The present invention relates generally to sample wells for holding samples to be analyzed in an automated sample analyzer, and, more particularly to sample wells for holding body fluid samples for analysis in an automated medical sample analyzer for medical diagnostic test procedures.
A sample well strip has a plurality of sample wells which are not in fluid communication with each other, but which are physically connected to each other and typically arranged in a linear array. The sample well strip is typically used for holding samples, such as aliquots of a reaction mixture, environmental samples, blood, urine or fractions of samples thereof, in instruments, such as automated sample analyzers, for use in medical diagnostic test procedures.
A goal of medical laboratories is to enhance laboratory efficiency by analyzing as many samples as possible in a given time period, while at the same time minimizing the number of interactions between laboratory personnel, the samples, and sample analyzers. Sample well strips have been developed that allow multiple samples to be loaded into an automated sample analyzer all at once. Generally, however, each sample well strip is individually loaded, well strip-by-well strip, and manually introduced into the automated sample analyzer in a position ready to receive the test sample. Thus, the number of sample well strips that can be loaded onto the sample analyzer, and the number of samples that can be analyzed per unit time, is limited by the number of well strips that can be arranged, typically side-by-side, on the loading tray of the automated sample analyzer.
Therefore, it would be desirable to provide a sample well strip comprising a plurality of sample wells that increases the number of samples that are analyzed per unit time and that minimizes the interactions between laboratory personnel and individual sample well strips. The goal of this invention is to enhance the efficiency of the automated sample analyzer's performance and capacity by a sample well strip that increases the number of well strips that can be loaded onto the analyzer at any one time.
In general, the advantages of the present invention provide sample well strips that increase the number of samples that can be analyzed by a sample analyzer within a unit of time and reduce the number of interactions between laboratory personnel and the individual well strips.
In one aspect, the invention relates to a sample holder system having a first and at least a second well strip having a plurality of wells and an interlocking device disposed on the well strips. The interlocking device reversibly engages the first well strip with the second well strip. In one embodiment, the interlocking device has a first engagement piece positioned on the first well strip and a second engagement piece positioned on the second well strip. The first and second engagement pieces reversibly interlock to form a sample holder system.
In another embodiment, the first engagement piece is positioned near the first end of the first well strip and the second engagement piece is positioned near the second end of the second well strip. In another embodiment, the first engagement piece is positioned on a first side wall of the first well strip and the second engagement piece is positioned on a second side wall of a second well strip. In this embodiment, for example, the second engagement piece is positioned at the second end of the first well strip and the first engagement piece is positioned at the second end of the second well strip. In another embodiment of the invention, the first well strip and at least the second well strip are substantially similar.
In one embodiment of the invention, the first engagement piece includes a flange and the second engagement piece includes a slot. Alternatively, the second engagement piece includes a slot and a slit. In one embodiment, the first engagement piece positioned at the first end of the first well strip has a flange and the second engagement piece positioned at the first end of the second well strip has a slot, or, alternatively, a slot and a slit. The interlocking device according to the invention includes a first engagement piece and a second engagement piece.
In another aspect, the invention relates to a first well strip including a plurality of wells, a first engagement piece, and a second engagement piece. The first engagement piece and second engagement piece cooperate to reversibly attach a first well strip and a second well strip.
In another embodiment of this aspect of the invention, the first well strip includes a first engagement piece substantially positioned near a first end of the first well strip and a second engagement piece substantially positioned near a second end of the well strip. In yet another embodiment of this aspect of the invention, the first engagement piece is positioned on a first side wall and the second engagement piece is positioned on a second side wall of the well strip. In a further embodiment, the first engagement piece is a flange and the second engagement piece is a slot, or alternatively, the second engagement piece is a slot and a slit.
In another aspect, the invention relates to a method for increasing the load capacity of an automated sample analyzer. The method according to the invention includes the steps of interlocking a first well strip with at least a second well strip to form a sample holder system and loading a plurality of sample holder systems onto the automated sample analyzer. In one embodiment, the method further includes the steps of detaching a first well strip from the sample holder system by disengaging the first well strip from the second well strip, moving the first well strip, and analyzing the samples in the wells of the first well strip. The plurality of well strips are interlocked by slidably moving the first well strip horizontally relative to at least a second well strip to engage the first and second well strips.
In one embodiment according to this aspect of the invention, the sample held by a well of a well strip is a body fluid, for example, blood, urine, plasma, or serum. The sample can be analyzed in the well of a well strip for a coagulation disorder, electrolyte concentration or to determine the presence or concentration of a drug.
The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention disclosed herein, as well as the invention itself, will be more fully understood from the following description of preferred embodiments and claims, when read together with the accompanying drawings. In the drawings, like reference characters generally refer to the same parts throughout the different views. The drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead generally being placed upon illustrating the principles of the invention.
Each of the embodiments of the invention described below have the following common features: a well strip comprising a plurality of sample wells, each well dimensioned to hold a sample, and each well strip reversibly attachable to at least one other well strip to form a sample holder system.
