This invention relates to a product delivery unit, and more particularly to a sealed unit with a pump for generating a seal rupturing pressure.
Heretofore, medications were packaged in flat packs between a transparent blister cover and a stiff material with a thin foil seal. Multiple medications were presented in a matrix array in a single rectangular pack. The end-user could see the medication through the blister cover, and push the medication down through the base and foil, and out the bottom of the pack. The user had to use enough force to puncture the base material and split through the foil. The pushing force was applied directly on the transparent cover and conveyed down onto the medication. Sometimes the conveyed force crushed the pill, or broke the jacket of a capsule. The medication commonly “hung-up” on the rough edges around the exit puncture. The user had to pick at the exit edges and the medication, causing further damage to the medication. The manual dexterity required for pushing and extracting the medication was frequently difficult for the aged.
It is therefore an object of this invention to provide a product delivery unit in which no user force or other pushing coercion is applied directly on the product during delivery. The user does not push or force the product out of the unit. The product falls out through a delivery port after the user ruptures the product chamber and clears the port by pulling away a removable port closure. The user applies force directly onto an adjacent pumping chamber to compress air which generates the rupturing pressure.
It is another object of this invention to provide such a sealed delivery unit for medications which does not require touching or handling the medication until after delivery. The medication drops directly into the hand of the end-user or into a dispensing container such as a disposable cup.
It is a further object of this invention to provide such a delivery unit having an opening procedure that is easily understood and executed by the aged, but difficult for young children. Adults can readily survey the physical lay-out of the delivery unit, comprehend the procedure, and press to generate the compressed air. Children on the other hand, go directly for the colored medication and struggle with the hard transparent cover.
It is a further object of this invention to provide such a delivery unit which assists the user in dislodging medications hung-up on the rough exit edges. Compressed air from the pumping chamber supplies an air stream that carries the smooth medication out the exit site.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a medication delivery system having multiple delivery units, in which the disturbance of adjacent non-delivering units is minimized.
Briefly, these and other objects of the present invention are accomplished by providing sealed unit for delivering a product or medication in response to a rupturing pressure. The unit has a generally flat member and an opposed shaped member pressed into selective engagement therewith. A pumping chamber enclosed between the members generates the rupturing pressure in response to an externally applied force. A medication chamber also enclosed contains the medication to be delivered. Fluid communication between the chambers permits rupturing the medication chamber in response to the rupturing pressure. A perimeter seal formed during the selective pressing engagement, extends around the chambers and can withstand the rupturing pressure. A delivery port with a pull-away closure delivers the medication out of the medication chamber. A rupture site proximate the delivery port ruptures outward under the rupturing pressure. A rupture flap produced by the rupturing and connected to the pull-away closure, permits the user to pulling away of the pull-away closure to open the delivery port for delivery of the medication.
Further objects and advantages of the present delivery unit and the operation of the pumping chamber will become apparent from the following detailed description and drawings (not drawn to scale) in which:
The first digit of each reference numeral in the above figures indicates the figure in which an element or feature is most prominently shown. The second digit indicates related elements or features, and a final letter (when used) indicates a sub-portion of an element or feature.
The table below lists the reference numerals employed in the figures, and identifies the element designated by each numeral.
Generally Flat Member 10F
Hermetic Sealing Layer 10H
Medication 10M
Shaped Member 10S
Tough Layer 10T
Medication Chamber 12M
Pumping Chamber 12P
Perimeter Lip 16F
Perimeter Lip 16S
Pull-away Closure 18C
Rupture Flap 18F
Rupture Site 18S
Divider Perforations 20D
Generally Flat Member 20F
Medication 20M
Shaped Member 20S
Delivery Units 20U
Medication End 21M
Pumping End 21P
Medication Chamber 22M
Pumping Chamber 22P
Medication Exit 24M
Pumping Entrance 24P
Interior Seal 24S
Pull-away Closure 28C
Rupture Flap 28F
Rupture Site 28S
Weak Rupture Seal 28W
Common Chamber 30C
Medication 30M
Medication Volume 32M
Pumping Volume 32P
Rupturing Site 38S
Medication Chamber 42M
Pumping Chamber 42P
Rupture Flap 48F
Table Top 48T
Sealed delivery unit 10 (shown in exploded format in
The gas inside the perimeter seal may be any suitable fluid, such as ambient air, dry air, or an inert gas such as nitrogen. Delivery port 18 with pull-away closure 18C (see
Shaped member 10S may be of any suitable material such as PVC or PET for protecting the medications. Flat member 10F may have multiple layers to provide strength and enclosure. Tough layer 10T, pressed against the shaped layer, may be of any suitable resistant material such as polyethylene. Hermetic layer 10H, pressed against the tough layer, may be any suitable sealing material such as a metal foil.
The delivery port may be in the flat member (as shown in
Sealed delivery system 20 has a plurality of delivery units 20U enclosed between shaped member 20S (see front view
In delivery system 20, each delivery unit 20U is elongated with a pumping end 21P for the pumping chamber and a medication end 21M for the medication chamber. The delivery units are arranged adjacently side-by-side with the pumping chamber of each delivery unit next to the medication chamber of the adjacent delivery unit in alternating sequence. The units are preferable separated by divider score or perforations 20D.
The pumping chambers may be dome-shaped (as shown in
Tunnel conduit 24 has a pumping entrance 24P opening from the pumping chamber, and a medication exit 24M opening into the medication chamber. The conduit provides fluid communication from the pumping chamber into the medication chamber. Interior seal 24S may be employed to seal off the tunnel conduit, sealing-off the medication chamber from the pumping chamber. The interior seal blocks the fluid communication during shipping and storage of the sealed unit, or other periods of non-use. The interior seal bursts under the rupturing pressure, restoring fluid communication just prior to delivery. Some medications require an environmentally protected volume with a critical sealed perimeter. Small volumes present less internal air interface with the medication, and short perimeters have less possibility of failure and contamination. The interior seal isolates the medication from the air in the pumping chamber and from the effects of leakage in the perimeter seal around the pumping chamber. Pumping chamber 22P is out of fluid communication with medication chamber 22M until the rupturing pressure disables or removes the interior seal.
Delivery unit 30 has a common chamber 30C with pumping volume 32P at one end and medication volume 32M at the other end. Applying pressure to the pumping volume causes the rift over rupture site 38S in the medication end to blow-out. The common chamber embodiment does not have a tunnel conduit. The pump and medication are in fluid communication due to the common chamber. The rift may be an “L” shaped score (shown in bold in
The flat member and the opposed perimeter lips may be coplanar defining a stable working plane for opening the delivery unit. Coplanar delivery unit 40 may be placed near the edge of flat counter or table top 48T (see
Applying pressure P at one end of the unit to get a rupture event R at the other end is an “indirection” not evident to a child. A wayward child will see the brightly colored medication through transparent, rigid shaped member 40S, and instantly focuses on the “candy-like” object.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the objects of this invention have been achieved as described hereinbefore by providing a product delivery unit in which the user does not apply force or other pushing coercion directly on the medication. The medication chamber ruptures and the product drops out through a delivery port in response to compressed air. The medications is not require touched until after delivery. The opening procedure that is readily understood by adults, but opaque and indirect to for young children. The compressed air assists the user in removing medications stuck in the delivery port. The medications may be delivered without disturbing adjacent non-delivered medications.
Various changes may be made in the structure and embodiments shown herein without departing from the concept of the invention. Further, features of embodiments shown in various figures may be employed in combination with embodiments shown in other figures. Therefore, the scope of the invention is to be determined by the terminology of the following claims and the legal equivalents thereof.
This application claims the benefit of provisional application Ser. No. 60/790,483, filed Apr. 10, 2006.
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