1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a sterilization tray assembly for holding selected sets of medical instruments or tools during sterilization and storage prior to use and for presenting them in a logical order when they are being used to perform a particular surgical procedure.
Different surgical procedures require the use of different sets of instruments or tools. For example, for a tooth implant, the instrument set may include twist drills, a drill extension, a driver, various size screws, etc. Prior to a particular surgical procedure, the surgeon determines or knows from experience which instruments will be required. The instruments are gathered together in a set, placed in a container which is packaged and then sterilized either chemically or in an autoclave. The packaged instrument set is then stored in that sterile condition until ready for use. When the surgeon is ready to perform the procedure, the container is brought to the operating room and opened exposing the still sterile instruments therein. At the end of the procedure, the instruments may be returned to the container and sent to a cleaning and sterilization facility.
2. Description of the Prior Art
The basic concept of organizing surgical instruments or tools into sets for subsequent sterilization, storage and presentation is not new; see, for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,118,115 and 5,843,388. The former patent shows a perforated sterilization container assembly including a perforated housing with a removable cover and an internal rack or tray for supporting a set of medical instruments in an organized manner. More particularly, the instruments are vertically supported in grommets mounted to the tray at spaced-apart locations thereon. Graphics may be imprinted on the tray to identify the instruments at particular locations in the container.
While that assembly is satisfactory in many respects, it is disadvantaged in that it utilizes grommets for supporting the instruments. The grommets must be removed from the internal tray following surgery because blood and tissue tend to collect in the spaces between the grommets and the tray. This adds to the cost of cleaning and maintaining that container assembly.
The latter above patent discloses a sterilization rack for medical instruments and which has shelves containing cutouts for supporting medical instruments. The rack has open sides so that the instruments are not protectively enclosed within the rack. Also, the rack is composed of many different parts which must be assembled, adding to the cost of that device.
Accordingly, the present invention aims to provide an improved sterilization tray assembly for sterilizing, storing and presenting a set of medical instruments.
Another object of the invention is to provide a sterilization tray assembly which protectively encloses the instruments.
A further object of the invention is to provide an assembly of this type which maintains the medical instruments at specified locations within the assembly.
Still another object of the invention is to provide such an assembly which is easy to clean and to sterilize.
Another object of the invention is to provide a sterilization tray assembly which is composed of a minimum number of parts which are relatively easy to manufacture.
Yet another object of the invention is to provide an assembly which is user friendly.
Other objects will, in part, be obvious and will, in part, appear hereinafter. The invention accordingly comprises the features of construction, combination of elements and arrangement of parts which will be exemplified in the following detailed description, and the scope of the invention will be indicated in the claims.
Briefly, my sterilization tray assembly comprises a unitary base having a top wall or web and a plurality of spaced-apart vertical tubes extending down from the top wall so as to define instrument-receiving passages having enlarged entrances at the top wall. The tubes have instrument supports partially occluding the lower ends of the passages for supporting instruments placed in the passages, while allowing a sterilant to circulate through those passages.
The assembly also includes a unitary cover for seating on the base so as to cover the instruments supported by the base. The cover has a top wall or web formed with a corresponding plurality of spaced-apart depending sleeves or tubes defining open-ended passages whose lower ends are of the same size as the entrances to the passages in the base. When the cover is seated on the base, corresponding ones of the tubes and sleeves are co-linear and capture the instruments therein, while still allowing the sterilant to contact the instruments.
Keying and latching means to be described later in detail facilitate the seating and locking of the cover on the base.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and objects of the invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
Referring now to
Formed integrally with top wall 12a, is a plurality of spaced-apart tubes 22 which extend down from wall 12a so that a sterilant can circulate around the tubes. Preferably tubes 22 are arranged in columns and rows and they extend down a distance less than the heights of walls 12b, 12c. Each tube 22 has a lengthwise passage 24 with a flared or funnel-shaped entrance end 24a which opens at the top wall 12a of base 12. While the passages 24 are shown as being cylindrical, other shapes are possible, e.g. oval, rectilinear, etc.