Referring to
The sample wells 108 in a well strip 111 are typically used for holding one of a variety of test samples, such as aliquots of a reaction mixture, an environmental sample, blood, urine, joint fluid, cerebrospinal fluid, and other body fluids or fractions thereof for use in chemical assays, diagnostic test procedures, drug testing, and other assays. For example, blood, serum, or plasma samples held in sample wells 108 are analyzed in sample wells 108 to determine, for example, the concentration of analytes such as glucose, lactate, electrolytes, enzymes, in the sample, or for analysis of coagulation disorders. Fluids other than body fluids can also be analyzed in sample wells 108. For example, drinking water placed in sample wells 108 can be analyzed for purity or contamination.
A test sample placed in sample well 108, according to the invention, can be analyzed in various instruments, such as automated sample analyzers for in vitro diagnostic analysis. Examples of such automated analyzers are manufactured by Instrumentation Laboratory Company, (Lexington, Mass.).
With continued reference to
In another aspect of the invention, a sample well strip 111 comprises one or more first engagement pieces, generally 200, such as a flange or a peg, located on a first side wall 121 of the sample well strip 111, shown in
In other embodiments (not shown) of this aspect of the invention, the reversible interlocking device may include a first engagement piece 200 such as hook, and a second engagement piece 201, such as an eye. Other combinations of the first engagement piece 200 and second engagement piece 201 include but are not limited to, respectively, a hook and a hook, peg and a hole, the two components of a dovetail joint, and various types of first and second adhesive surfaces, such as chemical or fabric adhesives. In a particular embodiment, the first engagement piece and the second engagement piece interlock, i.e., the first engagement piece engages the second engagement piece and temporarily locks in place without permanently deforming the first or the second engagement piece. The first and second engagement pieces are separable following interlocking of the first and second engagement pieces without permanently deforming either the first or second engagement piece.
In a particular embodiment, the first engagement piece 200 and the second engagement piece 201 are reversibly interlocked. A first well strip 111a is interlocked with a second well strip 111b by engaging the first engagement piece 200 of the first well strip 111a with the second engagement piece 201 of a second well strip 111b. The second well strip 111b may be interlocked with a third well strip 111c by engaging the first engagement piece 200 of the second well strip 111b with the second engagement piece 201 of a third well strip 111c, and so on. In other embodiments, the second engagement piece 201 of the first well strip 111a interlocks with the first engagement piece 200 of the second well strip 111b, and so on. The location of the first engagement piece 200 and the second engagement piece 201 on either the first, second, third, or more well strips 111, is not important as long as at least one first engagement piece 200 on a well strip 111, can interlock with at least one second engagement piece 201 on an adjacent well strip 111. Well strips 111 that are interlocked via the interlocking device engaging a first engagement piece 200 and a second engagement piece 201 are detached from each other by disengaging the first and second engagement pieces.
In a particular embodiment, the reversible interlocking device includes a clip-like flange first engagement piece 200 and a complementary slot second engagement piece 201. Flange 200, illustrated in
A second engagement piece, comprising a slot 201, illustrated in
In a particular embodiment of a reversible interlocking device, the first engagement piece comprises a flange and the second engagement piece comprises a slot. The second engagement piece 201 may further include a slit 202. As illustrated in
In a particular embodiment of the invention, illustrated in
A particular embodiment of the invention shown in
Other embodiments of the invention include sample well strips 111 having a first engagement piece 200 on the first end 101 of first side wall 121 of the sample well strip 111, and another first engagement piece 300 on the second end 103 of the first side wall 121 of the sample well strip 111. Alternatively, in another embodiment, first engagement piece 200 and second engagement piece 201 are on the same or opposite side walls of the sample well strip 111 and located anywhere along the longitudinal axis 109 of the sample well strip 111 as long as at least one first engagement piece 200 of a first sample well strip 111 reversibly interlocks with at least one second engagement piece 201 of a second sample well strip 111.
A sample holder system 150, illustrated in
Using the same interlocking technique, any number of well strips 111 can be interlocked to each other to form a sample holder system 150 as shown in
The sample holder system 150, shown in
A sample well 108 can have a variety of shapes For. example, in one embodiment of a well 108, the inside dimension of sample well 108 is rectangular as shown in
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, well 108, as shown in
Other well shapes are possible and the shape of the well is not limited to the embodiments illustrated. The well can be any shape as long as there is substantially no optical distortion of the wall of well 108 where the optical window 116 is located.
A sample well 108, illustrated in
For analysis by an optical reader in an automated analytical instrument, for example, illustrated in
The location of the optical window 116 on the well 108 is not limited to that depicted in
The funnel-shaped wells provide an additional important feature of one aspect of the invention. In one embodiment, illustrated from the bottom of sample holder system 150 in
While the various embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated, it is within the scope of the present invention to have a sample holder comprising a well strip with a different number of wells, various well shapes and interlocking devices to allow a multiple arrays of well strips to be loaded onto an instrument such as automated sample analyzer. Variations and modifications of what is described herein will occur to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit and the scope of the invention as claimed. Accordingly, the invention is to be defined not by the preceding illustrative description but instead by the spirit and scope of the following claims.
This application is a continuation patent application claiming priority to and the benefit of a co-pending U.S. Ser. No. 10/007,031 filed on Nov. 8, 2001, the entire content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100196949 A1 | Aug 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10007031 | Nov 2001 | US |
Child | 12755870 | US |