Inventions which are disclosed herein are related to medical syringes having a barrel and a piston for displacing fluids within the barrel and more specifically to powered systems which are used to drive such syringes to both dispense and draw-up medications and other fluids from and into syringes.
While syringes comprising a barrel and an associated piston have been used in the medical arts for a very long time, use and makeup of syringes are undergoing constant change to keep up with an ever evolving pattern of medical practice.
As examples, needle-bearing syringes are increasingly employing some form of needle guard to protect against dangers of needle sticks. Use of needleless syringes to deliver medications and to flush indwelling catheters is becoming increasingly prevalent and is the standard of practice in many healthcare facilities. Contemporary medications often require timed delivery at controlled rates to assure appropriate medical responses and to guard against vessel trauma and other adverse sequelae resulting from too high concentration or overly fast infusion of a given medicinal drug.
Further, improvements in syringe art have resulted in discovery and manufacture of materials which can reliably store drugs and other related fluids in syringes for long periods of time. Such long term storage of medications and other liquids has precipitated an accelerating growth in commercialized prefilled syringes. Other advancements in syringe art have yielded new prefilled syringe products having multiple chambers from which two or more disparate fluids may be delivered sequentially. One of the major uses of multi-chamber syringes is dispensing of a drug dose through a catheter followed by a flush bolus of an inert liquid to clear the catheter and complete a drug administration cycle by a single stroke of a syringe piston.
Related Art Compendium
Various forms and types of syringe drivers are known and commercially available. A few selected examples of U.S. patents which disclose various types of syringe drivers are as follows:
A spring driven syringe driver is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,681,566 issued to Paul v. Fenton, Jr., et al. (Fenton) Jul. 21, 1987. Fenton teaches selection of a predetermined spring-generated force to drive a syringe piston.
A syringe drive apparatus comprising a cylindrical barrel with a wall at one end with a nozzle and with a threaded actuating rod extending from the other end is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,312,343 issued to Harry H. Leveen, et al. (Leveen) Jan. 26, 1982. A collar is affixed to the syringe whereby angular rotation of the rod displaces the rod and an associated piston linearly.
A fluid syringe drive system is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,744,786, issued to Michael D. Hooven (Hooven) May 17, 1988. A viscous fluid is metered into a proximal end of a syringe to expel a fluid from the syringe at a controlled rate.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,755,172, issued to Brian E. Baldwin Jul. 5, 1988 discloses a syringe driver which applies a frictional driving force directly to a stem of a syringe piston. The drive is powered by a pair of Neg'ator constant force springs.
Use of a threaded rod as a drive member is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,883,472, issued to Peter Michel (Michel 472) Nov. 28, 1989. Adjustment of a manipulating head permits preselection of an arbitrary amount of liquid to be injected by pressure placed upon the manipulating head. An earlier U.S. Pat. No. 4,585,439, issued to Peter Michel (Michel 439) Apr. 29, 1986 also discloses use of a threaded piston rod. The piston rod is driven by a driver sleeve to directly advance a piston of an associated syringe.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,931,041, issued to Ulrich Faeser (Faeser) Jun. 5, 1990 discloses an infusion syringe pump which utilizes a motor-gear to accomplish a linear drive. A position-defining element is connected only to the linearly movable drive member which actuates a syringe piston.
An example of a syringe with a threaded stem is found in U.S. Pat. No. 5,507,727 issued to Lawrence Crainich (Crainich). The piston of Crainich is a threaded rod engaged by a threaded member, the rod being advanced by rotation of a proximally affixed knob. The threaded member is used to thrust the rod forward to expel fluid from an associated syrnge.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,954,695, issued to Nathaniel M. Sims, et al. (Sims) Sep. 21, 1999 discloses a multi-dose syringe driver which effects controlled parental infusion of a medical fluid. Flow rate from the associated syringe is determined by diameter of an attached mircrobore tubing.
A microcontroller controlled infusion device is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,723,072 B2, issued to J. Christopher Flaherty, et al. (Flaherty) Apr. 20, 2004. The dispensing of fluid using the Flaherty device results from successively applying a charge and removing the charge from a shape charge element.