The passage 24 in each tube extends all the way through the lower end of the tube. Also, the lower end of each tube 22 is formed with an integral bridge 26 which diametrically bridges the lower end of the passage 24 formed by that tube so that the bridge partially occludes the lower end of passage 24. Thus, when an instrument I is inserted into a passage 24 as shown in
In addition to the instrument-supporting tubes 22, the base top wall 12a may be formed with one or more receptacles 28. The illustrated receptacles are generally rectangular. However, they could just as well have other shapes and various dimensions. Receptacles 28 are adapted to contain instruments or tools which are not suitable for being supported in the passages 24, e.g. dental implants, fixtures, etc. Preferably, each receptacle 28 has a bottom wall 28a provided with one or more through holes 32 through which a sterilant may circulate into the corresponding receptacle 28.
Desirably, the side walls 12b and end walls 12c of base 12 extend down from top wall 12a so that the lower edges of the side and end walls are below the bridges 26 and the receptacle bottom walls 28a. Thus, when those lower edges rest on a supporting surface, the lower ends of passages 24 and the through holes 32 are spaced above that surface so that sterilant can be circulated around tubes 22 and through all of those passages. To optimize that circulation, the base walls 12b and 12c may be provided with one or more notches or through holes 34.
As shown in
Referring to
In order to releasably lock cover 14 to base 12 as shown in
Referring now to
Extending down from the cover top wall 14a is a plurality of sleeves 54 preferably arranged in columns and rows. The sleeves 54 define internal passage 56 whose cross-sections have the same shape and dimensions as those of the entry ends 24a of passages 24 in base 12. The sleeves 54 are arranged so that when the cover 14 is seated on base 10 as shown in
Preferably, small through holes 58 are present in the cover top wall 14a in alignment with passages 56 so that when the cover is seated on the base, a sterilant can flow through the holes 58 into passages 56. These holes 58 should be smaller than the tops of instruments I so that the instruments will not fall through those holes if assembly 10 should be inverted.
As shown in
In the cover 14, the sleeves 54, tabs 62 and corral 64 extend down from the cover top wall 14a a distance no greater than the spacing of the overhang 52 from top wall 14a so that when the cover 14 is seated on base 12, the lower ends of those structures will be located at or close to the base top wall 12a as shown in
Preferably, one or more additional through holes 68 are provided in the cover top wall 14a to optimize the circulation of sterilant within the cover when the cover is in place on the base 12.
Referring now to
The mating keys and keyways have a relatively close sliding fit and they are distributed around the perimeter of assembly 10 so that cover 14 may be precisely aligned with base 12 in both the X and Y directions and brought into parallelism with the base when the keys are keyed into the corresponding keyways. This assures that the sleeves 54 in the cover are in precise axial alignment with the tubes 22 in base 10 so that the upper ends of the instruments I seated in tubes 22 of base 10 will pass easily into the sleeve passages 56 in the cover.
Preferably, the downwardly projecting ends 72a, 74a of keys 72, 74 are designed so that as the cover is seated on the base, they will engage in the keys 36, 38 in the base 10 to align the cover with the base as described above before the lower ends of the sleeves 54 pass over the upper ends of the instruments I supported in the passages 24 of base 10. This helps significantly in mating the cover 14 to base 12 with the instruments therein.
Of course, the positions of the keys and keyways may be reversed with the key ends 72a projecting up from the base for engagement in internal keyways in the cover 12.
In the illustrated assembly 10, the keys 72, 74 and keyways 36, 38 are located symmetrically in the assembly. However, it is preferable to locate those elements asymmetrically so that the cover can only be seated on the base one way, i.e. when the sleeves 54 are located over the passages 24 and the tabs 62 and corral 64 are positioned over the two receptacles 28.
As best seen in
The tray assembly 10 may be packaged and sold as a stand alone assembly to individual physicians, clinics and offices where sets of medical instruments are used. In use, the assembly is removed from its sterile package (not shown) and the cover 14 is released from base 12 so that the instruments I held by the base are readily accessible to the user. The user simply selects instruments I from base 12, perhaps using the information provided by graphics G.
When the procedure is completed, the instruments may be returned to the base and the cover closed over the base allowing the instruments to be sent to a cleaning facility without fear of spreading contamination.
It will thus be seen that the objects set forth above, among those made apparent from the preceding description, are efficiently attained and, since certain changes may be made in the above construction without departing from the scope of the invention, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
It is also to be understood that the following claims are intended to cover all of the generic and specific features of the invention described herein.
This application is a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 10/675,186, filed on Sep. 30, 2003, which claims the benefit of Provisional application No. 60/488,892, filed Jul. 21, 2003.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60488892 | Jul 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10675186 | Sep 2003 | US |
Child | 10706700 | Nov 2003 | US |