservoirs


7


are configured integral with a tubular supporting body


20


hollow throughout located in the axis


11


, the outer circumference of which is connected by the reservoir cups


15


via separate stems


21


uniformly distributed about the axis


11


, as a result of which the reservoir body


6


has differing wall thicknesses, namely smaller in the region of the reservoir cup


15


, the lower end of the supporting body


20


as well as in the region of a flanged deck or a rim


22


, but each the same as the other, and in the region of the stems


21


wall thicknesses which are more than twice as thick as compared to the latter. The stem


21


and the rim


22


form together the face surface area


19


, the stem


21


being axially shorter than the reservoir cup


15


so that the curved bottom wall thereof protrudes downwards beyond the stem


21


and is located radially spaced away adjacently from the outer circumference of the supporting body


20


.




The radial spacing of the outer circumference of the cup


15


from the axis


11


equals the radius of the freely exposed outer circumference of the supporting body


20


so that the stem


21


does not protrude beyond these outer circumferences at right angles transversely to the plane common to the axes


10


,


11


. In the axial view as shown in

FIG. 2

the dispenser


1


just like each of its units


2


,


3


or the base bodies


4


,


5


is elongated or oval parallel to this axial plane so that its smallest width amounts at the most or at least to half of its maximum width and one of two reservoirs


7


is located at each end. Due to the thickened portions of stems


21


located diametrally opposed and due to the free surface area


19


being penetrated only by the reservoir openings the reservoirs


7


are connected to each other substantially flexibly rigid and to the supporting body


20


. The reservoirs


7


are further stiffened by the fixed connection of the reservoir body


6


to the base body


4


. The rim


22


of the face surface area


19


rests by its full circumference on the face or end surface area of the base body


4


facing the orifice


9


, this face or end surface area being formed by a rim


23


of the body


4


consistent in width and thickness. The rims


22


,


23


may be configured also integral with each other and surround the reservoir chambers


24


of all reservoirs


7


in the plane of the reservoir openings and of the reservoir shells


18


.




The base body


4


is formed by a cap


25


, configured elongated as viewed axially, which in each axial section comprises a constant inner and outer width throughout up to the rim


23


and forming a shell


26


as well as at the end thereof facing away from the orifice


9


a plane face wall


27


. Each reservoir cup


15


is in contact with the inner circumference of the shell


26


in its portion furthest removed from the axis


11


, namely symmetrical to the axial plane


10


,


11


and directly adjoining the inner circumference of the rim


23


by half the partial circumference of its outer circumference, i.e. only up to the transition between the bottom


17


and the shell


18


so that the bottom wall of the cup


15


is located within the base body


4


totally without any contact. The rim


23


protrudes only beyond the outer circumference of the shell


26


and forms with the rim


22


about the circumference a common, smooth circumferential surface area continual throughout which dictates the largest outer width of the unit


2


. The bottom


27


is located axially spaced away from the reservoir cups


15


, this axial spacing being greater than its axial extent. Spaced away from the reservoir cups


15


the walls


26


,


27


are mutually joined by stiffeners, such as ribs


28


, adjoining only at the inner sides of the walls


26


,


27


as well as at the outer circumference of the supporting body


20


extending up to the inner side of the bottom


27


. The web-shaped ribs


28


located radially to the axis


11


may thus form by their end edges from each other a divided centering opening for clampingly receiving the lower end section of the supporting body


20


.




When the body


6


is inserted into the body


4


it is first the supporting body


20


that engages this centering opening, after which the outer surface areas of the cups


15


located inclined to the direction of insertion


13


engage with the inner side of the shell


26


and thereby produce, where necessary, a mutual twisting alignment of the bodies


4


,


6


. It is solely by the engagement of the outer surface areas of the reservoir cups


15


with the inner surface area of the cap


25


that the bodies


4


,


6


are then opposingly positively and permanently prevented from twisting out of place with zero clearance. Due to the mutual stop by the rims


22


,


23


and by the parts


20


,


27


the bodies


4


,


8


are opposingly axially locked in place permanently with zero clearance. The outer circumference of the reservoir cups


15


may also clampingly engage the inner circumference of the body


4


with radial pressure, or the rims


22


,


23


may be hot-sealed or fused to each other so that any accidental parting of the bodies


4


,


6


is obviated. The body


6


seals off the interior of the body


4


hermetically at its cup opening. Opposite the outer circumference of the supporting body


20


as well as the stems


21


, namely in the region of its plane longitudinal sides, the inner circumference of the body


4


has no contact with the body


6


throughout since the outer width of the supporting body


20


and of the stems


21


transversely to the axial plane


10


,


11


is smaller than the corresponding outer width of the cup


15


. The outer side of the wall


27


, plane throughout, forms a handle


29


for locating one or more fingers as well as a surface area for reliably standing the dispenser on a plane table top.