Additional Background
As it is currently common practice to medicate patients using syringes to dispense liquids through catheters, powered syringe drivers are being used in ever greater numbers. These syringe drivers provide hands-off operation, permitting medication to be dispensed while a clinician is attending to other duties. However, while syringe drivers are used for such purposes in large numbers in U.S. Hospitals, cost of most such drivers often precludes wider use. Specialized use of syringe drivers in hospitals has resulted in ever increasing sophistication of these devices. In addition, a number of syringe driving systems have been recently incorporated into many standard pole-mounted IV pumps to accommodate such needs.
Use of automatically operating powered syringe drivers and pumps has resulted in the introduction of drivers and pumps which provide programmable fluid delivery rates, detection and alarms for over-pressure, anti-free flow features, dose completion signals and programmable drug data bases with automatic lock-out and other features which provide automatic alerts and alarms against improper delivery of medications. It is duly noted that it is not sufficient to generate an alarm on an over-pressure condition; there should be an inherent feature of a syringe driver which assures no over-pressure condition can exist during operation.
Of major concern is the need to detect fluid path blockage so timely corrective action can be taken. It is important to be responsive to patient discomfort or pain by adjusting flow rate when possible. As a result, flow rate control and alarm functions are well known in contemporary syringe drivers. In some cases, it is just as important, in manual syringe operation, to be able to limit a dispensing rate to meet rate-of-delivery specifications and other safety parameters associated with a given drug delivery.
Type of drug to be delivered and area of delivery also play a part in determining requirements and features of syringe delivery systems. For example, some drugs (e.g. gentamicin) must be infused over a specific period of time. Coordinated laboratory tests may be performed to test peaks and troughs in blood serum concentration to evaluate efficacy of the prescribed treatment. For this reason, a full drug dose must be delivered and a catheter flushed in a predetermined time frame. It is common practice for all drugs to be flushed-in with an inert liquid such as saline after introduction of the drug into a catheter or IV line.
Also it may be desirable to deliver sequential doses from a multi-chamber syringe at variable rates. For example, drug delivery may be at a first rate, catheter flush may be at a second rate and a catheter keep open flow (to avoid reflux complications) may be delivered at a third rate.
There are also special requirements for syringe drivers employed in home care. Of paramount importance is simplicity and facility of use for a user patient, particularly the very elderly and weakened. Rate-sensitive infusions must be inherently controlled by a syringe driver or other IV pump in such situations to guard against undesirable side affects of drug infusion, such as vessel irritation (phlebitis).
Nursing home care is a very cost conscious environment where IV therapy is a common, but not consistent treatment modality. In such cases, syringe drivers or pumps may be capital intensive, but still are desirable in a work environment which is personnel limited.
It may be noted that syringe drivers, used with syringes, are known to be able to be provided at a lower cost and also provide a more mobile alternative when compared to other types of parenteral fluid pumps in current use. These other types of pumps are generally used to deliver medications, usually antibiotics from partial-fill bags which can cost ten to fifteen times more than an empty syringe. One of the limitations of use of syringe drivers is a lack of an inherent flushing system. Some of the other pumps have built in flushing systems (e.g. piggyback systems) which automatically flush after delivery of a medication.
In brief summary, this novel invention alleviates all of the known problems related to providing a wide range-of-application syringe driver system. The syringe driver system is primarily used to dispense fluids from a medical syringe having a partially closed distal end through which fluid is dispensed, an open proximal end and a cylindrical barrel therebetween, the barrel preferably having a pair of gripping extensions which extend laterally and radially outward at the proximal end.
Basic to the driver system is an elongated piston or stem of the medical syringe which is securely affixed at one end to a stopper or plunger which occludes and is linearly displaced to propel fluid within the cylindrical barrel of the syringe. Proximally disposed from the stopper or plunger is a grooved stem section, the grooves of which are spirally oriented to form a screw pattern having a predetermined pitch.
