US3058467A - Hypodermic syringes - Google Patents

Hypodermic syringes Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3058467A
US3058467A US848295A US84829559A US3058467A US 3058467 A US3058467 A US 3058467A US 848295 A US848295 A US 848295A US 84829559 A US84829559 A US 84829559A US 3058467 A US3058467 A US 3058467A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
piston
compartment
rod
head
liquid
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US848295A
Inventor
Faure Jean-Marie
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3058467A publication Critical patent/US3058467A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M5/00Devices for bringing media into the body in a subcutaneous, intra-vascular or intramuscular way; Accessories therefor, e.g. filling or cleaning devices, arm-rests
    • A61M5/178Syringes
    • A61M5/31Details
    • A61M5/315Pistons; Piston-rods; Guiding, blocking or restricting the movement of the rod or piston; Appliances on the rod for facilitating dosing ; Dosing mechanisms
    • A61M5/31596Pistons; Piston-rods; Guiding, blocking or restricting the movement of the rod or piston; Appliances on the rod for facilitating dosing ; Dosing mechanisms comprising means for injection of two or more media, e.g. by mixing

Description

oct' 16 1962 JEAN-MARIE FAURE 3,058,467
HYPODERMIC SYRINGES Filed Oct. 25, 1959 INVENTOR.
JfA /v MA m5 FA 0,9/5
QMMQW ATTORNEY trite The various operations which are necessary in order to inject a medicament require a certain amount of practice and even a certain manual skill. It is in fact relatively diflicult to draw-off the liquid to be injected from the reservoir ampoule in which the said liquid is preserved, when using the hypodermic syringe for this purpose. The difliculties are even more appreciable when the product to be injected is not stable in solution, it being necessary in such a case to keep the said product in powder form so that it is mixed with its vehicle agent only at the time of the injection. In fact, in this case, an additional operation is necessary, since the liquid solvent which serves as a vehicle agent should be taken from its sterile container and injected into the vessel containing the powder to be dissolved. When the powder and vehicle have been suitably mixed together, the solution or product in suspension thus obtained is again drawn-off and injected into the patient by means of the hypodermic syringe. These various operations are long and difficult; moreover, they can never be carried out under perfect conditions of asepsis since they are necessarily effected in a medium which, in principle, is not sterile.
There exist ampoule-syringes which combine in a single instrument the operational properties of a reservoir ampoule and of a hypodermic syringe, thus making it possible to eliminate the operations involved in extracting the liquid.
There `also exist ampoule-syringes having two separate compartments, one containing the drug in powder or tablet form and the other containing the liquid intended to serve as a vehicle agent.
'In an ampoule-syringe of this known type, the mixture of the powder with its vehicle is thus carried out just before injection, which obviously permits the use of nonstable medicated solutions.
However, these ampoule syringes of known type have considerable drawbacks which are mainly due to the fact that during the mixing process prior to injection, it is difcult to control with any accuracy the passage of the liquid from one compartment to the other. In fact this transfer of liquid is usually carried out by the removal of a plug which separates the two compartments, this removal being elfected by virtue of the pressure applied to the said plug through the intermediary of the liquid, which is in turn forced by a piston actuated by the operator.
The present invention has for its object an ampoulesyringe having two compartments, of small overall size, and permitting of perfectly aseptic preservation and independently of the drug and its vehicle as well as easy and safe handling during injection.
The ampoule-syringe in accordance with the present invention has the following features:
(l) Its tubular reservoir is divided into two fluidtight compartments by the head of a piston: the first of these compartments, which is intended to receive the medicament in powder or tablet form, is sealed at its extremity by a duid-tight cap which can be perforated and to which a hypodermic needle can be tted by perforation in accordance with a known method; the second compartment, which is located at the piston-rod end and intended to receive the liquid, is limited at its extremity oppositely facing the head of the said piston by a suitable iiuid-tight device through which the piston-rod passes.
trates atet (2) Hollowed-out portions or ribbed portions are formed in the wall of the tubular reservoir at a suitable distance from the said capping ampoule, in such manner that, during the movement of withdrawal of the piston, the said ribbed or hollowed-out portions put the two compartments into communication when the said piston reaches their level; the tluid-tight device which limits the second compartment is so designed that, when the piston head comes opposite to the said hollowed-out portions, this device provides a passage for the atmospheric pressure, which drives the liquid into the first compartment in which a vacuum has been created as a result of the withdrawal of the piston.
Further features and advantages of the present invention will be set forth in the description which follows below, reference being made to the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. l is a view in longitudinal cross-section of the ampoule-syringe in accordance with the present invention.
FlG. 2 is a fragmentary view in longitudinal crosssection of a modification of the invention.
FlG. 3 shows a View in cross-section taken along the line AA of FIG. 2.
FIGS. 4, 5 and 6 are fragmentary views in longitudinal cross-section of three different embodiments of the fluidtight device which closes the second compartment.
Referring to FIGURE 1, a tube 1 of glass or of synthetic material is provided at one of its orifices with a ared portion 2, its other orifice being closed in a manner known per se by a cap 3 of rubber or of any other similar material, held in position by an annular metallic cap 4.
A piston having two heads 5 and 6 of rubber which are coupled together by a rigid rod 7 of glass or of plastic material, is adapted to sli-de in the tube y1.
