The present invention relates to threaded rod and nut assemblies. In particular it relates to a stop means for preventing relative movement of the rod with respect to the nut. This is particularly relevant for injection devices, such as pen style syringes, which often use threaded piston rods and nuts to drive preset doses from the syringe.
A typical injection device comprises a threaded piston rod and a nut. Usually, the piston rod has a groove or grooves machined so that it has a not round cross-section. In general, two types of devices are common. In one type, a drive nut is coupled to a drive means that spins the drive nut, which is rotatable but is fixed in the housing to prevent longitudinal movement. An end-of-content mechanism for such device is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,582,404. In other devices, the nut is screwed along the piston rod during a dose setting operation. See e.g. US Patent Application Nos. 20020052578 A1, which is hereby incorporated by reference. The nut is screwed a linear distance along the piston rod from an abutment in the housing of the device. The distance the nut is moved linearly is the amount by which a piston rod may be displaced and thus relates to a specific quantity of medication that will be expelled from medication containing cartridge within the device. Regardless of the type of device, it is often desirable or necessary to create a stop on the piston rod so that the nut cannot be screwed off one end of the rod.
In devices where the nut is screwed along the piston rod during dose setting, when the stop is located at a predefined distance, it is possible to configure a device so that a dose may never be set that exceeds the quantity of medication remaining in the cartridge. Typically, stops have been constructed by ending the thread on the piston rod and having a structure with a larger diameter than the threaded portion abut the nut. This is disclosed in FIG. 1 in US 20020052578 A1 (the piston rod having reference No. 4, the unthreaded part having No. 35 and the nut having No. 13). However, when large torque loads are exerted on the piston rod and nut, the nut can jam. It would therefore be desirable to construct a nut and threaded rod assembly with a stop means that prevents the nut from being screwed off the piston rod without jamming.
The present invention provides for a threaded rod and nut assembly having a stop means that prevents the nut from being screwed off the piston rod, at least in one direction. And it further provides for a method of making a nut and threaded rod assembly having a stop means. In one embodiment, a portion of a rod is threaded. Near a proximal end of the rod, the thread ends (preferably abruptly), and beyond that (in a proximal direction) there is a cylindrical surface having the same (or smaller) outside diameter as the largest diameter of the threaded portion. A groove or a plurality of grooves are machined longitudinally in the rod. A nut is threaded on the inside with a corresponding female thread preferably running only partly through the nut. A hole or opening is bored in the nut near a proximal end. The hole cuts into the end of the female thread and creates a stop surface within the nut. When the nut is screwed onto the rod, starting with the distal end of the nut, the nut screws along the rod in a distal direction until the groove in the cylindrical portion enters the region of the nut where the hole is bored. At this point, the surface in the cylindrical portion formed by the groove hits a thread on the interior of the nut and prevents relative rotation between the rod and the nut.
Thus, in one embodiment the present invention comprises a threaded rod having a portion of it outer surface threaded, a cylindrical portion disposed beyond where the threading ends, one or more grooves or flat surfaces machined in the outer surface, the grooves, extending to cover the length of the threaded portion and at least a portion of the cylindrical surface, thereby forming a stop surface on the rod, a nut having a threaded interior and a hole in the nut, thereby creating a stop surface in the nut for the stop surface of the nut to abut when the nut rod is screwed through the nut. Preferably, the hole is made over a peak (i.e., it should cover at least one peak) in the interior thread so that a cross-section of the peak of the thread forms the stop surface. Of course the hole may be larger than the peak to peak distance of the interior thread. This will result in the hole straddling at least one peak in an interior thread.
The above described embodiment may be created by a method comprising:
cutting a thread on the outer surface of a rod
removing the thread before the end of the rod, preferably abruptly, and
boring a hole in a nut, preferably such that the hole is not disposed between threads in a valley, but is disposed over a peak (or crest) of the thread.
The invention will be explained more fully in connection with a preferred embodiment and with reference to the drawings in which:
As is shown in
A nut 14 having interior female threads 15 is modified to have a stop surface 22 that abuts the stop surface 10 on the rod 1. As shown in
The above described invention is broad in scope and should not be limited to the embodiments disclosed herein. While it has been described as useful in injection devices having threaded piston rods, it is usefully in other applications where it is desirable to stop a nut from rotating off a threaded rod or to stop a rod from rotating through a nut. Furthermore, it is useful in end of content devices for injection devices such as that described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,582,404 and other devices where a stop is needed for a nut that screws along a threaded shaft, barrel, rod or other surface.
Some preferred embodiments have been shown in the foregoing, but it should be stressed that the invention is not limited to these, but may be embodied in other ways within the subject matter defined in the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PA 2003 01292 | Sep 2003 | DK | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/DK04/00583 | Sep 2004 | US |
Child | 11356678 | Feb 2006 | US |