Preferably, securely, but releasibly affixed on the other end of the piston is a disk-shaped collet-button which may be used to grip and displace the piston, while there, or broken free to provide a rotational, interface for displacing the stem and piston as an inherent part of a syringe driver system. The collet-button may be so affixed to the stem by a heat stake. The collet-button generally has a hollow core with internal, nut-like spiral threads which are sized and shaped to correspond to the screw pattern of the stem such that the collet-button may be facilely rotated to be displaced along the stem. Further, the collet-button has proximally disposed surface features which provide a quick-connect interface to a drive part of a syringe driver. The collet-button may also have a knurled outer rim which provides a manual gripping surface and a ratchet interface, the purposes of which are fully disclosed hereafter.
Of singular importance is a collet driver associated with the piston. Generally, the collet driver is disposed within a driver housing which is securely affixable to lateral extensions or gripping wings of the barrel. A motor is disposed within the housing in line with the barrel when affixed to the housing. The motor should have sufficient torque, when communicated through the collet driver, to displace the piston to dispense fluid from the syringe.
The collet driver includes a drive shaft or linkage which is directly connected to the motor and a driver part which is angularly displaced by the shaft but upon which the driving part is free to linearly slide. The driver part has distally disposed features which provide complimentary connections for the quick connect interface to the collet-button.
Of primary importance is an energy storage device disposed in line with the drive shaft or linkage between the driver part and motor. Displacement of the driver part toward the motor stores energy in the energy storage device. Release of energy from the energy storage device linearly forces displacement of the driver part against the collet-button, which is coupled to the stem through the threads and grooves, to propel the piston plunger to dispense fluid from the syringe. It is notable that pressure which results from energy released from the energy storage device is limited by energy stored therein and, therefore, may be thereby limited to not exceed a predetermined value independent of torque being produced by the motor. Thus, activating the motor to rotate the driver part to displace the collet-button along the stem in a direction toward the motor stores energy in the energy storage device and ultimately results in a force-limited displacement of the piston to dispense fluid from the syringe. Note that the change of motion from rotary action of the motor, driver part and collet-button to linear displacement of the stem is a cam interface. The energy storage device is preferably a spring.
Preferably, the motor is intermittently driven in an “on” and “off” cyclic fashion. To provide a predetermined flow rate, the motor is turned “on” for a predetermined period of time (to rotate the drive part and associated collet-button through a predetermined angle) relative to another predetermined period for the “off” time. The amount of fluid dispensed is a function of linear displacement of the collet-button which is dependent upon the pitch of stem grooves and corresponding collet-button threads. For this reason, neither the stem nor associated stop or plunger should rotate while the collet button is being driven.
When the motor is “on”, the collet-button is displaced to store energy into the energy storage device (e.g. a spring), although the energy storage device may be simultaneously linearly displacing the piston to dispense fluid from the syringe. When the motor is “off”, the energy storage device continues to release any stored energy by proceeding to displace the piston to dispense additional fluid from the syringe.
In those cases where effluent from the syringe does not permit the complete release of stored energy during the intermittent drive cycles, more and more energy is stored in the energy storage device and the collet-button and drive part are displaced ever closer toward the motor. Such a condition may occur when the drive's system fluid dispensing rate is lower than the motor drive rate, such as when an occlusion is reducing outflow or when the syringe is empty. In such cases, it is expedient to sense such a condition, respondingly remove power from the motor and provide an alert. For this purpose, a sensor is disposed to sense a limit point of such displacement. It is preferred that power be removed from the motor drive when such a displacement condition is sensed.
A syringe driver according to the instant invention may be provided in a variety of models ranging from a simple variable rate syringe driver to a device which can manage drug infusion, providing such features as programmable drug data bases with automatic lock-out, alerts and alarms. For these purposes a bar code reader and microprocessor may be added to provide an electronic control system.
In simplest format, a syringe driver may not employ a motor or other mechanical energy producing device and may be operated manually. In some medical delivery applications, it s preferable to deliver by syringe, but at a rate which is slower than that conveniently achievable by manually depressing a stem of a syringe. For this purpose, a snap-on apparatus may be employed to constrain the delivery rate. The snap-on apparatus is affixed to the syringe and disposed about a collet-button to deter directly pushing the stem into the syringe barrel to dispense fluid.