In the upper portion of the head 5 is arranged a threaded portion 8 intended to receive the threaded extremity of a piston-rod which is not shown in the drawing.
These two piston heads divide the ampoule-syringe into two compartments 9 and 10.
In the upper half of the tube 1 and in its internal wall there are formed recesses 11 and 12, the height rof which is slightly greater than the thickness X of the piston heads.
The distance Y which separates the lower lips of these recesses 11 and 12 is substantially equal to the distance which separates the points of fluid-tight closure a and b, located respectively at the bases of the piston heads 5 and 6.
The compartment 10 contains the product which is not stable in solution, in the form of powder. The compartment 9 contains the liquid which serves as a vehicle agent for the powdered product.
In order to put the powder and the vehicle into contact with each other, it is only necessary at the moment of injection to displace the two-headed piston towards the top by actuating its piston-rod, which is not shown in the drawing. As a result of this, -a vacuum is created in the compartment 10 and when the point of fluid-tight clos-ure b arrives opposite the recess 12., the liquid of the cornpartment 9 is thus sucked into the compartment 10. The point of fluid-tight closure a of the head 5 being then opposite the recess 11, this latter permits the entry of the atmospheric pressure which can thus be applied to the liquid and forces this latter through the said recess 12 into the low-pressure compartment 10.
When the mixture of the powder and its vehicle agent has been correctly completed throughout the compartment 10, it only remains vto proceed as in the case of a normal injection, after placing in position an injection needle which is fitted to the cap after perforation of this latter.
The dimensions and `in particular the distance which separates the cap 3 from the .recess 12 should be so calculated that the vacuum set up at by the Withdrawal of the piston 6 should be sucient to enable the suction of the liquid which is present at 9 to take place entirely while the compartments 9 and 10 `are put into communication with each other.
It is necessary, lfurthermore, that the space which is left lfree between the `bottom of the recess 12 and the cap 3 is suicient to contain the mixture of powder and the vehicle which is added to it, when once the solution or suspension has been completed. rl`his condition should in fact -be fulfilled so that, during the injection, the movement of thrust of the piston 6 does not have the effect of forcing `back the liquid of the compartment 10 into the compartment 9 'through the recess 12.
The space between the upper extremity of the recess 12 and the lower extremity of the recess 11 should be sutiiciently great to ensure that the plug 5 can be placed therein, in the storage position, without entailing the risk of being accidentally displaced towards one recess or the other.
On account of its position and its length, the recess 11 can enable the ampoule-syringe to be iilled with liquid by means of a vacuum in accordance with a method which is known per se. In fact, if the recess 11 is longer than the recess 12, it is possible in a certain position of the two-headed piston to provide a communication between the external medium and the compartment 9 without providing any actual communication between the compartments 9 and 10. This is in fact the case when the piston head 5 comes opposite to the recess 11 while the piston-head 6 has not yet come opposite to the recess 12.
In this position of the two-headed piston, it is easy to carry out the automatic filling of the compartment 9. The extremity 2 of the ampoule-syringe is in lfact immersed in the solution with which the compartment 9 is intended -to be filled, and the creation of a vacuum around the ampoule syringc-which has not ye-t been capped -at its other extremity-and the gradual restoration of atmospheric'pressure result in the automatic till-ing of the compartment 9. When the double-headed piston is returned to its fluid-tight position, the huid-tight conditioning of the liquid in the compartment 9 can thus be ensured.
In accordance with an alternative form of construction shown in FIGS. 2 and 3, the recesses 11 and 12 are replaced by bulges 13 and 14 formed on the internal surface of the 'tube 1. When one of the piston heads 5 and 6 of rubber comes into contact with the corresponding bulge, the said piston head is elastically deformed without however closely fitting the profile of the said bulge and consequently leaves a passa-ge which allows communication either between the compartments 9 land 10 in the case of the piston 6 or between the compartment 9 and the exterior, in the case of the piston 5.
In theV forms of embodiment of the ampoule-syringe in accordance with the present invention as described above, the access of atmospheric pressure into the compartment 9 is ensured by causing the piston 5 to come opposite to either the recess 11 or the bulge 13 which are formed at the oriice of the tube 1.
It is quite obvious that any other device which ensures this admission of the atmospheric pressure into the compartment 9, in synchronization with the establishment of communication between the compartments 9 and 10, will fall within the scope of the present invention.
FIG. 4 shows one of these forms of embodiment. In this device, the piston-head S is replaced by a duid-tight elastic ring 15 fixed at the extremity of the tube 1 by means of a metallic cap 16 and gripping the piston rod 17. The upper portion of this rod has a cylindrical section which ensures perfect fluid-tightness of the compartment 9 when the piston-head 6 (not shown in the drawing) is in the storage position. The portion of the rod 17 which is Alocated directly beneath this portion having a cylindrical section is provided either with grooves 18 or bulges which form an air passage when, as a result of the Awithdrawal of the piston 6 and of the rod 17, the said grooves or bulges come opposite to the elastic ring 15.
FIG. 5 Shows a form of construction in which the piston head 5 is completely :disengaged from the tube 1, instead of co-operating with a recess or bulge at the time of the air penetration stage.
In this form of construction the piston head S actually plays the part of a simple plug.
