The present invention relates to a container with an opening for delivery of flowable or pourable materials present in the container and with a closure device closing the opening and removable for clearance of the opening.
Such containers filled with contents to be delivered are known in the most varied forms and for different uses of the delivered contents. For example, they can be ampule-like containers which contain pharmaceuticals which must be delivered from the container for injection purposes, infusion purposes or the like.
In the areas of medical applications and generally technical applications in which contents to be delivered from a container are used for treatment or processing procedures, to some extent the problem arises that the substance to be delivered is a composition of agents which are incompatible with respect to joint storage suitability. In other words, these agents which must be stored separately may only be combined to form the material to be delivered from the container when use of this binary substance takes place. The requirement of separate storage and combination of the agents which takes place before use leads disadvantageously to increased storage effort and awkward handling.
An object of the present invention is to provide a container that facilitates simplified storage and handling of two agents that must be stored separately and combined prior to use.
In a container, this object is basically achieved by an auxiliary receptacle being provided for accommodating an additive to be added to the contents of a container and being removably attached to the container. The auxiliary container has an outlet which can be cleared by removing a closure for the discharge of the additive. The auxiliary receptacle cleared outlet can be attached to the opening of the container after removal of its closure to form a passage which is sealed to the outside between the auxiliary receptacle and the container for adding the additive.
Storage is simplified by the detachable connection of the present invention between the container and the auxiliary receptacle which contains the additive because the two agents, although they are separate from one another, form one storage unit. The handling necessary for delivery of the substance is greatly simplified because the addition of the additive to the container contents takes place especially easily and conveniently. The auxiliary receptacle can be coupled with its outlet to the opening of the container. The unit including the container and auxiliary receptacle attached to its opening can be shaken, for example, to induce the required mixing of the two agents, or, when the additive is an agent of a specific particle size which can be shaken in the form of a single large particle, for example, a tablet, to move it through the passage between the auxiliary receptacle and the container.
When the substances to be delivered are highly-sensitive products, as is the case for pharmaceuticals, where international standards for aseptic packaging must be met, the container is advantageously produced using the process known in the pertinent technology as the Bottelpack® system. This process enables cost-effective automated forming (blowing or vacuum forming), charging and sealing of receptacles.
According to this system or when using another production process, preferably the container with its closure device and the auxiliary receptacle with its closure are produced from plastic as a one-piece body. Weak points are formed in the body which constitute desired break points at which the closure device of the container and the auxiliary receptacle can be removed and separated from the container. In this way, both the container can be opened very easily, and the auxiliary receptacle can be removed to be able to handle it separately.
Preferably, on the outlet of the auxiliary receptacle, a weak point is also formed which constitutes desired break point for separation of the closure of the auxiliary receptacle for clearance of its outlet.
When the container is a type of ampule with an opening provided on a neck part projecting coaxially to the main axis of the ampule, the body forming the unit including the container and auxiliary receptacle can be configured such that the neck area of the ampule is lengthened by an extension. The extension extends in the direction of the main axis of the ampule, and has weak points which form the desired break points for the container closure and the auxiliary receptacle.
This extension of the body can be formed in partial areas which border the closure device of the container and the closure of the auxiliary receptacle in the form of flat plates. Grasping surfaces are then formed by which the closure device and the auxiliary receptacle can be easily separated from the container at the desired break points.
Other objects, advantages and salient features of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description, which, taken in conjunction with the annexed drawings, discloses a preferred embodiment of the present invention.
Referring to the drawings which form a part of this disclosure:
With reference to the figures, the present invention is explained using the example of an ampule container produced in one piece from thermoplastic using the Bottelpack® system, as known in the pertinent art. In this process for producing and charging containers, at least one tube of softened plastic material is extruded into an opened mold. In the course of closing the lower parts of the mold, welding processes are carried out on the tube to form the container bottom. The tube, or in the event that several containers are being formed, the tubes, is or are cut off above the mold by a cutting element to form the pertinent fill opening. The mold is then moved with the unit having the open fill opening or the open fill openings into a charging position in which the container or containers, after the container shape has been formed by expansion by blown air or vacuum molding, is filled with the contents. Then, a head welding process is carried out on the top of the container or containers, by which the closure of the filled unit is produced.
As shown most clearly in
It will be understood that in place of the tablet 27 shown as an additive in the auxiliary receptacle 13, another additive which can be shaken or which is a liquid can be added to the contents of the container 3. The container 3 and the auxiliary receptacle 13 may be formed with other container shapes than those shown in the drawings. In place of the Bottelpack® system, other production processes can be used to form the unit with the container and auxiliary receptacle.
While one embodiment has been chosen to illustrate the invention, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made therein without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
103 04 500 | Feb 2003 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP03/12677 | 11/13/2003 | WO | 00 | 7/27/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2004/069686 | 8/19/2004 | WO | A |
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6412526 | Castillo | Jul 2002 | B2 |
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26 38 561 | Mar 1978 | DE |
38 33 036 | Apr 1990 | DE |
40 11071 | Nov 1990 | DE |
197 06 932 | Aug 1998 | DE |
199 58 920 | Jun 2001 | DE |
WO 9740820 | Nov 1997 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060144853 A1 | Jul 2006 | US |