The snap-on apparatus has lateral openings which provide access to the outer rim of the collet-button whereby the collet-button may be manually articulated to drive the stem linearly and generally at a slower rate than that of a directly pushed stem. However, in the case of an apparatus which is so driven, just as in the case of a motor driven device, over-pressure situations must be prevented. Also, it is desirable to be able to retract the stem a short distance, such as the distance to draw in a desired amount of fluid into the syringe to test for blood flash.
To satisfy both of these conditions a spring is disposed in the snap-on apparatus proximally disposed relation relative to the collet-button. A pawl is provided to interface with the ratchet pattern of the outer rim of the collet-button to limit articulation of the collet-button to a direction of rotation which stores energy into the spring rather than to drive the stem to directly dispense fluid from the syringe. Note that the stem of the syringe may be retracted a short distance (compressing the spring) to test for blood flash while articulation of the collet-button simply stores energy in the spring which reactively displaces the stem to dispense fluid from the syringe with forces restricted to the force which may be stored in the spring. Note that, once a spring is fully compressed, no additional force may be applied to the stem by rotating the collet-button.
Method for use of either the syringe driver or snap-on apparatus is simple. Either the syringe driver or snap-on apparatus is disposed about a collet-button and affixed to the lateral extensions of the barrel (such as by a bayonet attachment to syringe gripping extensions or flanges).
In the case of the syringe driver, the rate at which fluid is to be dispensed is selected and power is turned “on” to the motor. Powered infusion continues at the selected dispensing rate until manually stopped, a flow alert is sensed or the associated syringe is emptied. Note that by nature of the stored energy device, reflux does not occur when power is removed from the motor (due to force of energy stored in the spring).
In the manual system, fluid dispensing rate is similarly controlled by energy stored in the energy storage device (e.g. a spring). Such a spring is powered by articulation of the collet-button. At each point where articulation ceases, reflux is prevented by pressure exerted by the spring.
Further, the syringe driver may be used to dispense disparate fluids from multi-chamber syringes. In such cases, it may be desirable to dispense fluids from the separate chambers at different rates. In such cases, a sensor may be used to determine varying patterns of displacement of the driver part against the energy storage device by programming within the microprocessor. Pattern recognition programs may be used to detect such events as by sensing a valve opening or change or resistance when the plunger is displaced to provide decision milestones at which flow rates are varied.
Accordingly, it is a primary object to provide a syringe driver system which is driven by a high torque motor, but which cannot over-pressure a syringe and associated attachments.
It is another primary object to provide a piston or stem of a syringe which comprises a plurality of grooves along the piston or stem which are spirally oriented to form a screw pattern having a predetermined pitch for use in a cam interface used to transfer rotational displacement of a motor to linear displacement of the piston or stem.
It is a consequential object to provide a collet-button which is releasibly affixed to a proximal end of the piston or stem for gripping purposes and which may be released from attachment to the proximal end of the piston or stem to be rotationally displaced along the piston or stem for use in the cam interface.
It is an important object to provide the collet-button with a proximally facing structure whereby a driver part connects thereto as part of the cam interface.
It is an object to provide a syringe driver having a motor aligned with a piston or stem of a syringe.
It is a very important object to provide an energy storage device into which energy is stored through the cam interface and which responsively linearly displaces the piston or stem of a syringe to dispense fluid therefrom.
It is an important object to provide circuit control for a motor which controls operational rate of such motor to further control a fluid dispensing rate of an associated syringe thereby.
It is an object to provide a syringe driver with a manually selectable dispensing rate.
It is another very important object to provide sensors and alerts for conditions of excessive flow resistance and an emptied syringe.
It is an object to provide a housing for the syringe driver which has facile and releasible attachment apparatus for attaching the driver to a syringe.
It is an object to provide an electronic control system for a syringe driver which comprises a microprocessor.
It is an object to provide an electronic control system for a syringe driver which comprises a bar code reader.
It is a key object to provide a cam interface between the motor and the syringe piston or stem, said interface being disposed to transform rotational displacement to a linear displacement of a collet-button displacement, which displacement is opposite to the direction of the piston or stem when dispensing fluid from the syringe.