The two units


2


,


4


and


3


,


5


are connected to each other before or directly after commencement of the actuating movement only by a single telescopic-type connection


30


located centrally in the axis


11


and which may be configured integral with one or more of the bodies


4


to


6


. In this case, however, the connection


30


exposed between the units


2


,


3


in the starting position is formed by a component separate from the bodies


4


to


6


and permits their shifting movement both axially, but with zero radial clearance, as well as their mutual rotary movement. In the starting position all reservoir cups


15


are located totally outside of the body


5


and in the actuated end position totally within the body


5


beyond which then only the longitudinal part of the body


4


adjoining the reservoirs


7


with the handle


29


protrudes outwardly.




The body


5


comprises likewise an integral and, as viewed axially, elongated or oval cap


31


, the shell


32


of which freely protrudes from its plane face wall


33


only in the direction of the handle


29


. The inner circumference of the shell


32


is slightly wider than the outer circumference of the body


4


or of the rim


22


,


23


so that the latter may be pushed into the shell


32


more or less up to the inner side of the face wall


33


, passageways thereby remaining free between the inner sides of the walls


32


,


33


and the outer sides of the walls


22


,


23


, and a wall of the shell. As suction channels these passageways connect the opened reservoir chamber


24


to the outer atmosphere surrounding the dispenser


1


and run in the direction of flow multiply angled first in the direction


12


along the outer circumference of the wall of the shell


26


,


23


,


22


, then transversely to the axis


10


,


11


along the face surface area


19


or of the seal


16


about the connection


30


and then in the direction


13


through the reservoir opening towards the reservoir bottom


17


, and from there in the direction


12


they translate deflected into the outlet passage


8


. These passageways may pass through the full circumference of the bodies


4


,


6


without interruption so that in the actuated end position they comprise passage cross-sections larger throughout than the outlet passage


8


, but form a constriction or sieve gap defined by the rims


22


,


23


to prevent the intake of any foreign matter. Between the faces of rims


22


,


23


the passageways form a flat passage gap extending over the full face surface area


19


, this gap being penetrated centrally only by the connection


30


so that the latter is directly surrounded by the air flow.




Protruding beyond the outer side of the face wall


33


in the axis


10


is a discharge nozzle


34


configured integral with the body


5


,


31


. Located in the end surface area of the discharge nozzle


34


is the orifice


9


as a right circular opening having a width of at least 2, 4 or 5 mm. Adjacent to and directly connecting the outer circumference of the nozzle


34


the otherwise plane outer side of the face wall


33


forms the second handle


35


for locating one or more fingers of the same hand. Like the handle


29


, the handle


35


extends full-length up to the corresponding shell


26


and


32


respectively, whereby both handles


29


,


35


are penetrated by the axis


11


since the nozzle


34


is located totally adjacent to the axis


11


but spaced away therefrom. Protruding less far than the shell


32


eccentrically adjacent to the nozzle


34


only beyond the inner side of the face wall


33


is a protuberance


36


totally located within the cap


31


. The sleeve-shaped insertion protuberance


36


is configured integral with the face wall


33


and forms part of the connection


30


.




The double-wall nozzle


34


comprises an outermost shell


38


conically flared at an acute angle in the direction


13


up to the wall


33


, this shell extending only up to the wall


33


and translating thereinto integrally. At the other end located at the orifice


9


the shell


38


translates integrally into a freely protruding inner shell


37


conically tapered at an acute angle, which from the connection with the shell


38


extending up to the orifice


9


is without contact to the shell


38


over its full length and over most of its outer circumference and thus freely protrudes in the direction


13


beyond the inner side of the wall


33


into the cap


31


. The outer circumference of the shell


37


is integrally connected to the inner circumference of the shell


38


via stiffeners, such as ribs


39


which protrude from the transition between the shells


37


,


38


up to the inner side of the wall


33


as well as into the cap


31


. The longitudinal or axial ribs


38


are distributed uniformly about the axis


10


and set back relative to the adjacent ends of the tubular


37


,


38


.




The inner circumference of the tubular shell


37


defines alone the sole outlet passage


8


conically flared at an acute angle in the direction


12


. The length of the nozzle


34


is smaller than the spacing between the handles


29


,


35


in the resting position or in the actuated end position. The outer width of the nozzle


34


is selected closely behind its free face surface area with a 6 mm diameter so large that it may be introduced into a nostril and come into contact with the inside of the nostril relatively snugly when already inserted only slightly. The cited face surface area translates rounded into the conically outer circumference of the shell


38


. Curved partly or semi-circular about the axis


10


in every working rotated position are also the shells


26


,


32


as well as the rims


22


,


23


, whereby these curved sections as viewed axially translate into each other via straight flanking sections of the shell or rim in each case.




As evident from

FIG. 1

a separate seal


16


is provided for each reservoir chamber


24


, although an integral common seal throughout may also be provided for two or more or all reservoir chambers


24


. The seal


16


is joined by hot-sealing or fusion only to the face surface area


19


, beyond which it protrudes only by its thickness of maximally half or a tenth of a millimeter. To open the seal


16


—which is flexible but capable of bursting without debris—of a chamber


24


located in the axis


10


of the passage


8


, a tool


40


is provided on the unit


3


,


5


, this tool being located totally within the cap


31


at the end of the passage


8


or of the shell


37


and protruding beyond this end, as a result of which the inner shell forms a spike


37


with which the complete tool


40


is integrally configured as with the remaining body


5


.




Located nearest to the sealing plane


19


in the axis


10


is a tip


41


of the tool


40


pointing in the direction


13


, this tip being configured spaced away from the corresponding end of the hollow spike


37


as a 90° conically pointed tip. Integrally adjoining the tip


41


in the direction


12


are the webs


42


, the ends of which remote from the tip


41


integrally adjoin the face or end surface area of the shell


37


so that they protrude in the plane of this face surface area beyond neither the inner circumference nor the outer circumference of the shell


37


. The outer longitudinal edges of the four webs


42


uniformly distributed about the axis


10


form a smooth inclined continuation of the outer circumference of the tip


41


and their inner longitudinal edges diverge in the direction


12


in the same way inclined to the axis


10


. The side edges of each web


42


are located parallel to each other so that, between them, triangular ports


44


of the passage inlet


43


of the passage


8


are formed in each case uniformly distributed about the axis


10


. The passage cross-section of the single port


44


as well as of all ports


44


jointly is smaller than that of the passage


8


, the orifice


9


and of the cited passageways for the delivery air flow, as a result of which the tool


40


forms protruding beyond the plane end surface area of the shell


37


a sieve, a flow restrictor and a swirler for the flow, the ports


44


of which are defined by the end surface area of the shell


37


as well as by the webs


42


.




In the actuated end position, in which the body


5


or the shell


37


is directly stop-defined relative to the body


4


or


6


, the end of the tip


41


is located away from the bottom


17


by a spacing which is smaller than the radius of curvature thereof or half thereof, whilst the end surface area of the shell


37


is located in the region of the bottom


17


or in the region of the transition between the bottom


17


and the shell


18


. The outer circumference of the shell


37


then defines with the shell


18


an annular passage interrupted by the ribs


39


, this annular passage starting from the reservoir opening or the face surface area


19


and pointing axially in the direction of the bottom surface area


17


. At the end surface area of the shell


37


the continuation of this annular passage which is then defined by the webs


42


and the opposite bottom wall


17


first assumes a wider passage cross-section before then again becoming narrower towards the tip


41


. The air flowing through the annular passage towards the surface area


17


is caused to swirl about the axis


10


by the guiding surface area


17


, this swirl flow entering through the ports


44


into the passage


8


and simultaneously emerges mixed with the medium from the orifice


9


.




The closed chamber


44


is filled expediently only with medium sufficient to partly cover the bottom


17


and in the working position the ports


44


dip into the medium either not at all or only in part to thus achieve a very good swirling entrainment of the medium and also size reduction of any large particles possibly formed by minute particles sticking together. When the spike


37


dives into the chamber


24


the medium is displaced radially outwards about the axis


10


by the tool


40


so that the medium fill in the center forms a depression.




