The invention concerns a test strip system including at least one test strip with a test field; and for measuring the test field, a measuring device with a strip receiver having a support surface for the test strip, and positioning means, by means of which the inserted test strip is so held in the strip receiver that at least the test field containing section of the test strip takes on a definite position relative to the support surface.
A test strip system of the above-mentioned kind is known, for example, from U.S. Pat. No. 5,424,035. In the solution there described, the support surface rises slightly at the inner end of the strip receiver and has a pin intended to be received in a recess of the strip. Between this holding pin and the spot at which the test field of the test strip is to come to lie in the strip receiver is a rigid pressing element opposite the support surface, the spacing of which pressing element from the support surface is slightly more than the thickness of a test strip. By means of this arrangement the test strip is pressed in slightly bent condition against the support surface so that the test strip, on one hand, hangs firmly on the pin and; on the other hand, the test field, by the bending of the test strip, is pressed against the support surface. The insertion and especially the removal of the test strip are each difficult and complicated and the danger exists that the user, in attempting to pull the test strip from measuring device, either dirties the device or his fingers.
The invention has as its object the provision of a test strip system of the a foregoing kind in which the test strip, especially the test field, is held in a definite position with the insertion and removal of the test strip into and out of the strip receiver being simple and easy.
This object is solved in accordance with the invention in that the test strip is pressable against an abutment of the strip receiver by a spring force working parallel to the support surface. The abutment defines the position of the test strip on the support surface. Since the test strip itself, however, is very light, a small spring force is sufficient. This spring force can, for example, be created by the test strip, upon its insertion into the strip receiver, being elastically deformed. For example, the test strip can have at least one recess near one of its edges with the contour of the strip material bordering the recess and/or the contour of an adjacent surface of the test strip receiver being so chosen that a bridge formed in the strip material by the recess is deformed upon insertion of the test strip into the strip receiver; the restoring force of the material bridge being sufficient to create the desired spring bias. For example, a nose can be formed at the boundary surface of the strip receiver which presses against the material bridge and slightly deforms it. In the reverse of this, the material bridge can also have an outwardly extending projection which projects beyond the nominal contour of the test strip edge so that the projection, and with it the material bridge, is deflected by the boundary surface of the strip receiver in the direction toward the recess. Thereby, the result again is a restoring force sufficient to press the test strip against an abutment.
The last-named embodiment allows in an advantageous way the further formation on the material bridge or on the strip receiver of a recess for partially receiving the projection. Thereby, there is achieved not only a spring force for pressing the strip against the abutment, but also a latching of the test strip to the strip receiver.
Another possibility exists in that the strip receiver has arranged in it a spring which pushes the test strip in the receiver against the abutment. The spring is, in this case, advantageously so arranged that its spring force is directed in the sense of a pushing out of the test strip from the receiver. In this case, additional advantages can be achieved if the abutment is formed on a locking element intended to be received in a recess of the test strip. On one hand, the recess can be used to quasi-code the test strip. If the recess (several recesses can also be provided in connection with several locking elements) is not entirely at the designated spot, the locking element cannot move into the recess and the spring moves the test strip again out of the measuring device as soon it is left loose. With this measuring strip, the measuring device can carry out no measurement. If further the locking element is adjustable between an inserted position and a freeing position, the spring can be used after the movement of the locking element to its freeing position to eject the test strip out of the measuring device.
According to a further feature of the invention, to solve the problem existing with of a test strip system of the initially-mentioned kind, it is proposed that the test strip receiver have at least two holding means spaced from one another at the edge areas of the support surface for holding fast the associated edges of the test strip and that the support surface, in a middle area between the holding means, be spaced vertically from these edge areas. With this arrangement, the test strip is held at its edge areas and is bent throughout its vertically-displaced middle area, and is thereby stressed so that the test field again has a definite position with respect to the support surface. For example, the support surface can be bent cylindrically, or the support surface can have a projection formed only in its middle portion which projection supports the test field so that by the bending of the test strip over the projection and the strip tension connected therewith, the test field is firmly pressed against the projection.
According to a further feature of the invention, for the solution of the mentioned object in a test strip system of the initially-mentioned type, it is proposed that the strip receiver have an outer insertion end and an inner end, that near the inner end a spring arm be arranged which rises vertically out of the support surface and toward the inner end of the strip receiver and is elastically deflectable in the direction toward the support surface, and that the spring arm have associated with it a counter-pressure surface which is spaced from the support surface and which rises away from the support surface and extends toward the inner end of the strip receiver so as to be generally parallel to the direction of the spring arm.
If a test strip is inserted into the so-formed strip receiver, it will be pressed by the spring arm against the counter-pressure surface so that it becomes bent or deflected. The restoring force created by the bending of the strip presses the free section of the strip against the support surface so that the test field again lies flatly on the support surface. In order to be able to exactly position the strip, it is advantageous if on the spring arm, a detent extension is formed for reception into a locking recess of the test strip. In contrast to the solution known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,424,035, the test strip can, despite the detention, easily be again pulled out of the device.
According to a further feature of the invention, for the solution of the above-named object in a test strip system of the initially-mentioned kind, it is proposed that above the support surface a clamping lever be pivotally supported for movement relative to the support surface about a pivot axis parallel to the support surface, which clamping lever has a clamping arm biased toward the support surface. The test strip can, therefore, be pressed against the support surface by the clamping arm. Here it also is advantageous if the clamping arm has a detent projection for reception in a detent recess of the test strip so that the test strip can be exactly positioned.
In a preferred embodiment, the clamping arm of the clamping lever is connected with a second lever arm forming an actuating arm onto which a spring engages for pushing the clamping arm against the support surface. At the same time, the clamping arm can be raised from the support surface by pressing on the actuating arm against the bias of the spring so that a test strip can fall from the strip receiver without the user having to grasp it.
To avoid a soiling of the measuring device by the test fluid dropped onto the test strip and, as the case may be, to be better able to clean the strip receiver, the strip receiver can be made as a separate element which is removably insertable in a housing of the measuring device.
According to a further feature of the invention, for the solution of the above-mentioned object in a test strip system of the initially-mentioned kind, it is proposed that the measuring device and the test strip be formed for the electrical measurement of the test field through contact elements on the measuring device and on the test strip and that at least one contact element on the measuring device is formed as a clamping spring which presses the test strip in its measuring position against the support surface. In order to release the clamping spring and to free the test strip after its use, an actuating lever is connected with the measuring device, preferably for pivotal movement about an axis parallel to the support surface, and is so associated with the at least one contact spring that the contact spring by pivoting of the actuating lever is lifted from the support surface. After the pivoting of the actuating lever, it is sufficient that the measuring device be held with the insertion opening for the test strip facing downwardly so that the used test strip can fall from the measuring device.
Further features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description which in connection with the accompanying drawings explain the invention by way of exemplary embodiments.
The drawings are:
FIG. 1—a schematic partial longitudinal section through a test strip measuring device with a test strip according to a first embodiment of the invention.
FIG. 2—a section corresponding to that of
FIG. 3—a plan view of the embodiment of
FIG. 4—a schematic plan view of a test strip receiver according to a further embodiment of the invention.
FIG. 5—a view corresponding to
FIG. 6—a view corresponding to
FIG. 7—a schematic plan view of a strip receiver with a spring receiver end.
FIG. 8—a view corresponding to
FIG. 9—a schematic plan view of a strip receiver according to a further embodiment of the invention.
FIG. 10—a schematic longitudinal section along the line X-X in
FIG. 11—a schematical section along the line XI-XI in
FIG. 12—a section along the line XII-XII in
FIG. 13—a section along the line XIII-XIII in
FIG. 14—a view corresponding to
The measuring system illustrated in
The measuring device is, for example, a device for the optical determination of the concentration of a given substance in a liquid, especially body liquids, for example, a device for blood sugar determination or for the quantitative determination of certain substances in urine. The housing 12,14 contains a plate 20 with a measuring optic 22 and, in addition to that, a non-illustrated electronic evaluation and control circuit. Further, the measuring device induces an operating part and an indicator device. Measuring devices of this kind are known in themselves and, therefore, do not need to be described in more detail.
The strip receiver 16 has a carrier 24 with a support surface 26 for the test strip 18, as well as a measuring opening 28 through which a test field 30 of the test strip 18 can be measured by the measuring optic 22. The carrier 24 is pushed into the housing 12,14 and held in the housing lower portion 12 by a hook 32. Provision can be made for allowing the carrier 24 to be removed from the housing 12,14 in order, for example, to clean it.
A spring arm 34 is so arranged in the carrier 24 that it rises from the support surface 26 and extends inwardly toward the inner end of the strip receiver 16. The spring arm 34 is biased in the direction of the arrow A and can be pivoted against this biasing force in the direction toward the support surface 26.
The spring arm 34 is associated with a counter-pressure surface 36 connected with the housing upper portion 12 which extends generally parallel to the spring arm 34 and is spaced a given distance from the support surface 26.
Upon insertion of the test strip 18 into the strip receiver 16, the forward end of the test strip 18, that is the end facing the inside of the device, moves between the spring arm 34 and the counter-pressure surface 36 so that the test strip 18 becomes bent. In its forward area, the test strip has a detent recess 38 into which a detent nose 40 formed on the free end of the spring arm 34 becomes inserted, if the test strip 18 is inserted fully into the strip receiver 16. In this way, the correct position of the test strip 18 in the strip receiver 16 is established, in which correct position the test field 30 is located exactly over the measuring opening 28. Because of the bending of the test strip and because of the stiffness of the strip material, a restoring force is created in the strip which presses the test field 30 firmly against the support surface 26 so that the test field 30 has a definite spacing from the measuring optic 22. As will be recognized, the test strip 18 can be inserted in simple way into the strip receiver 16 and, above all, can be again pulled out of the strip receiver in a simple way, without this simple operation encumbering the positioning accuracy.
The solution illustrated in
In the solution illustrated in
In a variant of the embodiment illustrated in
In
The embodiment, according to
In the illustrated embodiment of
In the embodiment according to
The embodiment of
The measuring opening 28 is surrounded on the upper side of the support surface 26 by a ring 94 which lifts the test strip 18 slightly above the support surface 26. Near the insertion end of the strip receiver 16, two noses 96 and 98 are formed on the side walls 54 of the strip receiver 16, under which noses the associated edges of the test strip 18 can be inserted. The form of the detent noses 96 and 98 is illustrated in cross-section in
In the previously-described embodiments, it has always been presumed that the test field is to be measured by a measuring optic of the measuring device.
Instead of a measuring optic, contact springs 100 are arranged on the plate 20, which, for one thing, are intended to come into contact with non-illustrated counter-contact elements on the test strip 18 when the test strip 18 is in its measuring position in the measuring device 10. For another thing, the contact springs 100 are so-formed that they urge the test strip 18 in its measuring position against the support surface 26.
The lever 46 serves in the
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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198 22 770 | May 1998 | DE | national |
This application is a divisional application of U.S. patent application 09/218,327 filed on Dec. 22, 1998, and abandoned on Jan. 11, 2002.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4780283 | Meinecke et al. | Oct 1988 | A |
4934817 | Gassenhuber | Jun 1990 | A |
5091154 | Pauli et al. | Feb 1992 | A |
5281395 | Markart et al. | Jan 1994 | A |
5424035 | Hones et al. | Jun 1995 | A |
5597532 | Connolly | Jan 1997 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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77 25 947 | Dec 1977 | DE |
0 319 922 | Jun 1989 | EP |
0 333 099 | Sep 1989 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20020114735 A1 | Aug 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09218327 | Dec 1998 | US |
Child | 10043681 | US |