A ring 19 which is rigidly iixed to the rod 17 of the piston 6 (not shown) and disposed at the base of the plug S applies Aan effort on lthis latter during the movement of withdrawal of the piston caused by the action of the operator on the rod 17. This effort tends to completely disengage the plug 5 from the 1tube 1. As the plug S is constituted by Ia ring which is inserted with slight friction on to the rod 17, it follows as a result that during the movement of injection, the plug 5 slides on the rod 17 without again passing into the tube 1. Friction which is undesirable during the injection, is thus considerably reduced.
FIG. 6 shows a form of embodiment which completely eliminates the piston-head 5 or its equivalent. In accordance with this form of embodiment, the rigid rod 17 which is rigidly fixed to the piston 6 (not shown), terminates at the level of the upper lip 2 of the tube 1 in a non-duidtight end portion 20 tapped at 21 and intended to receive the threaded extremity of a piston rod which is not shown in the drawing. The upper lip 2 of the tube 1 and the external edge 22 of the end-pieces 20 are coupled together by means of a capsule 23 constituted yby Ia thin skin of thermo-weldable material which ensures the Huid-tightness of the compartment 9. This thin capsule is easily torn by the withdrawal of the endpiece 20 when a movement of withdrawal is imparted to the said rod after the piston rod is screwed into the tapped emplacement 21.
The tearing of the thermo-weldable capsule thus gives access to the atmospheric pressure in the compartment 9.
It is understood that the scope of the present invention could cover any alternative form of embodiment in which the admission of the atmospheric pressure into the compartment 9 is effected by means of the tearing of a capsule, irrespective of the position of the said capsule or of the manner in which it is torn. This tearing process could in fact be carried out by hand, for example, or it could also be produced by the perforation of the capsule caused by screwing the piston-rod into the tapped emplacement, the orice of which could be covered for this purpose by the capsule itself.
What I claim is:
1. A syringe vial for storing two substances in separate chambers and for permitting mixing thereof comprising, in combination: a substantially tubular body; a uid tight cap closing off one end of said tubular body, said cap being capable of being perforated; a resilient piston head disposed in said tubular body and sealingly and slidably contacting the internal wall thereof, said piston head dividing said tubular body into two isolated chambers, one of which is located between said cap and said piston head and the other of which is located between said p-iston head and the other end of said tubular body; a piston rod secured to said piston head for effecting longitudinal movement thereof within said body; means on said tubular body cooperable with said piston head for placing the chambers in communicaiton with each other when said piston head is at a predetermined location within said body; means cooperating with said piston rod for closing off the other end of said other chamber, said last-named means including means responsive to longitudinal movement of said piston head toward the other end of said body for placing said other chamber in free communication with the atmosphere through said other end of said tubular body when said piston head is in said predetermined location, such longitudinal movement of said piston head also creating a vacuum in said one chamber so that liquid in the other chamber will be drawn into said one chamber when said piston head is in said predetermined location.
2. A syringe vial according to claim 1 wherein Said means for closing ot the other end of said other chamber comprises a second resilient piston head secured to said piston rod and slidably and sealingly contacting the internal wall of said tubular body; means on said tubular body cooperable with said second piston head for providing a passage between said second piston head and said tubular body to thereby place the other chamber in communication with the atmosphere when said first-mentioned piston head is in said predetermined location.
3. A syringe vial according to claim 2 wherein said tubular body has a pair of circumferentially extending grooves in the internal wall thereof of axial thickness greater than the axial thickness of said piston heads, said grooves being axially spaced a distance corresponding to the spacing of said piston heads so that said piston heads can simultaneously be aligned with said grooves, one of said grooves defining said means for placing said chambers in communication with each other and the other groove defining the means for placing the other chamber in communication with the atmosphere when said rstamentioned piston head is in said predetermined location.
4. A syringe vial according to claim 2 wherein said tubular body has a pair of inwardly extending projections on the internal wall thereof, said projections being axially spaced a distance corresponding to the spacing of said piston heads so that said piston heads can simultaneously be deformed by said projections, one of said projections defining said means for placing said chambers in communication with each other and the other projection defining the means for placing the other chamber in cornmunication with the atmosphere when said first-mentioned piston head is in said predetermined location.
5. A syringe vial according to claim 1 wherein said means for closing oir" the other end of said other chamber is an annular cap through whose central opening said piston rod extends; said piston rod having an axially elongated groove in the periphery thereof for forming a passage connecting the atmosphere to said other chamber when Said piston head is in said predetermined location.
6. A syringe vial according to claim 1 wherein said means for closing of the other end of said other chamber is a second piston head slidably mounted on said piston rod so that it may be completely removed from said tubular body when the first-mentioned piston head is in said predetermined location.
7. A syringe vial according to claim 1 wherein said means for closing ot the other end of said other chamber includes a rupturable sheet.
References Cited in the tile of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,285,206 Johnson et al Nov. 19, 1918 2,549,417 Brown Apr. 17, 1951 2,665,687 Brown Ian. 12, 1954 2,665,690 Lockhart Ian. 12, 1954 2,717,601 Brown Sept. 13, 1955 2,761,447 Hersee Sept. 4, 1956 2,896,622 Huttermann July 28, 1959
US848295A 1958-10-27 1959-10-23 Hypodermic syringes Expired - Lifetime US3058467A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
FR871854X 1958-10-27

