Claims
- 1. A lancet driver configured to exert a driving force on a lancet during a lancing cycle and used on a tissue site, said driver comprising:
a drive force generator for advancing said lancet along a path into the tissue site; and a sensor configured to detect lancet position along said path during the lancing cycle.
- 2. The device of claim 1 wherein said sensor detects lancet velocity along said path.
- 3. The device of claim 1 wherein said drive force generator comprises a voice coil drive force generator.
- 4. The device of claim 1 wherein said drive force generator comprises a rotary voice coil drive force generator.
- 5. The device of claim 1 wherein said drive force generator comprises a linear voice coil drive force generator.
- 6. The device of claim 1 wherein the drive force generator comprises a magnetic source that produces a controllable magnetic field in a magnetically active region adjacent the magnetic source;
a moveable member at least partially disposed in the magnetically active region, said member moved by the controllable magnetic field to actuate said lancet.
- 7. The device of claim 1 wherein said drive force generator uses electricity to create a controllable electromagnetic field for actuating said lancet.
- 8. The device of claim 1 further comprising a human interface on a housing of said driver and providing at least one output selected from: stick number, lancets remaining, time, alarm, profile information, force in last stick, or last stick time.
- 9. The device of claim 1 further comprising a human interface on a housing, said interface selected from: an LED, an LED digit display, or an LCD display.
- 10. The device of claim 1 further comprising an input device on a housing, said input device selected from: at least one pushbutton, a touch pad independent of the display device, or a touch sensitive screen on the LCD display.
- 11. The device of claim 1 wherein said drive force generator actuates said lancet to penetrate to a depth in the tissue site and pause for a controlled dwell time while in the tissue site, said dwell time sufficient to draw body fluid toward a wound channel created by said lancet.
- 12. The device of claim 1 wherein said drive force generator uses electricity and is configured to hold said lancet in the tissue site at a fixed position when electric current is turned off, allowing for unlimited dwell time in the tissue site.
- 13. The device of claim 1 wherein said drive force generator has a movable member and a drive coil creating a magnetic field wherein the drive coil magnetically attracts the movable member, said drive coil configured to only partially encircle side surfaces of said movable member.
- 14. The device of claim 1 further comprising a mechanical damper disposed to minimize oscillation of the lancet in the tissue site when the lancet reaches an end point of its penetration stroke into said tissue site.
- 15. The device of claim 1 a lancet coupler for removably coupling the lancet to said drive force generator.
- 16. The device of claim 1 wherein said housing and all elements therein have a combined weight of less than about 0.5 lbs.
- 17. The device of claim 1 wherein the sensor comprises an incremental encoder.
- 18. The device of claim 1 wherein the sensor comprises a linear optical incremental encoder.
- 19. The device of claim 1 wherein the sensor comprises a rotary optical incremental encoder.
- 20. The device of claim 1 wherein the sensor comprises a capacitive incremental encoder.
- 21. The device of claim 1 wherein the sensor comprises an optical encoder and an optical encoder flag secured to the movable member.
- 22. The device of claim 1 wherein average lancet velocity into the tissue site differs from average lancet velocity leaving the tissue site.
- 23. The device of claim 1 wherein said force generator is configured to achieve a withdrawal stroke of the lancet at a lancet velocity of less than about 0.02 meter per second.
- 24. The device of claim 1 wherein said force generator is configured to achieve a penetration stroke of the lancet at a lancet velocity between about 0.8 and 20.0 meter per second.
- 25. The device of claim 1 further comprising a cartridge coupled to the drive force generator, said cartridge containing a plurality of lancets.
- 26. The device of claim 1 further comprising a processor coupled to the drive force generator for signaling said generator to change the direction and magnitude of force exerted on the lancet during the lancing cycle, said sensor communicating with said processor.
- 27. The device of claim 26 wherein said processor determines relative position and velocity of the lancet based on relative position measurements of the lancet with respect to time.
- 28. The device of claim 26 further comprising memory for storage and retrieval of a set of alternative lancing profiles which the processor uses to modulate the drive force generator.
- 29. The device of claim 26 wherein the processor modulates the lancet driver by comparing an actual profile of the lancet to the profile and maintaining a preset error limit between the actual profile and the profile.
- 30. The device of claim 26 wherein the processor optimizes said phases of a lancet velocity profile based on information entered by a user of the lancing device.
- 31. The device of claim 26 wherein the processor calculates an appropriate lancet diameter and geometry to collect a blood volume required by a user.
- 32. The device of claim 26 wherein said processor has logic for learning and recording characteristics of said tissue site to optimize control of lancet velocity and lancet position in a manner that minimizes pain to the patient while drawing body fluid for sampling.
- 33. The device of claim 1 wherein a processor actuates said drive force generator to drive the lancet at velocities in time that follow a selectable lancing velocity profile said selectable lancing velocity profile is selected from a set of alternative lancing velocity profiles having characteristic phases for lancet advancement and retraction.
- 34. The device of claim 33 wherein the lancing velocity profile is selectable by a user of the lancing device.
- 35. The device of claim 33 wherein said lancing velocity profile provides a lancet withdrawal velocity sufficiently slow to allow blood flowing from punctured blood vessels to flow into a wound channel in the tissue site created by the lancet, to follow the lancet out of the wound channel, and flow to a skin surface.
- 36. The device of claim 33 wherein said velocity profile includes a lancet deceleration phase, after said lancet penetrates said tissue site and prior to withdrawal from said tissue site, wherein said lancet velocity follows a programmable deceleration profile having said lancet stopping in the tissue site without a sudden hard stop.
- 37. The device of claim 33 wherein the lancing velocity profile is selected by the lancing device based on optimization of lancing parameters from information obtained in previous lancing events.
- 38. The device of claim 37 wherein said processor optimizes said velocity profile for subsequent lancing based upon success of obtaining a blood sample from said user in previous lancing events.
- 39. The device of claim 37 wherein said processor optimizes said velocity profile for subsequent lancing based upon blood volume obtained from said user in previous lancing events.
- 40. The device of claim 37 wherein said processor optimizes said velocity profile for subsequent lancing based upon elastic tenting associated with skin deformation in previous lancing events.
- 41. The device of claim 37 wherein said lancet penetrating to a depth in the tissue site based on impedance measurements from a distal portion of the lancet in said tissue site.
- 42. A lancet driver configured to exert a driving force on a lancet used at a tissue site during a lancing cycle, said device comprising:
a voice-coil, drive force generator; and a processor coupled to the drive force generator capable of changing the direction and magnitude of force exerted on the lancet during the lancing cycle; a position sensor configured to detect lancet position during the lancing cycle.
- 43. The device of claim 42 wherein said voice coil comprises a cylindrical coil encircling a movable magnet.
- 44. The device of claim 42 wherein said voice coil comprises a linear flat coil.
- 45. The device of claim 42 wherein said drive force generator comprises a rotary voice coil drive force generator.
- 46. The device of claim 42 wherein said drive force generator comprises a linear voice coil drive force generator.
- 47. The device of claim 42 wherein the drive force generator comprises a magnetic source that produces a controllable magnetic field in a magnetically active region adjacent the magnetic source;
a moveable member at least partially disposed in the magnetically active region, said member moved by the controllable magnetic field to actuate said lancet.
- 48. The device of claim 42 wherein said drive force generator uses electricity to create a controllable electromagnetic field for actuating said lancet.
- 49. The device of claim 42 further comprising a human interface on a housing of said driver and providing at least one output selected from: stick number, lancets remaining, time, alarm, profile information, force in last stick, or last stick time.
- 50. The device of claim 42 further comprising a human interface on a housing, said interface selected from: an LED, an LED digit display, or an LCD display.
- 51. The device of claim 42 further comprising an input device on a housing, said input device selected from: one or more pushbuttons, a touch pad independent of the display device, or a touch sensitive screen on the LCD display.