In the diving action it is only the tip


41


that first comes into contact with the seal


16


, causing it to be pricked before then being slit open in the further diving action by the webs


42


and the ribs


39


only along radially lines up to the shell


18


and divided into individual circular sectioned flaps. These flaps then extend only up to the surface level of the medium in the chamber


24


and are caused to radially vibrate and flutter by the inlet flow of air, resulting in the delivery flow impacting the medium to be pulsed, it also leaving the orifice


9


pulsed. Each rib


39


is located with a tool member


42


on the same side of the axis


10


in a common axial plane and translates into this member


42


graduated about the outer circumference of the shell


32


.




The connection


30


comprises but a single connecting member


45


separate from the bodies


4


to


6


, namely an arbor connected to the body


5


firmly seated axially and prevented from twisting out of place. A tapered end of the hollow member


45


configured rotationally symmetrical full-length and located in the axis


11


is inserted as a connector spigot


46


firmly seated in the protuberance


36


so that the outer circumference of this connecting member smoothly adjoins the outer circumference of the cylindrical connecting member


45


the same in width. In the starting position the member


45


passes through a gap between the end surface area of the cap


31


and the rim


22


,


23


. As of the surface area


19


the outer circumference of the member


45


engages the inner circumference of the arbor


20


shiftingly, rotatively as well as sealed so that a telescopic connection materializes. Provided spaced away below the cups


15


and above the wall


27


on the inner circumference of the boss


20


is a stop


47


formed by the annular shoulder at the transition to a flared inner cross-section of the arbor


20


, pointing away from the body


5


and forming together with the counter-stop


48


of the member


45


a captive lock for the units


2


,


3


in the starting position. The counter-stop


48


is formed by a widened annular collar at the outer circumference and end of the section of the member


45


which is guided up to the counter-stop


48


slidingly on the body


6


. In the actuated end position the member


45


with the counter-stop


48


comes up against the inner side of the wall


27


. In this end position the ribs


39


may still feature a gap spaced away from the annular defining edge of the shell


18


and of the reservoir opening respectively.




Prior to first-time use (priming) the two units


3


,


4


are joined together by a tamper-proof seal


49


safeguarding the bodies


4


,


5


in the starting position or in an intermediate position and sealing off the gap between the bodies


4


,


5


over part or all of the circumference from the atmosphere. The seal


49


can be translated into the release position needed to permit the formerly blocked actuating movement and rotary mutual movement of the units


2


,


3


only by destroying a connection


51


, namely its connection to the body


4


and/or the body


5


. The cupped seal tag


52


is in this case curved about the axis


10


of the passage


8


and of the tool


40


, located symmetrical to the axial plane


10


,


11


and extending about the axis


10


at an angle of an arc of less than 180° and more than 90°. The seal tag adjoins the ends of the shells


26


,


32


facing each other, it possibly translating via a design break connection integrally into the shell


32


, as indicated by the dot-dashed line


53


, and being configured separately from the body


5


so that it may form at the inner circumference centering and stop surface areas for both the outer circumference and the end edge of the shell


32


. The member


52


is integrally connected to the outer circumference of the rim


23


by the connection


51


protruding inwardly from the inner circumference of the member


52


and adjoining the lower end surface areas of the rim


23


the same as of the member


52


.




In joint integral fabrication of the bodies


4


,


5


the connection


51


could be configured as a film hinge-type joint so that both bodies


4


.


5


may be produced located juxtaposed in cap openings facing in the same directly before then being folded together about the hinging axis into the position as shown in FIG.


1


. The connection


51


may be released either by applying strong axial pressure to the handles


29


,


35


or by manual peeling off the seal tag


52


radially outwards by it being flexurally deformed and totally removed from the two bodies


4


,


5


.




In the first case as cited the member


52


remains on the base body


5


so that although mutual axial movement of the units


2


,


3


is still permitted, their mutual rotation about the axis


11


is not, due to the remaining member


52


preventing this. As soon as on the axial stroke the rim


22


,


23


is attained in the shell


32


this too prevents any rotational movement of the units


2


,


3


irrespective of the seal


49


since the inner circumference of the member


52


forms a smooth continuation of the inner circumference of the shell


32


. It is not until the units


2


,


3


have been telescopically extended into their starting position that it is possible to dislodge the member


52


in destroying the connection


51


by mutually twisting the bodies


4


,


5


and thus permit the rotative movement needed to align the passage


8


with the second reservoir


7


.




To facilitate opening the chamber


24


a pressure point control


50


is provided which locks the units


2


,


3


in place until a predetermined pressure force is attained at the surface areas


29


,


35


, it then being easily defeated so that the units


2


,


3


are able to be manually urged towards each other greatly accelerated and only the seal


16


of the selected chamber


24


is pierced. In this case the holding member of the pressure point control is to be viewed as being the connection


51


which, however, after destruction is no longer effective for discharge from the second reservoir


7


. In order to have an effective pressure point control


50


on opening or discharging each reservoir


7


, the units


2


,


3


could be arranged to interengage in the starting position via a radially pliant latch which is disengaged on actuation and reengaged on the return to the starting position. Apart from being effective between the outer and inner cross-section of the bodies


4


,


5


the latch could also be effective directly between the bodies


5


,


6


, e.g. by providing a protruding latch cam on the supporting part


20


adjacent to the lower end surface area of the members


45


,


48


.




The nozzle


34


may be introduced into the bodily opening of a patient being treated before or after the axial actuation. In the first case a pump for boosting the delivery flow into the chamber


24


as well as into the passage


8


could be provided and formed e.g. by the member


45


,


48


acting as the plunger and the body


6


,


20


as the barrel. In the case as illustrated, however, the dispenser


1


is totally valveless since an inlet valve or an outlet valve is needed in none of the passageways for the delivery flow and the medium. After axial actuation the end edges


54


of the ribs


39


—provided converging at an acute angle in the direction


12


with the axis


10


, namely oriented parallel to the webs


42


and in a linear elongation from their inner edges—are located axial slightly spaced away from the sharp defining edge of the chamber opening flanked at right angles in the axial section so that these edges


54


protrude up into the shell


18


.




Located between the outer sides of the bodies


4


,


6


and the inner sides of the body


5


are the portings or passageways


55


as explained extending from the full circumference of the shells


26


,


32


between the parallel rims


22


,


23


up to the full circumference of the spike


37


and from there directly onto the chamber


24


. The outer width of the spike


37


is greater than two-thirds of the inner width of the shell


18


and the mean width of the passage


8


corresponds to half the width of the shell


18


. When air is suctioned through the orifice


9


from the passage


8


and the chamber


24


without an intervening valve, then air flows via the passageways


55


from without via an inlet


56


in the way as described and likewise without valve control into the chamber


24


so that the medium is strongly swirled therein and then the resulting, well homogenized mixture of medium and delivery flow forced out in sequence through the ports


44


, the passage


8


and the orifice


9


. Once the chamber


24


has been emptied the units


2


,


3


are manually returned from the end position in which the member


45


,


48


is stopped in contact with the bottom


27


back into the stopped extended starting position so that their mutual anti-twist lock is now released. The units


2


,


3


are then counter-twisted about the axis


11


through 180° so that the parts


34


,


37


to


44


,


54


are then aligned on the second reservoir


7


still to be opened. This can then be emptied into the second nostril by axial actuation in the way as described.




In the case as shown in

FIG. 1

the axial extent of the shank


34


is greater than the axial extent of the cap


31


, whereas in the case as shown in

FIG. 3

it is smaller, but smaller than the axial extent of the body


4


and


6


respectively. The axial stroke is smaller than the axial extent of each of the caps


25


,


31


or of the nozzle


34


, the length of which corresponds to the spacing between the handles


29


,


35


in the actuated end position. The cap


31


is half as short as the cap


25


which accommodates the cap in its interior only in the actuated end position, the length of the cap


31


being measured from the face surface area


35


up to the end edge of the shell


32


. The axial extent of the body


6


equals that of the cap


25


or of the body


4


as a whole, thus resulting in the dispenser


1


being configured miniature and simple to operate.




For assembly, first the member


45


,


48


is inserted from below in the direction


12


into the supporting part


20


until it comes up against the stop


47


, it then being connected to the body


5


via the protuberance


36


and spigot


36


,


46


in the same direction of insertion


12


. Then, this assembly is inserted in the direction


13


into the body


4


, the cap


32


at


53


comes up against the lock


49


resulting in the dispenser


1


then being ready for priming as described. If the member


45


,


48


is to form an assembly with the body


5


prior to being fitted to the body


6


, for example, due to it being configured integral with the body


5


, the member


48


could be configured as a snap-action member or the like which on insertion in the direction


13


into the supporting part


20


deflects from the face surface area


19


initially radially inwardly before snapping back radially outwards into its locking position after having negotiated the shoulder


47


.




The annular space defined by the outer circumference of the supporting part


20


, the inner circumference of the shell


26


, the inner side of the wall


27


as well as by the walls of the reservoir cup


15


and between adjacent cups


15


by the inner side of the flanged deck


22


is vacant, i.e. free of fixed installed items so that reservoir cups


15


differing in depth may be inserted in one and the same cap


25


. Since the magnitude of the stroke is dictated solely by the reservoir body


6


or by its cooperation with the counter-stop


48


, adapting the stroke to the corresponding cup depth is simply done by making changes to the reservoir body


6


as well as to the connecting member


45


without involving any change to the bodies


4


,


5


. In any case, however, the reservoir cups are located spaced away from and between the handles


29


,


35


in each actuation position.




As evident from

FIGS. 3 and 4

the body


4


may be eliminated altogether or be formed solely by the body


6


,


20


forming with the lower end of the supporting part


20


also the handle


29


. In this case the protuberance


36


is configured integral with the remaining connecting member


45


. In the starting position too, all reservoirs


7


or cups


15


are located totally within the shell


32


, beyond the lower opening of which only the supporting part


20


freely protrudes. The arrangement may be made so that on the actuating stroke the member


45


emerges slightly from the lower end


29


of the shank


20


before the tip


41


has attained the seal


16


, the user then feeling the corresponding relative location between the units


2


,


3


by his finger pressing against the handle


29


. The four chambers


24


or cups


15


uniformly distributed about the axis


11


are connected to the shank


20


via the stems


21


so that although the stems


21


translate directly into the rim


22


they are located spaced away from each other circumferentially, as a result of which each cup


15


is able to execute a slight, resilient pivoting movement relative to the shank


20


like a single-armed and radial lever freely protruding from the shank


20


.




In this case the interengaging members of the control


50


are provided directly at the bodies


5


,


6


, namely at the inner circumference of the shell


32


and at the outermost circumference of the rim


22


as well as being configured each integral with the corresponding body


5


and


6


respectively. Adjoiningly the rim


22


comprises at its free end edge surface areas


47


,


51


opposite each other which may be provided full-length as the flanks of an annular groove about the axis


11


. Both surface areas


47


,


51


are formed by separate radial protuberances each defined by two flanks. The flank


47


of the protuberance located nearer to the end edge of the shell


32


exerts a greater return resistance on the protuberance


48


of the body


6


than the corresponding flank of the protuberance belonging to the shoulder


51


and may be located e.g. at right angles to the axis


11


. The rim


22


forms around each cup


15


a most prominent radially rim protuberance


48


, the surface areas


47


,


51


being located in the movement travel of all protuberances


48


. In the starting position the protuberances


48


are located expediently between the surface areas


47


,


51


so that on actuation the inclined surface area


51


first needs to be slidingly overcome by the protuberances


48


with the cited resilient definition of the body


6


before the accelerated working stroke commences. Then, when the units


2


,


3


are telescopically re-extended, the body


6


deforms correspondingly in the opposite direction when the protuberances


48


slide along the other inclined surface areas of the protuberance of the surface area


51


into the region of the latching opening


47


,


51


. In the starting position the body


6


is accordingly locked in place by a snap-action connection of the control


50


.