It is an object to provide a method for determining a syringe driver state which exhibits high flow resistance and syringe empty and produces alerts therefore.
It is an important object to provide a syringe driver which inhibits reflux of fluid proximally toward said syringe when power is removed from said motor.
It is another key object to provide a collet from the gripping part of a syringe piston or stem and which rotates thereupon as a nut rotates upon a screw.
It is a basic object to provide an electronic control system which intermittently drives a driver part with a torque from a motor which would yield an over-pressure force to a piston if driven directly to a plunger piston, but which provides a reduced and smoothed reasonably acceptable pressure to the piston through the energy storage device by actuating the driver part to intermittently drive against the energy storage device and therethrough to the plunger piston.
It is yet another primary object to provide a snap-on lock apparatus whereby a collet-button, when disposed at the proximal end of the barrel, is securely affixed by the apparatus to inhibit linear displacement of the collet-button while permitting rotation thereof to propel the piston or stem linearly.
It is an object to provide the lock apparatus with at least one direction retarding pawl and a collet-button with corresponding ratchet teeth to thereby restrict collet-button rotation to a single direction such that collet-button rotation displaces the collet-button away from said syringe barrel.
It is an object to provide a lock apparatus with a spring housed in a compartment, the spring storing energy from collet-button rotation and acting to force dispensing of fluid from an associated syringe.
It is an object to provide a manual syringe drive apparatus and associated method of use which assures manually applied torque does not directly drive fluid from the syringe.
It is an object to provide a syringe driver and associated method of use which assures motor torque is not directly applied to a piston or stem of a syringe to drive fluid from the syringe.
These and other objects and features of the present invention will be apparent from the detailed description taken with reference to accompanying drawings.
This invention is supportive of both single chamber syringes and multi-chamber syringes such as those disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/838,101, titled MULTI-CHAMBER, SEQUENTIAL DOSE DISPENSING SYRINGE and filed May 3, 2004 by Howlett, et al (Howlett '101). Multi-chamber syringe parts seen in
In this description, the term proximal is used to indicate a portion of a device normally closer to a clinician using the device or, in other words away from a patient. The term distal refers to an oppositely disposed portion. Reference is now made to embodiments illustrated in
As used herein, the term “fluid” is defined to be a substance (either liquid or gas) which tends to flow or to take the shape of its container. The term “gas” is defined to be a fluid that expands indefinitely and which may be understood in most circumstances within the scope of this document to be consistent with air. The term “liquid” is a fluid which is free flowing like water, but which is neither solid nor gaseous. Liquids, like water, disclosed in this disclosure are generally understood to be incompressible.
Prior art syringes (as exemplified by syringe 10 in
As seen in
Reference is now made to
Teeth 120 on edges 112, 114, 116 and 118 are organized in a spiral pattern, much like threads on a screw, which has a predetermined pitch and spacing, the purpose of which is fully disclosed hereafter. Also, the general geometric construction of teeth pattern 120 permits a threaded member to facilely be rotated about edges 110.
On a proximal end 130 of assembly 30′, a collet-button 140 is securely, but releasibly affixed thereto. While collet-button 140 may be affixed to stem 80 mechanically or with adhesive, in this case collet-button 140 is thereat affixed by a heat stake 142 (see
As seen in
As seen in
And so, as seen in
Note connecting geometry 174 of each distal end 176 of stem 30′ and 30″. Similar connecting geometry is commonly found for securely connecting a stopper (e.g. stopper 144, see
Further, material from which collet-button 140 and the associated stem (e.g. 30′ or 30″) is made should be sufficiently sturdy to stand-up under stress of torque of a drive motor and should be sufficiently self-lubricating to reduce lateral forces, due to friction, to a value which does not overcome stiction of the combination of stopper 144 and the associated stem. Polypropylene may be used for material for both a collet-button and a stem.
Also, when selecting a pitch for a given pattern 172 of teeth 120, consideration should be given to the amount of lateral force which results from a selected pitch. Even though a higher pitch angle provides opportunity for greater volumetric effluent flow per unit angle of rotation of collet-button 140, it may be advisable to select a reduced angle to assure a lower, more acceptable lateral force which results from forcing collet-button 140 to rotate.