- 52. The device of claim 42 wherein said drive force generator actuates said lancet to penetrate to a depth in the tissue site and pause for a controlled dwell time while in the tissue site, said dwell time sufficient to draw body fluid toward a wound channel created by said lancet.
- 53. The device of claim 42 wherein said drive force generator uses electricity and is configured to hold said lancet in the tissue site at a fixed position when electric current is turned off, allowing for unlimited dwell time in the tissue site.
- 54. The device of claim 42 wherein said drive force generator holds said lancet at a fixed position against tenting force from said tissue site without contacting a mechanical stop.
- 55. The device of claim 42 wherein said drive force generator has a movable member and a drive coil creating a magnetic field wherein the drive coil magnetically attracts the movable member, said drive coil configured to only partially encircle said movable member.
- 56. The device of claim 42 a mechanical damper disposed to minimize oscillation of the lancet in the tissue site when the lancet reaches an end point of its penetration stroke into said tissue site.
- 57. The device of claim 42 a lancet coupler for removably coupling the lancet to said drive force generator.
- 58. The device of claim 42 wherein said housing and all elements therein have a combined weight of less than about 0.5 lbs.
- 59. The device of claim 42 wherein the sensor comprises an incremental encoder.
- 60. The device of claim 42 wherein the sensor comprises a linear optical incremental encoder.
- 61. The device of claim 42 wherein the sensor comprises a rotary optical incremental encoder.
- 62. The device of claim 42 wherein the sensor comprises a capacitive incremental encoder.
- 63. The device of claim 42 wherein the sensor comprises an optical encoder and an optical encoder flag secured to the movable member.
- 64. The device of claim 42 wherein average lancet velocity into the tissue site differs from average lancet velocity leaving the tissue site.
- 65. The device of claim 42 wherein said force generator is configured to achieve a withdrawal stroke of the lancet at a lancet velocity of 0.5 meters per second to less than about 0.02 meter per second.
- 66. The device of claim 42 wherein said force generator is configured to achieve a penetration stroke of the lancet at a lancet velocity between about 0.8 and 20.0 meter per second.
- 67. The device of claim 42 further comprising a cartridge coupled to the drive force generator, said cartridge containing a plurality of lancets.
- 68. The device of claim 42 further comprising a processor coupled to the drive force generator for signaling said generator to change the direction and magnitude of force exerted on the lancet during the lancing cycle, said sensor communicating with said processor.
- 69. The device of claim 68 wherein said processor determines relative position and velocity of the lancet based on relative position measurements of the lancet with respect to time.
- 70. The device of claim 68 further comprising memory for storage and retrieval of a set of alternative lancing profiles which the processor uses to modulate the drive force generator.
- 71. The device of claim 68 wherein the processor modulates the lancet driver by comparing an actual profile of the lancet to the profile and maintaining a preset error limit between the actual profile and the profile.
- 72. The device of claim 68 wherein the processor optimizes said phases of a lancet velocity profile based on information entered by a user of the lancing device.
- 73. The device of claim 68 wherein the processor calculates an appropriate lancet diameter and geometry to collect a blood volume required by a user.
- 74. The device of claim 68 wherein said processor has logic for learning and recording characteristics of said tissue site to optimize control of lancet velocity and lancet position in a manner that minimizes pain to the patient while drawing body fluid for sampling.
- 75. The device of claim 42 wherein a processor actuates said drive force generator to drive the lancet at velocities in time that follow a selectable lancing velocity profile said selectable lancing velocity profile is selected from a set of alternative lancing velocity profiles having characteristic phases for lancet advancement and retraction.
- 76. The device of claim 75 wherein the lancing velocity profile is selectable by a user of the lancing device.
- 77. The device of claim 75 wherein said lancing velocity profile provides a lancet withdrawal velocity sufficiently slow to allow blood flowing from punctured blood vessels to flow into a wound channel in the tissue site created by the lancet, to follow the lancet out of the wound channel, and flow to a skin surface.