In each working rotary position the two units


2


,


3


are positively prevented from being twisted mutually out of place by a lock


57


, but with sufficient rotary play to permit a slight, mutual resilient twisting movement to permit their precise mutual alignment in axial stopping of the surface area


54


at the unit


2


. Between two protuberances


48


, each defined as viewed axially semi-circular and convex, the outer end surface area of the rim


22


forms in each case a semi-circular and concave definition recess


58


engaged by a protuberance


59


at the inner circumference of the shell


32


with slight radial tension with the cited rotary play. The protuberance


59


guides the body


6


practically over the full actuating stroke, but releases it for the rotative movement about the axis


11


when the latching members


48


are located in the latching opening


47


,


51


. In this arrangement latching members are also provided expediently in the region of the groove


47


,


51


which may be defeated, unlike the lock


57


, by the manual rotary force exerted on the body


6


and which always locks in place when a chamber


24


is located in the axis


10


. From this latching position effective solely by positive friction the body


6


is then translated into the positive rotary lock


57


directly on commencement of the working stroke. For this purpose the end surface area of the protuberance


59


is able to approach the axis


11


inclined in the direction


12


. In the region of each protuberance


59


the thickness of the shell


32


may be reduced so that it forms at the outer circumference a finger scallop for the user.




The dispenser


1


described is particularly suitable for powdered, grainy or similar, flowable media or solid substances. However, it may be just as suitable for liquid or pasty media, the part


40


or part


16


then comprising a plunger sliding sealed along the shell


18


to thus produce a discharging pressure in the chamber


24


. The tool


40


for opening or piercing the plunger or seal


16


may also be a hollow needle of a metallic material, more particularly stainless steel, through which the outlet passage


8


is guided. In this case the outlet passage


8


is then expediently guided through an outlet valve which does not open until a sufficiently high pressure has built up in the chamber


24


due to the travel of the stroke. In this configuration the delivery flow may also port directly into the passage


8


, the orifice


9


of which is formed expediently by an atomizer nozzle with means for swirling the medium. As evident from

FIGS. 3 and 4

the units


2


,


3


or the bodies


5


,


6


, but especially the cap shell


32


, are defined circular about the axis


11


as viewed axially so that the handles


29


,


35


do not extend longitudinal transversely to the axis


10


,


11


as shown in

FIGS. 1 and 2

.




It will be appreciated that all features of all embodiments are interchangeable or supplementary to each other for any one dispenser, so that all passages of the description apply to all embodiments. All cited effects and properties such as locational definitions, size relationships or the like may be provided precisely as described, or merely substantially or approximately so and may also greatly deviate therefrom depending on the required discharge effect.



Claims
  • 1. A dispenser having two bodies which are rotatable relative to one another, one of said bodies, being a base body, comprising a discharge nozzle having a piercing element which has an inlet and outlet for a medium to be inhaled through the nozzle and another of said bodies, being a reservoir body, comprising multiple sealed reservoirs for containing the medicament which when pierced by the piercing element the medium will flow from the inlet of the piercing element to the outlet and out an orifice.
  • 2. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein said reservoirs comprise a reservoir being concavely bounded by a reservoir cup, and wherein an outlet shell bounds said outlet.
  • 3. The dispenser according to claim 2, wherein said reservoir chamber is bounded by a substantially wherein said reservoir chamber is bounded by a substantially hemispherical cup bottom.
  • 4. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein while extracting the medium said reservoir bounds a substantially annular inlet opening for passing inlet flow into said reservoir.
  • 5. The dispenser according to claim 4, wherein said outlet is located inside the piercing element, said reservoir being bounded by a cup bottom opposing a cup aperture, and an annular duct connecting said cup aperture with said cup bottom, said annular duct being coaxial with said inlet of said piercing element.
  • 6. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein said reservoir is bounded by a cup wall and a reservoir closure including a closure wall thinner than said cup wall, said closure wall being bonded to a cup rim and hermetically sealing said reservoir while being releasable only by being destroyed, said reservoir closure being substantially planar.
  • 7. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein actuating means are included for opening said reservoir by a manual actuating motion.
  • 8. The dispenser according to claim 1, and further including abutment means, wherein while discharging the medium said outlet is positively locked relative to said reservoir by said abutment means while simultaneously an inclined face engages a recess of said reservoir containing body.
  • 9. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein said outlet is surrounded by longitudinal ribs circumferentially subdividing said reservoir and including front edges which substantially connect to said reservoir body when manually actuating said dispenser.
  • 10. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein a piercing element is included for opening said reservoir, said piercing element being located in the vicinity of said inlet and covering said outlet when viewed in axial view, for opening said reservoir said piercing element substantially exclusively slitting said reservoir body, ports of said inlet being inclined relative to an axis of said reservoir.
  • 11. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein said base body includes said piercing element including a plunger and said inlet, while discharging the medium said plunger extending inside said reservoir and being spaced from a cup bottom of said reservoir, wherein passageways extend within said reservoir from a constriction into a widened section adjoining said cup bottom.
  • 12. The dispenser according to claim 11, wherein said piercing element and said reservoir commonly provide a mixing and swirl chamber for a delivery flow radially inwardly deflected in said reservoir over an angle of substantially 180° into said outlet.
  • 13. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein said reservoir is bounded by a reservoir cup supported substantially exclusively circumferentially by said base body and including a cup aperture, said reservoir cup including a rim enveloping said cup aperture.
  • 14. The dispenser according to claim 13, wherein said reservoir cup includes a cup shell and said reservoir body includes a support body, said cup shell eccentrically connecting to said support body substantially in one part.
  • 15. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein said at least one base body includes a first base body and a second base body manually displaceable relative to said first base body, said first base body supporting said reservoir and said second base body including said outlet, while discharging the medium said first and second base bodies being interconnected substantially exclusively via said reservoir body.
  • 16. The dispenser according to claim 15, wherein said reservoir body is mounted on said second base body directly adjacent to said reservoir via a telescopic mount, while discharging the medium said reservoir body being located substantially entirely within at least one of said first and second base bodies and radially adjacent to said telescopic mount.
  • 17. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein control means are included for manually overcoming a pressure resistance while initially actuating said dispenser.
  • 18. The dispenser according to claim 17, wherein said at least one base body includes first and second base bodies, said control means including means for locking said second base body relative to said first base body in an initial position, said control means including a rated rupture connection interconnecting said first and second base bodies, a captive lock being included for preventing said second base body from being withdrawn from said first base body.
  • 19. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein said reservoir body includes a plurality of individual reservoirs each of said individual reservoirs, being individually connectable to said outlet.
  • 20. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein said base body includes a first base body and a second base body manually axially and rotatably displaceable relative to said first base body, an arbor being included and rotatably engaging said reservoir body.
  • 21. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein said base body is a cap and includes a cap shell prevented from rotating relative to said reservoir body by rotation prevention means, at least while discharging the medium said rotation prevention means being located in the vicinity of said cap shell.
  • 22. The dispenser according to claim 21, wherein said rotation prevention means include a positioning member located on an outer circumference of said reservoir body and on an inner circumference of said cap shell, said rotation prevention means including means for axially slidingly displacing said cap shell relative to said reservoir body.
  • 23. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein said base body includes said outlet duct and a discharge nozzle, said discharge nozzle including a free end traversed by said medium outlet said discharge nozzle including first and second shells commonly bounding said medium outlet, said first shell being nested inside said second shell and radially spaced from said second shell, said first shell defining a length extension different from a length extension of said second shell, said first shell freely protruding into said base body.
  • 24. The dispenser according to claim 1, wherein said reservoir body and base body include peripheral faces located outside of said at least one reservoir, passageways being bounded by said peripheral faces.
  • 25. The dispenser according to claim 24, wherein said base body includes a cup end wall including an inner face, said reservoir body including an end face opposing said inner face, said end face and said inner face commonly bounding said passageways.
  • 26. The dispenser according to claim 24, wherein said base body includes a first cap shell, and a second cap shell enveloping said first cap shell, said passageways ending upstream in an inlet and suction opening substantially circumferentially bounded by at least one of said first and second cap shells.
  • 27. A dispenser according to claim 1, wherein said base body being rotatable around an axis of rotation, said sealed reservoirs being disposable near said piercing element by rotation and then pierced by movement of said base body in direction of said axis.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
197 04 849 Feb 1997 DE
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/EP98/00311 WO 00
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO98/34660 8/13/1998 WO A
US Referenced Citations (6)
Number Name Date Kind
4627432 Newell et al. Dec 1986 A
4778054 Newell et al. Oct 1988 A
5469989 Graf et al. Nov 1995 A
5533502 Piper Jul 1996 A
5584417 Graf et al. Dec 1996 A
5740794 Smith et al. Apr 1998 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number Date Country
4021 263 Jul 1990 DE
0 729 764 Feb 1996 EP
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry
International Search Report dated Jun. 24, 1998 for PCT/EP98/00311.