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3058467A true US3058467A (en) 1962-10-16

Family

ID=9358576

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US848295A Expired - Lifetime US3058467A (en) 1958-10-27 1959-10-23 Hypodermic syringes

Country Status (3)

Country Link
US (1) US3058467A (en)
DE (1) DE1105113B (en)
GB (1) GB871854A (en)

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3477431A (en) * 1967-02-03 1969-11-11 Abbott Lab Combined mixing syringe and container
US3511239A (en) * 1967-01-21 1970-05-12 Penicillin Ges Dauelsberg & Co Multi-chamber syringe
US3570486A (en) * 1968-10-14 1971-03-16 Horizon Ind Ltd Mixing syringe
US3881484A (en) * 1973-07-05 1975-05-06 Jr Charles F Gidcumb Mixing syringe having a rotationally restrained piston rod
US3902491A (en) * 1973-04-27 1975-09-02 Radiologie Cie Gle Syringe usable as container for storage and preservation of injection fluid
US4340056A (en) * 1981-02-02 1982-07-20 The Franklin Institute Non-air-entraining mixer/dispenser
US5395326A (en) * 1993-10-20 1995-03-07 Habley Medical Technology Corporation Pharmaceutical storage and mixing syringe having high pressure assisted discharge
US20120109076A1 (en) * 2009-07-17 2012-05-03 Daikyo Seiko, Ltd. Piston for syringe having very small capacity, and plunger having the piston mounted thereto

Families Citing this family (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3467097A (en) * 1965-07-06 1969-09-16 V O M Corp Dual medicinal vial
US3566859A (en) * 1967-06-12 1971-03-02 Boris Schwartz Vacuum syringe
DE3266680D1 (en) * 1981-07-29 1985-11-07 Duphar Int Res Hypodermic syringe
EP0072058A1 (en) * 1981-08-10 1983-02-16 Duphar International Research B.V Multiple-compartment syringe
EP0072057B1 (en) * 1981-08-10 1988-02-10 Duphar International Research B.V Automatic injection syringe
ES2017924B3 (en) * 1985-10-11 1991-03-16 Duphar Int Res B V AUTOMATIC INJECTOR.
DE102008025011B4 (en) * 2008-05-24 2022-12-22 Tecpharma Licensing Ag Ampoule with ampoule holder

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1285206A (en) * 1918-04-27 1918-11-19 William D Johnson Bottle-measuring cap.
US2549417A (en) * 1949-08-10 1951-04-17 Frederick M Turnbull Syringe ampoule
US2665690A (en) * 1950-09-29 1954-01-12 Compule Corp Plural-compartment admixing container or vial
US2665687A (en) * 1950-08-02 1954-01-12 Frederick M Turnbull Syringe assembly
US2717601A (en) * 1949-08-10 1955-09-13 Frederick M Turnbull Syringe ampule
US2761447A (en) * 1952-03-26 1956-09-04 Palmer Fultz Hypodermic syringe
US2896622A (en) * 1955-05-03 1959-07-28 Gruenenthal Chemie Injection ampoules for several media and intended to be used once

Family Cites Families (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2591046A (en) * 1948-10-18 1952-04-01 Frederick M Turnbull Hypodermic syringe assembly
US2660171A (en) * 1950-12-07 1953-11-24 Jr Fairleigh S Dickinson Vial

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1285206A (en) * 1918-04-27 1918-11-19 William D Johnson Bottle-measuring cap.
US2549417A (en) * 1949-08-10 1951-04-17 Frederick M Turnbull Syringe ampoule
US2717601A (en) * 1949-08-10 1955-09-13 Frederick M Turnbull Syringe ampule
US2665687A (en) * 1950-08-02 1954-01-12 Frederick M Turnbull Syringe assembly
US2665690A (en) * 1950-09-29 1954-01-12 Compule Corp Plural-compartment admixing container or vial
US2761447A (en) * 1952-03-26 1956-09-04 Palmer Fultz Hypodermic syringe
US2896622A (en) * 1955-05-03 1959-07-28 Gruenenthal Chemie Injection ampoules for several media and intended to be used once

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3511239A (en) * 1967-01-21 1970-05-12 Penicillin Ges Dauelsberg & Co Multi-chamber syringe
US3477431A (en) * 1967-02-03 1969-11-11 Abbott Lab Combined mixing syringe and container
US3570486A (en) * 1968-10-14 1971-03-16 Horizon Ind Ltd Mixing syringe
US3902491A (en) * 1973-04-27 1975-09-02 Radiologie Cie Gle Syringe usable as container for storage and preservation of injection fluid
US3881484A (en) * 1973-07-05 1975-05-06 Jr Charles F Gidcumb Mixing syringe having a rotationally restrained piston rod
US4340056A (en) * 1981-02-02 1982-07-20 The Franklin Institute Non-air-entraining mixer/dispenser
US5395326A (en) * 1993-10-20 1995-03-07 Habley Medical Technology Corporation Pharmaceutical storage and mixing syringe having high pressure assisted discharge
US20120109076A1 (en) * 2009-07-17 2012-05-03 Daikyo Seiko, Ltd. Piston for syringe having very small capacity, and plunger having the piston mounted thereto
US9561329B2 (en) * 2009-07-17 2017-02-07 Daikyo Seiko, Ltd. Piston for syringe having very small capacity, and plunger having the piston mounted thereto

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB871854A (en) 1961-07-05
DE1105113B (en) 1961-04-20

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3058467A (en) Hypodermic syringes
US3340873A (en) Compartmented medical container having a rupturable diaphragm between compartments
US2591706A (en) Plural-compartment admixing hypodermic syringe ampoule for segregated storage of ingredients of liquid medicinal solutions and therapeutic preparations
US3557787A (en) Disposable syringe
US3330282A (en) Combination syringe and vial mixing container
US2610628A (en) Plural-compartment admixing vial for segregated storage of ingredients of solutions and liquid mixtures
US3330281A (en) Combination syringe and vial mixing container
US3678931A (en) Syringe
US3853157A (en) Process and apparatus for dispensing liquid compositions intended for parenteral administration
US3838689A (en) Disposable syringe with slit valve
US2724383A (en) Combined mixing container structure and hypodermic syringe for segregated ingredients of hypodermically injectable preparations
US4048999A (en) Two-chamber mixing syringe
US3340869A (en) Collapsible ampoules
US2832339A (en) Hypodermic injector
US3091240A (en) Hypodermic syringe and ventable closure means
US8545441B2 (en) Injector having a displaceable stopper part
US3527215A (en) Syringe construction having internal bladder
US3737973A (en) Method and device for assembling a stopper to a syringe barrel
US3527216A (en) Hypodermic syringe assembly
US3052240A (en) Disposable hypodermic syringe
US8597233B2 (en) Cylinder-piston unit suitable for storing injection solutions for a needle-free automatic or manual filling of the cylinder-piston unit, also under atmospheric pressure
US3343538A (en) Apparatus for feeding multiple dose jet injectors
US3630199A (en) Unitized injection system
US2567001A (en) Hypodermic syringe
US2453591A (en) Hypodermic syringe