This invention relates to a mount for use in association with a medical needle projecting from a carrier, to facilitate the mounting thereon of a safety device adapted to confer protection to the needle. The invention extends to the combination of such a mount and a medical needle projecting from a carrier.
Modern medical practice frequently requires the use of a safety device to confer protection on a needle used for penetrating a human or animal body. The safety device may be passive, and so which operates fully automatically without requiring any action by a user of the needle, or active, which requires an action by the user. Either way, the safety device will be manufactured separately from the needle and then must be associated with the needle so as to confer protection thereto.
Some medical needles are mounted on a hub which is then packaged separately from a syringe or other medical injector with which the needle is to be used. When required for use, the needle is removed from its package and is fitted to the syringe, typically by way of a Luer-Slip or Luer-Lok taper connection. Other medical needles are permanently attached to a syringe in the course of the manufacture thereof, either by being staked-in with an adhesive or perhaps co-moulded with a plastic syringe. If protection is to be given to the needle, the safety device must then be mounted either on the needle hub, in the case of a separate needle, or on the syringe in the case of a syringe having a needle permanently attached thereto or where a separate needle has been fitted to the syringe.
There have been various proposals for the secure mounting of a safety device to a medical needle hub or to a syringe carrying a needle. Some of these require extensive modification to the needle hub or syringe and so can be used exclusively with a needle hub or syringe specifically adapted for use with the safety device. Others require the use of a special mount allowing the safety device to be connected to the syringe. Such arrangements normally require complex moulding of the needle hub or the syringe, frequently necessitating the use of moulds with side actions; in turn this significantly increases the manufacturing costs.
It is a principal aim of this invention to provide a mount for a safety device for use with a medical needle either provided with a mounting hub for securing to a syringe, or provided as an integral part of a syringe, and which is easy to implement and use.
According to one aspect of this invention, there is provided a mount for a safety device for use in association with a medical needle projecting from a generally cylindrical carrier including at least two circumferentially-spaced ribs upstanding from and extending substantially parallel to the axis of the carrier, said mount including a wall having a central aperture through which the carrier extends when in use with the wall lying in a substantially radial plane with respect to the carrier, the aperture being profiled so that portions of the wall defining the aperture engage with an interference fit the ribs of the carrier.
On fitting together the safety device and the carrier for the needle, the ribs of the carrier interengage with portions of the wall of the mount. By forming an interference fit between the ribs and the wall portions, the mount may be securely held on the carrier so securing the safety device on the carrier, surrounding the needle in order to confer protection thereto.
In a preferred embodiment, the aperture of the mount wall has a generally circular central region adapted to accommodate the generally cylindrical carrier. Further, the wall has a plurality of recesses extending generally radially away from the central region, each recess being adapted to receive a respective rib upstanding from the carrier.
Each recess of the mount wall may be profiled in order to provide a pair of opposed corners at the junction between the recess and the central aperture, the spacing between the corners being less than the width of a rib on the carrier with which the mount is to co-operate. In this way, the interference fit is created between said corners of the recess and the rib of the carrier which is received in the recess. In the alternative, or perhaps in addition, each recess has a radially outer surface defined by the wall and in use, the outer surface of the recess engages and forms an interference fit with the radially outer surface of the rib received in that recess.
In order to ensure that a sufficient interference fit is formed between the mount and a carrier, the mount may be made of a relatively hard material with respect to the material of the ribs of a carrier with which the mount is used. Also, the materials of the wall of the mount and the ribs may flex to some extent on fitting the mount to the carrier, to enhance the connection between the mount and the carrier.
The mount may be associated with a safety device so that when the mount is used with a carrier supporting a medical needle, protection is conferred on that needle. Such a safety device may have a sleeve slidable between shielding and non-shielding positions, the sleeve being slidably carried on the outer surface of the mount. The sleeve may be spring-urged to a shielding position and may have a mechanism arranged to lock or block the sleeve in its shielding position, after use of the device to perform a medical procedure.
According to a further aspect of this invention, there is provided a mount of this invention in combination with a medical needle projecting from a generally cylindrical carrier including at least two circumferentially-spaced ribs upstanding from and extending parallel to the axis of the carrier, with parts of the wall of the mount forming an interference fit with the ribs of the carrier thereby to hold the mount to the carrier.
The carrier may have two ribs, in which case those ribs should be substantially diametrically opposed. In the alternative, the carrier may have more than two ribs which should be substantially equi-spaced around the carrier. For example, there may be three ribs disposed at 120° to each other or four ribs arranged mutually at right angles, though it would be possible to have other numbers of ribs. The wall of the mount should be similarly profiled, for receiving the ribs of the carrier.
Other features of this invention are defined in the subsidiary claims appended hereto and to which reference should be made.
By way of example only, this invention will now be described in more detail and specific embodiments thereof given, referring to the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring initially to
The hub has a tubular carrier portion 12 within which the needle is received, the needle being secured therein either means of an adhesive or by being co-moulded with the hub. A conical portion 13 extends from the rearward end of the carrier portion 12 and has an internal conical surface adapted for connection to a Luer-Slip connector formed at the forward end of a syringe body. In the alternative, the conical internal surface could be adapted for use with a Luer-Lok connector as provided on some syringes, to give a more secure connection than a Luer-Slip connector. Surrounding the rearward end of the conical portion is a flange 14 to facilitate handling of the needle and its hub, but with some injectors also forming a part of the connection.
Formed along the external surface of the tubular carrier portion 12 are four ribs 15 arranged mutually at right-angles and extending for the greater part of the length of the carrier portion, the rearward ends of the ribs merging into the external surface of the conical portion 13. Each rib is of substantially rectangular cross-sectional shape and has a rounded forward end which terminates rearwardly of the front of the carrier portion. The hub is typically formed from a plastics material such as polypropylene of an appropriate grade to allow a secure Luer-Slip or Luer-Lok connection. Such a needle and hub arrangement is entirely conventional and is well-known to those skilled in this art.
The tube 17 has a cylindrical outer surface 20 on which is mounted a sliding sleeve 21 adapted to confer protection to the needle 10, that sleeve being slidable rearwardly from a needle shielding position shown in
The details of the sleeve 21 and its associated arrangements for spring-urging the sleeve forwardly and locking the sleeve in its shielding position after performance of a procedure form no part of the present invention and will not be described in detail here, though appropriate arrangements are well-known and understood by those skilled in the art. Examples of suitable spring and locking arrangements are described and claimed in co-pending international application No PCT/GB2011/050159.
The tube 17 including the annular wall 19 is formed of a plastics material of a harder grade than that from which the needle hub is formed. For example, the tube may be formed of an acetyl plastic of a suitable grade. As best seen in
In order to allow the required functionality of the corners 24 interacting with the ribs 15, there must be clearance between outer edge of the central aperture 22 extending through the annular wall 19 and the tubular carrier portion 12 of the needle hub. Though in
It will be appreciated that the profile of the syringe of
The moulds used to form the conventional needle hub shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1001506.3 | Feb 2010 | GB | national |
1017491.0 | Oct 2010 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2011/050161 | 2/1/2011 | WO | 00 | 8/23/2012 |