- 78. The device of claim 75 wherein said velocity profile includes a lancet deceleration phase, after said lancet penetrates said tissue site and prior to withdrawal from said tissue site, wherein said lancet velocity follows a programmable deceleration profile having said lancet stopping in the tissue site without a sudden hard stop.
- 79. The device of claim 75 wherein the lancing velocity profile is selected by the lancing device based on optimization of lancing parameters from information obtained in previous lancing events.
- 80. The device of claim 79 wherein said processor optimizes said velocity profile for subsequent lancing based upon success of obtaining a blood sample from said user in previous lancing events.
- 81. The device of claim 79 wherein said processor optimizes said velocity profile for subsequent lancing based upon blood volume obtained from said user in previous lancing events.
- 82. The device of claim 79 wherein said processor optimizes said velocity profile for subsequent lancing based upon elastic tenting associated with skin deformation in previous lancing events.
- 83. The device of claim 79 wherein said lancet penetrating to a depth in the tissue site based on impedance measurements from a distal portion of the lancet in said tissue site.
- 84. A lancet driver configured to exert a driving force on a lancet during a lancing cycle and used on a tissue site, said device comprising:
a voice-coil, drive force generator; and a processor coupled to the drive force generator capable of changing the direction and magnitude of force exerted on the lancet during the lancing cycle; wherein said processor actuates said drive force generator to drive the lancet at velocities in time that follow a selectable lancing velocity profile.
- 85. The device of claim 84 wherein said drive force generator comprises a rotary voice coil drive force generator.
- 86. The device of claim 84 wherein said drive force generator comprises a linear voice coil drive force generator.
- 87. The device of claim 84 wherein the drive force generator comprises a magnetic source that produces a controllable magnetic field in a magnetically active region adjacent the magnetic source;
a moveable member at least partially disposed in the magnetically active region, said member moved by the controllable magnetic field to actuate said lancet.
- 88. The device of claim 84 wherein said drive force generator uses electricity to create a controllable electromagnetic field for actuating said lancet.
- 89. The device of claim 84 further comprising a human interface on a housing of said driver and providing at least one output selected from: stick number, lancets remaining, time, alarm, profile information, force in last stick, or last stick time.
- 90. The device of claim 84 further comprising a human interface on a housing, said interface selected from: an LED, an LED digit display, or an LCD display.
- 91. The device of claim 84 further comprising an input device on a housing, said input device selected from: one or more pushbuttons, a touch pad independent of the display device, or a touch sensitive screen on the LCD display.
- 92. The device of claim 84 wherein said drive force generator actuates said lancet to penetrate to a depth in the tissue site and pause for a controlled dwell time while in the tissue site, said dwell time sufficient to draw body fluid toward a wound channel created by said lancet.
- 93. The device of claim 84 wherein said drive force generator uses electricity and is configured to hold said lancet in the tissue site at a fixed position when electric current is turned off, allowing for unlimited dwell time in the tissue site.
- 94. The device of claim 84 wherein said drive force generator holds said lancet at a fixed position against tenting force from said tissue site without contacting a mechanical stop.
- 95. The device of claim 84 wherein said drive force generator has a movable member and a drive coil creating a magnetic field wherein the drive coil magnetically attracts the movable member, said drive coil configured to only partially encircle said movable member.
- 96. The device of claim 84 a mechanical damper disposed to minimize oscillation of the lancet in the tissue site when the lancet reaches an end point of its penetration stroke into said tissue site.
- 97. The device of claim 84 a lancet coupler for removably coupling the lancet to said drive force generator.
- 98. The device of claim 84 wherein said housing and all elements therein have a combined weight of less than about 0.5 lbs.
- 99. The device of claim 84 wherein the sensor comprises an incremental encoder.
- 100. The device of claim 84 wherein the sensor comprises a linear optical incremental encoder.
- 101. The device of claim 84 wherein the sensor comprises a rotary optical incremental encoder.
- 102. The device of claim 84 wherein the sensor comprises a capacitive incremental encoder.
- 103. The device of claim 84 wherein the sensor comprises an optical encoder and an optical encoder flag secured to the movable member.
- 104. The device of claim 84 wherein average lancet velocity into the tissue site differs from average lancet velocity leaving the tissue site.
- 105. The device of claim 84 wherein said force generator is configured to achieve a withdrawal stroke of the lancet at a lancet velocity of 0.5 meters per second to less than about 0.02 meter per second.
- 106. The device of claim 84 wherein said force generator is configured to achieve a penetration stroke of the lancet at a lancet velocity between about 0.8 and 20.0 meter per second.
- 107. The device of claim 84 further comprising a cartridge coupled to the drive force generator, said cartridge containing a plurality of lancets.
- 108. The device of claim 84 further comprising a processor coupled to the drive force generator for signaling said generator to change the direction and magnitude of force exerted on the lancet during the lancing cycle, said sensor communicating with said processor.
- 109. The device of claim 108 wherein said processor determines relative position and velocity of the lancet based on relative position measurements of the lancet with respect to time.
- 110. The device of claim 108 further comprising memory for storage and retrieval of a set of alternative lancing profiles which the processor uses to modulate the drive force generator.
- 111. The device of claim 108 wherein the processor modulates the lancet driver by comparing an actual profile of the lancet to the profile and maintaining a preset error limit between the actual profile and the profile.
- 112. The device of claim 108 wherein the processor optimizes said phases of a lancet velocity profile based on information entered by a user of the lancing device.
- 113. The device of claim 108 wherein the processor calculates an appropriate lancet diameter and geometry to collect a blood volume required by a user.
- 114. The device of claim 108 wherein said processor has logic for learning and recording characteristics of said tissue site to optimize control of lancet velocity and lancet position in a manner that minimizes pain to the patient while drawing body fluid for sampling.
- 115. The device of claim 84 wherein a processor actuates said drive force generator to drive the lancet at velocities in time that follow a selectable lancing velocity profile said selectable lancing velocity profile is selected from a set of alternative lancing velocity profiles having characteristic phases for lancet advancement and retraction.
- 116. The device of claim 115 wherein the lancing velocity profile is selectable by a user of the lancing device.
- 117. The device of claim 115 wherein said lancing velocity profile provides a lancet withdrawal velocity sufficiently slow to allow blood flowing from punctured blood vessels to flow into a wound channel in the tissue site created by the lancet, to follow the lancet out of the wound channel, and flow to a skin surface.
- 118. The device of claim 115 wherein said velocity profile includes a lancet deceleration phase, after said lancet penetrates said tissue site and prior to withdrawal from said tissue site, wherein said lancet velocity follows a programmable deceleration profile having said lancet stopping in the tissue site without a sudden hard stop.
- 119. The device of claim 115 wherein the lancing velocity profile is selected by the lancing device based on optimization of lancing parameters from information obtained in previous lancing events.
- 120. The device of claim 119 wherein said processor optimizes said velocity profile for subsequent lancing based upon success of obtaining a blood sample from said user in previous lancing events.
- 121. The device of claim 119 wherein said processor optimizes said velocity profile for subsequent lancing based upon blood volume obtained from said user in previous lancing events.
- 122. The device of claim 119 wherein said processor optimizes said velocity profile for subsequent lancing based upon elastic tenting associated with skin deformation in previous lancing events.
- 123. The device of claim 119 wherein said lancet penetrating to a depth in the tissue site based on impedance measurements from a distal portion of the lancet in said tissue site.
- 124. A body fluid sampling device configured to exert a driving force on a lancet during a lancing cycle and used on a tissue site, said device comprising:
a drive force generator suitable for actuating the lancet along said path towards the tissue site, into the tissue site, and then back out of the tissue site, said lancet penetrating to a depth in the tissue site sufficient to draw body fluid from the tissue site for sampling; a closed feedback control loop for controlling said drive force generator based on position and velocity of the lancet.
- 125. The device of claim 124 further comprising a processor for regulating the electric drive mechanism to actuate the lancet at velocities conforming with said selectable lancing velocity profile.
- 126. The device of claim 124 wherein said closed feedback control loop directs said electric drive mechanism to stop the lancet in the tissue site without oscillation of the lancet and lancet position in the tissue site.
- 127. A body fluid sampling device for use at a tissue site on a patient, said device comprising:
a drive force generator; and a processor coupled to the drive force generator capable of changing the direction and magnitude of force exerted on the lancet during the lancing cycle; a position sensor configured to detect lancet position during the lancing cycle; wherein said drive force generator actuates said lancet along a one directional, linear path towards the tissue site, into the tissue site, and then back out of the tissue site, said lancet penetrating to a depth in the tissue site and pauses for a controlled dwell time while in the tissue site, said dwell time sufficient to draw body fluid toward a wound channel created by said lancet.
- 128. The device of claim 127 further comprising a processor for regulating the drive force generator to actuate the lancet at velocities conforming with a selectable lancing velocity profile and providing for said controlled dwell time.
- 129. The device of claim 127 wherein said drive force generator is configured to hold said lancet in the tissue site at a fixed position when electric current is turned off and allowing for unlimited dwell time in the tissue site.
- 130. A body fluid sampling device for use at a tissue site on a patient, said device comprising:
a voice-coil, drive force generator; and a processor coupled to the drive force generator capable of changing the direction and magnitude of force exerted on the lancet during the lancing cycle; a position sensor configured to detect lancet position during the lancing cycle; a damper disposed to minimize oscillation of the lancet in the tissue site when the lancet reaches an end point of its penetration stroke into said tissue site.
- 131. The device of claim 130 wherein said end point of the penetration stroke is adjustable based on blood sampling success.
- 132. A method for sampling body fluid from a tissue site, said method comprising:
driving a lancet along a path into the tissue site; using a sensor to detect lancet position along said path into the tissue site.
- 133. The device of claim 132 further comprising stopping said lancet in said tissue site for a controlled dwell time to allow body fluid to gather.
- 134. The device of claim 132 further comprising stopping said lancet in accordance with a deceleration velocity profile minimizing oscillation of said lancet in the tissue site.
- 135. The device of claim 132 wherein said using step comprises detecting lancet velocity.
- 136. The device of claim 132 further comprising decelerating said lancet by using a mechanical damper to minimize oscillation.
- 137. The device of claim 132 further comprising withdrawing said lance from said tissue site along a wound channel created during the driving step.
- 138. The device of claim 132 wherein said driving step uses a movable member moved by a controlled magnetic field to actuate said lancet.
- 139. The device of claim 132 wherein said driving step uses a voice coil force generator having a movable member moved by a controlled magnetic field to actuate said lancet.
- 140. The device of claim 132 wherein said driving step comprises actuating said lancet at velocities that follow a selectable lancing velocity profile.
- 141. The device of claim 132 further comprising withdrawing said lancet at lancet velocities sufficiently slow to allow body fluid to flow into a wound channel in the tissue site created by said lancet.
- 142. A method for sampling body fluid from a tissue site, said method comprising:
driving a lancet along a path into the tissue site using closed loop feedback to control lancet velocity to follow a selectable lancing velocity profile.
- 143. The device of claim 142 wherein said wherein said selectable lancing velocity profile has average lancet velocity into the tissue site being greater than average lancet velocity leaving said tissue site.
- 144. The device of claim 132 wherein said driving step uses a movable member moved by a controlled magnetic field to actuate said lancet.
Parent Case Info
[0001] The present application is a continuation-in-part of and claims the benefit of priority from commonly assigned, co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. /______, (Attorney Docket No. 38187-2593) filed Sep. 4, 2002 (US case for—2558 PC); U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/127,395, (Attorney Docket No. 38187-2551) filed Apr. 19, 2002, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. /______, (Attorney Docket No. 38187-2594) filed (US case of—2551B PC ). This application is related to commonly assigned, co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. /_____, (Attorney Docket No. 38187-2595) filed Sept. 5, 2002. The complete disclosure of all applications listed above are incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.