Another factor for consideration is use of a single driver with a single volumetric calibration for dispensing known volumetric delivery rates of liquid from syringes of different sizes. As an example, if a first syringe had an inner barrel diameter of “d1” (with a stem assembly 30′ and pattern 170) and a second syringe (not shown) had an inner barrel diameter of “d2” (with a stem assembly 30″ and pattern 172), a ratio of pitch of pattern 170 relative to pitch of pattern 172 would be d22/d12 to yield the same effluent flow rate for the same angular rotation of collet-button 140.
Reference is now made to
Housing 190 is designed to contain active parts of driver 200 and to protect a user from moving parts. Housing 190 is preferably injection molded from a high impact plastic such as an acrylic. Further housing 190 is also preferably molded in two parts which are securely affixed for normal use, but which may be opened for access to batteries. Such housing design is well known in the housing design and molding arts.
As seen in
A complement of parts used in driver 200 is seen in
As seen in
Motor 290 is preferably a relatively high torque motor, such as a motor used in a hand held screw driver. It should have sufficient torque that pulsing of the motor for a predetermined period of time causes the motor to rotate an associated motor drive through a predetermined arc. For this reason, a stepper motor may be preferred. Such motors are contemporarily available commercially.
Spring 250 is a compression spring which, when compressed by attachment of driver 200 to a syringe 10′, yields a spring force of sufficient strength to overcome stiction of an associated stem or piston assembly 30′ when collet-button 140 is disposed as seen in
Reference is now made to
Note, in
To connect driver 200 to syringe 10′ (and to collet-button 140), collet-button 140 is displaced to a site near or abutting end 22 (see
To operate driver 200, flow rate is set to a desired, predetermined value by switching the power switch 216 to the “on” state followed by depressing switches 212 and 214 until the desired flow rate is displayed on rate indicator 210. (See
Motor 290 is preferably periodically driven through short increments of time as disclosed in detail hereafter. It is important to note that, to deliver fluid from syringe 10′, motor 290 is powered to rotate shaft 270, cylinder 260 and, therefore, collet-button 140 to selectively rotate collet-button 140, along teeth pattern 170 (or 172) of teeth 110, away from, a first state where collet-button abuts end 22 (see
As may be noted in
Attention is drawn to
Adjustment of effluent fluid flow rate may be made by adjusting the period between starting and stopping motor 290 wherein time t from point 402 to 402′ is held constant, but drive time is altered from point 402 to a different point 404′, as seen in
Through the drive period (e.g. from 402 to point 404′) drive cylinder 260 is rotated to arcuately displace collet-button 140 about stem assembly 30′ which causes collet-button 140 to be displaced proximally thereby compressing spring 250 via resulting displacement of cylinder 260. An exemplary displacement “d” (pulse 410) of collet-button 140 (and cylinder 260 and spring 250 compression) is plotted in
However, should effluent fluid flow from syringe 10′ not clear at a rate commensurate with effluent drive rate, displacement of collet-button 140 (and cylinder 260 and spring 250) may not return to abut collet-button 140 against end 22. In such a case, displacement of collet-button 140 (and cylinder 260 and spring 250) may be continuously displaced, as seen by example by displacement plot 410′ in
In like manner, when syringe 10′ is fully emptied and stem assembly 30′ is fully displaced into barrel 20, collet-button 140 (and cylinder 260 and spring 250) resultingly are also displaced toward threshold 420 as plot of waveform 440 in
A simple control system 500 for regulating driver flow as depicted in
Period of oscillation of oscillator 508 determines period from point 402 to 402′ (see
A control circuit 550 for variable period driver 200 cycle is seen in
Period of oscillation of oscillator 508 determines period from point 402 to 402′ (see
A significant requirement of driver 200 operation may be a requirement to control effluent flow rate of a wide range of values. As an example, it may be desirable to vary flow over a predetermined range from 0.1 ml/hour to 100 ml/hour. Precisely setting and achieving such a range is difficult using rheostatic control. For this reason, a digital control system such as system 600, seen in
Operation of control system to that disclosed supra for control systems 500 and 550, with some notable exceptions. Flow rates are incremented and decremented by depressing switches 602 and 604, respectively, to adjust desired flow rate which is stored in counter 610 and visually fed-back via display 630 (see
Counter 610, in conjunction with mode register 622, comprises an addressing register for read only memory 620. Memory 620 may hold a unique drive period and total cycle period for each setting of counter 610, thereby permitting predetermination of optimum drive to null (no motor drive) periods for various flow rate settings. Note that counter 610 may be adjusted until switch 218 is closed. At such time, initial conditions are generated by output of one shot 606 which clears counters 610′ and 610″ and sets mode 622 to a desired operating mode (e.g. 0, for normal operating mode). Operating modes may be changed to change flow rates based upon predetermined conditions, such as detecting emptying of a chamber 70 to drive effluent from chamber 60 (see
Once desired flow rates are set and syringe 10′ is affixed to driver 200 and ready for fluid delivery, switch 218 is closed to initiate driver 200 operation. Each counter 610′ and 610″ counts down to underflow which yields a “borrow signal” from the least significant bit of each counter (or like signal). Underflow of counter 610 sets flip-flop 608 to initiate a motor 290 drive period through gate 510 and amplifier 516. When counter 610″ counts down to underflow, flip-flop 608 is reset to terminate the current motor 290 drive period. The cycle period determining number set in counter 610′ is greater than the motor 290 drive period number set in counter 610″ which makes the cycle period longer than the motor 290 drive period.
Note that status indicator 522 is turned “on” when switch 294 is closed, to indicate an alarm condition, generally for the same reasons the same alarm indicator 522 in
A microprocessor based control system 600′ is seen in
A program flow diagram 650 for operation of driver 200 under control of system 600′ is seen in
Program entry 652 begins with closing of switch 216, see
If program flow proceeds to decision 660, a test is made to see if an alarm flag is set. If so, another flag is set to remove power from motor 290 (see
From connection 670, program flow is designed to control total cycle and motor drive periods, beginning at function 674. Function 674 accesses total cycle period count and motor drive period count from counter rate determined and displayed in function 668. Function 676 follows function 674 and loads new cycle and motor drive counts into associated “c” (cycle period) and “d” (drive period) registers (or memory cells), respectively. Flow then proceeds to decision 678 whereat a choice is made to proceed to connection if switch 218 (see FIG. 21) is open or to proceed to decision 682 if switch 218 is closed.
At decision 682, a choice is made to proceed to function 684 if contents of the “d” register is not zero or to proceed to function 686 if contents of the “d” register is zero. Function 684 decrements contents of the “d” register. Function 686 sets a flag to remove motor power. From both functions 684 and 686, program flow continues to decision 688.
At decision 688, a choice is made to proceed to proceed to function 690 if contents of the “c” register are not zero or, otherwise, to proceed to decision 692. Function 690 decrements contents of the “c” register or memory cell. At decision 692 a choice is made to proceed to function 694 if switch 294 (see
From function 690, flow continues to decision 698 wherein a choice is made to proceed to function 696 if switch 294 is closed or to proceed to otherwise proceed to function 699. Flow from function 696 is as disclosed supra. Via function 699, the motor “on” flag is set to assure motor 290 will be on if not reset by decision 682. Program flow from continuation 680 returns to decision 656.
Use of a spring, such as spring 250 (see
Manual driver 700 comprises a spring 250 and a housing 710 which acts as a “lock apparatus” which houses spring 250 and is releasibly affixed to syringe 10′. Similar to housing 190 (see
Further, housing 710 comprises a pair of risers 720 and 722 which extend superiorly from attachments 712 and 712′ to be joined by a hollow ringed connection 724 at the top thereof. Connection has an orifice 726 which is sufficiently large to permit a stem, such as stem 80 (see
The inventions disclosed herein may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. The present embodiments are therefore to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, the scope of the invention being indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description, and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore intended to be embraced therein.
What is claimed and desired to be secured by Letters Patent is: