The present invention relates to a needle protection device for a syringe which comprises a needle, a tubular body, to the distal end of which the needle is fixed, and an injection piston which is slidingly arranged in the body, this device comprising a needle protector which is substantially coaxial with the body of the syringe; a protector support which is fixedly joined to the body or which is provided with means for being fixedly joined to the body; a spring which is arranged between and in contact with the support and the protector, the support and the protector being movable relative to each other between a retracted position of the protector, in which the needle of the syringe is disengaged and the spring is locked in a compressed state, and a deployed position of the protector, in which the needle is arranged inside the protector and the spring is, at least partially, relaxed; and means for unlocking the spring.
The invention relates in particular to the field of single-use pre-filled injection syringes which are intended in particular for intramuscular or subcutaneous injections.
These devices are intended to limit to the greatest possible extent the risk, to the user, of accidental pricks after the injection since, once the contents of the syringe have been injected, the needle of the syringe is withdrawn from the patient and the protector is brought into the deployed position all around the needle.
In order to ensure a higher level of safety of use, it has been proposed to provide these devices with resilient means for displacing the protector around the needle of the syringe. In this manner, document U.S. Pat. No. 5,591,138 describes a device of the above-mentioned type which can be used in one of the two following manners: once the injection has been carried out with one hand, the user operates the unlocking means with his other hand in order to disengage the compression spring and to allow the deployment of the protector around the needle. Alternatively, the needle is introduced to a sufficient depth into the skin of the patient to bring about the unlocking of the spring, the spring not being able in any case to relax owing to the protector being pressed against the skin of the patient; in this case, the spring relaxes when the assembly of the device is moved away from the patient.
Therefore, this type of device requires, in order to achieve the desired deployment of the protector, either manipulation with two hands or the protector to be pressed against the skin of the patient. This manipulation ensures neither a high level of ease of use for the practitioner, nor great comfort for the patient. Therefore, these devices remain little used because their use is too far removed from the conventional use of an injection syringe. Furthermore, once the spring is unlocked, the decompression energy of the spring is often violently released without any control by the user being possible, which brings about a degree of instability of the device in the hand of the user. Furthermore, the rigid locking of the protector in the deployed position, in particular in order to prevent any re-use of the device, is possible only by the device being manipulated with two hands.
The object of the present invention is to provide a protection device which allows the protector to be deployed with the same hand as that which holds the syringe, with a simple releasing action without the protector needing to be pressed against the patient, and control of the displacement of the protector by the user being possible.
To this end, the invention relates to a protection device of the above-defined type for which the spring has, in the locked state, a predetermined force which is greater than the pushing effort necessary for displacing the syringe piston over substantially the entire injection path, and the unlocking means comprise a finger support flange which is fixedly joined to the protector and which is suitable for, on the one hand, transmitting to the spring a compression force less than that predetermined force when the piston slides for the injection and, on the other hand, transmitting to the spring a compression force greater than that predetermined force when the piston is at the end of the injection path.
According to other features of this device, taken in isolation or according to all technically possible combinations:
The invention further relates to an injection device comprising, on the one hand, a syringe which comprises a needle, a tubular body, to the distal end of which the needle is fixed, and an injection piston which is slidingly arranged in the body and, on the other hand, a needle protection device which simultaneously comprises a needle protector which is substantially coaxial with the body of the syringe, a protector support which is fixedly joined to the body or which is provided with means for being fixedly joined to the body of the syringe, a spring which is arranged between and in contact with the support and the protector, the support and the protector being movable relative to each other between a retracted position of the protector, in which the needle of the syringe is disengaged and the spring is locked in a compressed state, and a deployed position, in which the needle is arranged inside the protector and the spring is, at least partially, relaxed, and means for unlocking the spring, wherein the needle protection device is as defined above.
The invention will be better understood from a reading of the description below which is given purely by way of example and with reference to the drawings, in which:
The syringe 1 is a glass syringe of standard type, which is intended for single use. It contains a liquid to be injected into a patient in an intramuscular or subcutaneous manner. For this purpose, it comprises a body 4, a needle 6 which is fixedly joined to the distal end of the body 4 and a piston 8. This piston conventionally comprises a rod 10 which is provided, at the distal end thereof, with a push-button 12, which is not visible in
The body 4 of the syringe comprises, in the proximal portion thereof, a neck 16 which circumferentially delimits two diametrically opposed lugs 18 which are generally intended, in particular in the absence of the assembly 2, to form contact surfaces for the index finger and second finger of the practitioner during the manipulation of the syringe and the injection of the liquid therein.
The protection assembly 2 generally having an axis X-X substantially comprises, as illustrated in
These three elements will be described in detail in succession below with reference to
The support 20 comprises a main portion 26 which is substantially cylindrical and which has an inside diameter substantially equal to the outside diameter of the body 4 of the syringe 1. This portion 26 continues at the proximal end thereof with a secondary portion 28 having larger inside and outside diameters than those of the main portion 26, a radial shoulder 29 being formed.
The proximal portion 28 is provided with means 30 for fixing to the syringe neck 16. In greater detail, these means 30 comprise, on the one hand, a pair of diametrically opposed deformable hooks 32 which are also visible in
The fixing means 30 comprise, on the other hand, protrusions 34 (
Two traversing grooves 36 are arranged facing each other in the main portion 26. Each groove is constituted by a first rectilinear portion 38, which extends substantially along axis X-X of the support 20 over a length greater than that of the needle 6, and a second rectilinear portion 40 which extends in an inclined manner relative to the same axis X-X. The inclined portion 40 opens at the proximal end portion of the main groove portion 38 and forms a V-shape, the point of which is directed towards the proximal side of the assembly 2.
The main portion 24 comprises, at the distal end thereof, a first pair of diametrically opposed tongues 42 which are each located in the continuation of the grooves 36 (
The main portion 24 comprises a second pair of diametrically opposed tongues 44 which are located between the tongues 42 along the circumference of the distal end of this portion. They have a substantially frustoconical outer surface 44A, which is divergent towards the front, and a substantially planar distal surface 44B.
Plumb with these tongues 44 at the proximal end, longitudinal recesses 26A are arranged in the main portion 26 (
In addition, at one side and the other of the tongues 42, axial slots 26B are provided starting from the distal end of the support in such a manner that, before the body 4 of the syringe 1 is inserted inside the support 20, these tongues 42 can be deformed radially, in particular inwards.
The protective sleeve 22 has a length substantially equal to that of the body 4 of the syringe 1. It is constituted by two cylindrical portions 46 and 48, the proximal portion 46 having a diameter slightly greater than that of the main portion 48. These two portions fit together to form a radial shoulder 49.
The sleeve 22 integrally comprises, in the proximal portion thereof, an external flange 50 in the form of two diametrically opposed lugs 52 (
Two diametrically opposed studs 54 are fixedly joined to the sleeve (
In greater detail, the support 20 and the sleeve 22 can be moved between a retracted position of the sleeve, in which the greater part of the sleeve covers the greater part of the support and the studs 54 are located at the distal end of each of the inclined groove portions 40, as illustrated in
When the syringe 1 is fixed to the assembly 2, these extreme positions correspond to an injection configuration, in which the needle 6 of the syringe 1 is disengaged and intended to be inserted into a patient, and a protection configuration, in which this needle is surrounded by the protective sleeve 22, respectively.
The proximal portion of the sleeve 22 further comprises internally a pair of diametrically opposed deformable hooks 56. Each of these hooks has, on the one hand, an inner surface 56A of substantially frustoconical shape which is divergent towards the front and which is complementary to that of the inner surfaces 44A of the tongues 44 of the support 20, and a proximal surface 56B which is substantially planar (
In the retracted position of the sleeve, those hooks 56 extend inside the recesses 26A which are arranged in the support 20. In the deployed position of the sleeve, as illustrated in
The sleeve 22 is further provided at the distal end thereof with a crown of deformable tongues 58, the distal edges of which form a substantially circular opening 60 having a diameter less than the inside diameter of the main portion 26 of the support 20.
The spring 24 is a helical spring which is arranged between the protective sleeve 22 and the protector support 20. In greater detail, the spring is received between the shoulder 29 of the support 20 and the shoulder 49 of the sleeve 22. In the retracted position of the sleeve, the spring 24 is in a compressed state, thus having decompression energy linked to the tension of the spring and the difference between the length of the spring in the rest state and its length, designated L in
Optionally, the protection assembly 2 further comprises a cap 66 of generally tubular shape illustrated in
The cap 66 is suitable for surrounding the needle 6 before the syringe 1 is used. This cap is closed at one of the ends thereof and the opposite end thereof is formed by an annular ring 68 having an outside diameter suitable both for being conjugate with the surface 42A of the hooks 42 of the support 20 and for being greater than the diameter of the opening 60 formed by the tongues 58 of the protective sleeve 22. The inner face of this ring 68 is intended to be adhesively bonded to the glass base 67 of the syringe body 4, where the needle 6 is fixed, in particular to ensure given sealing with respect to bacteria.
The operation of the injection device according to the invention is as follows:
Firstly, the protection device 2 is assembled in the retracted configuration, that is to say, that of
Secondly, the glass syringe 1 is pre-filled with a liquid to be injected into a patient. This syringe is provided with the cap 66 which encloses the base 67 of the syringe body 4.
The syringe and the cap are then inserted inside the assembly 2 in order to form the injection device, as illustrated in
Furthermore, insofar as the syringe neck 16 is completely clipped inside the portion 28, it can no longer serve as usual to form a contact surface for the index finger and the second finger 9 of the practitioner. This support function is fulfilled by the flange 50 which is fixedly joined to the sleeve 22. Insofar as the length of the protective sleeve 22 is substantially equal to that of the syringe body 4 and/or the flange 50 is arranged in the region of the proximal end of this sleeve, the practitioner can manipulate the syringe by resting his thumb on the contact head 14 of the piston 8 as in the accustomed manner, and by resting his index finger and second finger on the faces of the lugs 52 that are directed towards the needle 6.
Furthermore, when the syringe 1 is fixed to the protector support 20, as illustrated in
When the practitioner is ready to carry out the injection of the liquid contained in the syringe, he retracts the cap 66 by drawing it axially forwards. The ring 68 then passes through the opening 60, deforming the tongues 58. Once the cap 66 has been retracted, the tongues 58 again take up the initial position thereof. The passage hole 60 at the distal end of the sleeve, having a diameter smaller than the outside diameter of the cap 68, then prevents the cap from being repositioned around the needle. The co-operation of the cap 66 and the tongues 58 thus forms a control means for the first use of the injection device.
The practitioner then inserts the needle 6 into a patient. He injects the liquid contained in the syringe by applying a pushing action to the contact head 14 of the piston 8, his index finger and second finger remaining in contact with the faces of the lugs 52 that are directed towards the needle. During the injection, no movement is brought about between the protector support 20 and the protective sleeve 22, the spring 24 remaining compressed with a length L, as illustrated in
The injection continues until the push-button 12 of the piston 8 reaches the end of the injection path.
The practitioner then withdraws the needle from the patient. In order to release the protection assembly 2, the practitioner applies an additional pressure to the piston rod 8. This pressure must be greater than the predetermined force produced by the spring 24 in the locked state, so that this spring is further compressed and changes from the length L thereof to a smaller length L′, as illustrated in
The practitioner then releases the pressure which he had been applying to the flange 50 until then, allowing the spring 24 to relax as far as a rest state. The pins 54 move in translation inside the longitudinal groove portion 38 as far as the distal end thereof, as illustrated in
Furthermore, when the sleeve 22 is moving in translation relative to the support 20, the hooks 56 make use of the longitudinal recesses 26A of the support until they slide along the distal tongues 44 of the support 22 by co-operation between the complementary surfaces 56A and 44A thereof.
In the deployed position of the protector, the tongues 44 retain the hooks 56 in position by co-operation between the surfaces 56B and 44B so that the protective sleeve 22 cannot be moved into the initial position thereof. Similarly, the sleeve 44 cannot readily be detached from the support 20 because the pins 54 are stopped against the distal base of the longitudinal groove portion 38 (
The injection device according to the invention is simple to use in this manner, whilst at the same time allowing the practitioner to control the movement for covering the needle with the protective sleeve. The number of components constituting the protection assembly 2 illustrated is reduced to three.
The device according to the invention can be adapted to various types of syringe, both in terms of the shapes and the volumes thereof. Therefore, this device has the advantage of not calling into question the general shape of the syringes used and consequently does not bring about any modification of the industrial methods for filling these syringes.
Various variants of the device according to the invention can be envisaged:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
02 03338 | Mar 2002 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR03/00722 | 3/6/2003 | WO | 00 | 3/18/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/077977 | 9/25/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5346480 | Hess et al. | Sep 1994 | A |
5573513 | Wozencroft | Nov 1996 | A |
6033386 | Novacek et al. | Mar 2000 | A |
6547764 | Larsen et al. | Apr 2003 | B2 |
6719730 | Jansen et al. | Apr 2004 | B2 |
20010031949 | Asbaghi | Oct 2001 | A1 |
20020193746 | Chevallier | Dec 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1 066 848 | Jan 2001 | EP |
WO 99 17823 | Apr 1999 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050165353 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |