US3677268A - Iontophoresis electrode - Google Patents

Iontophoresis electrode Download PDF

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Publication number
US3677268A
US3677268A US880767A US3677268DA US3677268A US 3677268 A US3677268 A US 3677268A US 880767 A US880767 A US 880767A US 3677268D A US3677268D A US 3677268DA US 3677268 A US3677268 A US 3677268A
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Prior art keywords
electrode
iontophoresis
cover means
fluid
housing
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US880767A
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Richard A Reeves
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Sherwood Medical Co
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Sherwood Medical Industries Inc
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61NELECTROTHERAPY; MAGNETOTHERAPY; RADIATION THERAPY; ULTRASOUND THERAPY
    • A61N1/00Electrotherapy; Circuits therefor
    • A61N1/02Details
    • A61N1/04Electrodes
    • A61N1/0404Electrodes for external use
    • A61N1/0408Use-related aspects
    • A61N1/0428Specially adapted for iontophoresis, e.g. AC, DC or including drug reservoirs
    • A61N1/0432Anode and cathode
    • A61N1/044Shape of the electrode
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B5/00Measuring for diagnostic purposes; Identification of persons
    • A61B5/42Detecting, measuring or recording for evaluating the gastrointestinal, the endocrine or the exocrine systems
    • A61B5/4261Evaluating exocrine secretion production
    • A61B5/4266Evaluating exocrine secretion production sweat secretion

Definitions

  • a protective cover impenetrable to liquids and to light energy, seals the filter cover and is removable when the elec- 1,573,] Y l l trode is to be used 1,585,104 5/1926 Montgomery... 3,474,775 10/1969 Johnson 8 China, 3 Drawing figures IONTOPHORESIS ELECTRODE
  • This invention relates to a self-contained iontophoresis electrode, and more particularly to a iontophoresis electrode which is prefilled with liquid and is disposable after use on a patient.
  • FIG. 2 is an exploded view of one of the iontophoresis electrodesof FIG. I;
  • the electrode 10 is disposable after a single use on a patient. Because the electrode is prefilled with the nitrate solution, the technician performing the analysis does not have to handle chemicals nor fill and clean electrodes.
  • the protective cover 54 prevents evaporation of the solution, and further protects the solution from light energy. Because the electrodes are sealed and used only once, contamination problems are reduced.

Abstract

A self-contained iontophoresis electrode, disposable after use on a patient, is prefilled with an inducing iontophoresis liquid completely contained within a chamber covered by a filter cover. A protective cover, impenetrable to liquids and to light energy, seals the filter cover and is removable when the electrode is to be used.

Description

United States Patent Reeves 1 July 18, 1972 s41 IONTOPHORESIS ELECTRODE 3,151,619 10/1964 Sullivan 1 28/4 1 7' 2,318,207 5/1943 Ellis [72] i Reeves Crew 3,492,216 1/1970- Risema'n ..12s/2.1 12 x [73] Assigneez Sherwood Medical Indmtrles Inc.
Primary Examiner-Dalton L. Truluck [22] Flled' 1969 Assistant ExaminerG. F. Dunne [2 1] Appl. No.: 880,767 Alt0rney-Donald S. Olexa, Jerome M. Teplitz, John G.
Heimovics, William G. Lawler, Jr. and Hofgren, Wegner, Al- 52 us. c1 ..12s/172.1, l28/4l7 Stellma and Mccmd [51] Int. Cl. ..A6ln 3/06 [58] 'FieldofSearch ..l28/l72.l,405,406,411,417, [571v ABSTRACT 128/418, Ev 416 A self-contained iontophoresis electrode, disposable after use on a patient, is prefilled with an inducing iontophoresis liquid [56] References cued completely contained within a chamber covered by a filter UNITED STATES PATENTS cover. A protective cover, impenetrable to liquids and to light energy, seals the filter cover and is removable when the elec- 1,573,] Y l l trode is to be used 1,585,104 5/1926 Montgomery... 3,474,775 10/1969 Johnson 8 China, 3 Drawing figures IONTOPHORESIS ELECTRODE This invention relates to a self-contained iontophoresis electrode, and more particularly to a iontophoresis electrode which is prefilled with liquid and is disposable after use on a patient.
Iontophoresis is a medical technique for introducing drugs through intact skin. In the detection of cystic fibrosis in children, it is known that the great majority of children suffering with cystic fibrosis have an abnormally high concentration of sodium chloride in their sweat. An effective means of detecting such disease is to collect sweat produced by pilocarpine iontophoresis, and analyze the sweat for chloride ion concentration by using various standard methods including conductivity of the sweat sample.
Localized sweating may be induced by using iontophoresis electrodes. Such electrodes typically include a recessed area covered by filter paper held by a retaining ring. An opening through the housing of the electrode allows a technician to fill the recessed area with liquids which induce iontophoresis. For example, the technician may fill one electrode with 0.5 percent solution of pilocarpine nitrate, and the second electrode with 1 percent solution of sodium nitrate. These electrodes are strapped in contact with a patients skin, conveniently to an arm or leg, and electrical conductors are connected to the electrodes, connecting the pilocarpine nitrate electrode to positive DC voltage and the sodium nitrate electrode to negative DC voltage. After a short time period, the electrodes are removed from the patients skin. The skin area into which pilocarpine has been induced will now producelocalized sweating, allowing the sweat to' be collected in order to be analyzed by standard methods.
After removing the electrodes from the patient, the technician must disassemble the electrodes, discard the filter covers, and may clean the electrodes. When another patient is to be tested, new filter covers must be placed on the electrodes, and the electrodes must be again filled with the proper solutions. This procedure is both time consuming and subject to contamination and error, such as filling of the electrodes with the wrong solutions.
In accordance with the present invention, an improved iontophoresis electrode is provided which is completely self-contained, i.e., is prefilled with the liquids which induce iontophoresis. To use, the technician merely tears off a protective cover and straps the electrode to the patient. The electrode includes improved structure for effectuating pilocarpine utilizing iontophoresis. After use, the electrode is discarded, resulting in substantial savings in the technicians time and elimination of the problems of contamination.
One object of this invention is the provision of a self-contained iontophoresis electrode which includes all component parts and liquids for effectuating iontophoresis when connected to an external voltage source.
One feature of this invention is the provision of a self-contained iontophoresis electrode which is prefilled with a liquid for inducing iontophoresis, and includes a liquid penetrable cover for applying the liquid to the skin of a patient and a protective cover impenetrable by the liquid for sealing the electrode until use.
Another feature of this invention is the provision of a selfcontained iontophoresis electrode having a completely enclosed chamber defined by a housing and a penetrable cover. The housing includes an electrically conductive element, surrounded by electrically insulated material, for connecting the liquid to an external DC voltage source.
Yet another feature of this invention is the provision of a disposable iontophoresis electrode which is prefilled with nitrate solution. The electrode includes a detachable protective cover impenetrable to liquids and impenetrable to light energy.
Further features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description and from the drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a pair of iontophoresis electrodes strapped to the arm of a patient;
FIG. 2 is an exploded view of one of the iontophoresis electrodesof FIG. I; and
FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view of the iontophoresis electrode of FIG. 2, with the electrical connector being shown by a plane view.
While an illustrative embodiment of the invention is shown in the drawings and will be described in detail herein, the invention is susceptible of embodiment in many different forms and it should be understood that the present disclosure is to be considered as an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the invention to the embodiment illustrated. The scope of the invention will be pointed out in the appended claims.
Turning to FIG. I, a pair of iontophoresis electrodes 10 in accordance with the present invention are held in place on a patients arm by a perforated rubber strap 12, having perforations 14 of a size sufficient to allow insertion therethrough of a neck portion 16 of the electrodes 10. Although the electrodes are illustrated as being strapped to the patients arm, it will be understood that they can just as easily be attached to another portion of the patients body, as for example, to a leg. As will appear, a protective cover has already been removed from the prefilled electrodes. After the electrodes are strapped to opposite sides of the patients arm, connection is made to a source of DC voltage (not illustrated) by means of electrical conductors I8 which terminate in male plugs 20 insertable into an electrical receptacle within each neck 16.
The electrode 10 illustrated in full view in the foreground is filled with 0.5 percent solution of pilocarpine nitrate, and is placed conveniently against the flexon portion of the patients forearm. This electrode is connected by plug 20 and its associated conductor 18 to positive DC voltage. The other electrode, shown partly in dashed lines, is filled with a l percent solution of sodium nitrate, and is placed on the opposite side of the patients arm. It is connected by its plug 20 and associated conductor 18 to negative DC voltage. The DC voltage may be provided from any suitable source. By way of example, the DC voltage source may take the form shown in a copending application of Donald A. Ninke and James F. La Hay, entitled lontophoresis and Conductivity Analysis Circuit" filed on even date herewith, Ser. No. 880,807 and assigned to the assignee of the present application.
After about 5 minutes of iontophoresis, the plugs 20 may be removed from electrodes 10 and the strap and electrodes removed from the patients arm. The electrodes 10 are now discarded, eliminating problems of contamination and cleaning. When using the iontophoresis technique for the detection of cystic fibrosis, the forearm of the patient is then washed with distilled water and wiped dry, after which a sweat collecting cup is placed over the forearm where the electrode 10 containing pilocarpine nitrate was located.
After about a 25 minute time period, the sweat collecting cup is removed and the contents analyzed for sodium chloride, in order to detect by known methods for the presence of cystic fibrosis in a patient. By way of example, the sweat collecting cup may include an electrode for direct connection with a cystic fibrosis analyzer. Such a combination cup and electrode is shown in the copending application of James F. La Hay, entitled Collection and Measuring Electrode", filed on even date herewith, Ser. No. 880,810 and assigned to the assignee of the present application. The ion content of the sweat may then be analyzed by the previously identified circuit of Ninke and La Hay.
' The pair of electrodes 10 are identical except for the solution with which each is filled. The structure of each electrode 10 is illustrated in detail in FIG. 2 and 3. A thin walled, electrically insulated housing 25, formed from plastic, includes a generally cup-shaped portion 26 with an integral elongated neck portion 16 extending outwardly therefrom. The centrally located neck 16 is hollow as seen in FIG. 3. Cup portion 26 includes an arcuate chamber 30 bounded by a generally semicircular trough surface, with an opening only along the upper termination of the trough.
For making electrical connection with chamber 30, a conductive insert 35 is press fit through the hollow center of neck 16 in liquid-tight sealing engagement therewith. Insert 35, which may be formed of electrically conductive plastic or other electrically conductive materiaLconsists of a hollow tubular neck 36 which terminates in a flat, enlarged head 37. As seen in FIG. 3, the hollow interior of neck 36 forms the female receptacle for electrical plug 20, and is'of a size adapted to receive a compressible pin 40 of plug 20. Pin 40 is electrically connected through plug 20 to conductor 18. Head 37 seats on a flat ridge 42 which connects trough 26 with neck 16. Insert 35 further encloses chamber 30, so that the only fluid opening is confined to a space between the top portion of head 37 and a shoulder 44 on the trough surface.
The fluid penetrable opening of chamber is enclosed by a disk cover 50 which is absorbent to the. liquid within the chamber. Such cover 50 may take theform of filter paper which is saturable by liquid. The disk 50 seats against shoulder 44 and rests on the upperplane of head 37, thus completely enclosing chamber 30.
The liquid or fluid solution which is to cause iontophoresis is placed within chamber 30 before disk 50 is seated in place. As previously described, one of the pair of electrodes is filled with a 0.5 percent solution of pilocarpine nitrate, and the other electrode is filled with a 1 percent solution of sodium nitrate. Desirably, housing 25 is color coded so as to identify the solution contained within the chamber 30. This color coding may correspond to a color coding on plug 20 and conductor 18, in order that a technician may readily identify the correct manner to connect the electrodes to the DC voltage source.
' After disk 50 is seated against shoulder 44, a second cover 54 is placed over disk 50 and sealed around its circumference to the flat circular edge 56 of housing 25. Cover 54 is impenetrable to fluid and further is substantially impenetrable to light energy, because solutions used for iontophoresis are typically light sensitive. Protective cover 54, preferably a flexible foil formed by an aluminum metal, paper, polyethylene composite, is welded to edge 56 of the plastic housing 25. The welding allows cover 54 to be peeled off edge 56 when the electrode is to be used, thereby exposing the filter cover 50 which is placed against the patients arm. For ease in removing cover 54, it may include a tab 60 which is not welded to housing 25 and extends beyond the circumference of edge 56, in orderto allow a technician to easily grasp the cover 54 and peel or tear it off the housing.
The above construction allows protective cover 54 to be removed without disrupting filter cover 50 from its engagement with the housing 25. As seen best in FIG. 3, the thickness of filter cover 50 substantially corresponds to the distance between shoulder 44 and the plane of edge 56. This causes the exposed plane of filter cover 50 to coincide with the plane of edge 56, allowing the electrode to be placed flat against the skin of the patient.
The electrode 10 is disposable after a single use on a patient. Because the electrode is prefilled with the nitrate solution, the technician performing the analysis does not have to handle chemicals nor fill and clean electrodes. The protective cover 54 prevents evaporation of the solution, and further protects the solution from light energy. Because the electrodes are sealed and used only once, contamination problems are reduced.
Although the electrode of the present invention has been described with particular reference to its use in pilocarpine nitrate iontophoresis, it will be understood that drugs other than pilocarpine nitrate may be used in the electrode and introduced through a patients skin by iontophoresis in a manner similar to that described above. Moreover, the electrode of the present invention has use in applications other than iontophoresis. For example, when filled with an electrolytic fluid and held in contact with a patients skin as described above, thereby establishing electrical connection between the patients skin and the fluid the electrode of this invention may be used in obtaining galvanic skm response measurements,
electrocardiograms, electroocculograms, and various other biological voltage measurements requiring electrical contact to be made with a patients skin.
lclaim:
l. A prefilled, disposable iontophoresis electrode, comprishousing means including a hollow neck portion and a partial chamber portion spaced radially surrounding said hollow neck portion;
electrically conductive means extending through said hollow neck portion and into the partial chamber portion to allow external electrical connection to the partial chamber portion, said partial chamber portion and said conductive means forming a fluid impenetrable chamber with afluid opening being the sole fluid. passageway for said chamber;
first cover means completely enclosing said fluid impenetrable chamber along said fluid opening to completely contain therein an iontophoresis fluid for inducing iontophoresis on the skin of a patient, said first cover means being absorbent to said iontophoresis fluid to allow iontophoresis when said first cover means is placed against the skin of the patient and electrical connection is made to said electrically conductive means; and
second cover means impenetrable by said iontophoresis fluid for sealing said first cover means, including means attaching said second cover means to said housing for removal therefrom without disrupting said firstcover means.
2. The electrode of claim 1 wherein said fluid is light sensitive, said second cover means comprising a material for preventing penetration of light energy therethrough.
3. The electrode of claim 1 wherein said second cover means comprises a material containing metal, said second cover means being welded to said housing around its periphery.
4. The iontophoresis electrode of claim 3 wherein said housing means includes a shoulder located on a different plane than the plane of the periphery to which said second cover means is welded, said first cover means being formed by filter paper of a thickness substantially corresponding to the distance between the plane of said shoulder and the plane of said periphery, said filter paper being seated against said shoulder, whereby the engagement of the filter paper with the shoulder is not disrupted when the weld of said second cover means to the housing means is broken.
5. The self-contained electrode of claim 9 in which said electrically insulated housing means includes an integral hollow neck portion contiguous with and spaced from the chamber portion defined by the housing means, the conductive neck of said electrically conductive means being contained within said hollow neck portion in liquid-tight sealing engagement therewith and extending into contact with the chamber.
6. The self-contained electrode of claim 5 wherein the conductive neck of said electrically conductive means has a hollow center defining a receptacle for an electrical plug, the electrical plug being inserted within said receptacle to allow external electrical connection to the fluid, and the electrical plug being removable from the receptacle in order to allow the electrode to be discarded after use on a subject.
7. The self-contained electrode of claim 6 wherein said electrically conductive means is formed of an electrically conductive plastic material.
8. The iontophoresis electrode of claim 1 wherein said second cover means includes a tab extending beyond the periphery of said housing, whereby said tab may be lifted to break the attaching means holding said second cover means to said housing.
Po-wso UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE CERTIFICATE OF CORRECTION Patent No, 3l677vl268 Dated July 18, 1972 I Inventor(s) Richard Reeves -It is certified that error appears in the above-identified patent. and that said Letters" Patent are hereby corrected as shown below:
In the Claims: Cancel claims 5, 6 and 7.
On the title page, "8 Claims'V 'should read 5 Claims Column -4, line 7, "8." should read s.
I Signed and sealed this 20th day 6f March 1973,
(SEAL)- Attest:
EDWARD M.FLETCHER,JRQ v ROBERT GOTTSCHALK Attesting Officer Commissioner of Patents

Claims (8)

1. A prefilled, disposable iontophoresis electrode, comprising: housing means including a hollow neck portion and a partial chamber portion spaced radially surrounding said hollow neck portion; electrically conductive means extending through said hollow neck portion and into the partial chamber portion to allow external electrical connection to the partial chamber portion, said partial chamber portion and said conductive means forming a fluid impenetrable chamber with a fluid opening being the sole fluid passageway for said chamber; first cover means completely enclosing said fluid impenetrable chamber along said fluid opening to completely contain therein an iontophoresis fluid for inducing iontophoresis on the skin of a patient, said first cover means being absorbent to said iontophoresis fluid to allow iontophoresis when said first cover means is placed against the skin of the patient and electrical connection is made to said electrically conductive means; and second cover means impenetrable by said iontophoresis fluid for sealing said first cover means, including means attaching said second cover means to said housing for removal therefrom without disrupting said first cover means.
2. The electrode of claim 1 wherein said fluid is light sensitive, said second cover means comprising a material for preventing penetration of light energy therethrough.
3. The electrode of claim 1 wherein said second cover means comprises a material containing metal, said second cover means being welded to said housing around its periphery.
4. The iontophoresis electrode of claim 3 wherein said housing means includes a shoulder located on a different plane than the plane of the periphery to which said second cover means is welded, said first cover means being formed by filter paper of a thickness substantially corresponding to the distance between the plane of said shoulder and the planE of said periphery, said filter paper being seated against said shoulder, whereby the engagement of the filter paper with the shoulder is not disrupted when the weld of said second cover means to the housing means is broken.
5. The self-contained electrode of claim 9 in which said electrically insulated housing means includes an integral hollow neck portion contiguous with and spaced from the chamber portion defined by the housing means, the conductive neck of said electrically conductive means being contained within said hollow neck portion in liquid-tight sealing engagement therewith and extending into contact with the chamber.
6. The self-contained electrode of claim 5 wherein the conductive neck of said electrically conductive means has a hollow center defining a receptacle for an electrical plug, the electrical plug being inserted within said receptacle to allow external electrical connection to the fluid, and the electrical plug being removable from the receptacle in order to allow the electrode to be discarded after use on a subject.
7. The self-contained electrode of claim 6 wherein said electrically conductive means is formed of an electrically conductive plastic material.
8. The iontophoresis electrode of claim 1 wherein said second cover means includes a tab extending beyond the periphery of said housing, whereby said tab may be lifted to break the attaching means holding said second cover means to said housing.
US880767A 1969-11-28 1969-11-28 Iontophoresis electrode Expired - Lifetime US3677268A (en)

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Cited By (27)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3750094A (en) * 1972-03-09 1973-07-31 Zenco Engineering Corp Electrical connector
US3989035A (en) * 1975-08-04 1976-11-02 Stemmen Laboratory, Inc. Disposable medical electrode
US4004578A (en) * 1974-09-10 1977-01-25 Salve S.A. Expendable electro-cardiograph electrode
DE2844980A1 (en) * 1978-10-16 1980-04-24 Robert Tapper Iontophoretic burn protection electrode structure - in which one electrode has a porous material on the skin contact side
EP0011813A1 (en) * 1978-11-22 1980-06-11 Motion Control, Inc. Non-invasive chemical species delivery apparatus
US4332257A (en) * 1980-02-11 1982-06-01 Bunker Ramo Corporation Medical clip and electrode constructions
DE3304246A1 (en) * 1982-02-09 1983-08-18 Richter Gedeon Vegyészeti Gyár R.T., 1475 Budapest INTERMEDIATE IONTOPHORESIS INSERT, CONTACT SOLUTION AND USE OF A MICROTUBULA INHIBITOR FOR TREATING CHRONIC PAIN SYNDROME
US4676257A (en) * 1984-12-20 1987-06-30 Pain Prevention, Inc. Dental anesthesia apparatus
US4722726A (en) * 1986-02-12 1988-02-02 Key Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Method and apparatus for iontophoretic drug delivery
US4809700A (en) * 1986-03-21 1989-03-07 Elettronica Trentina S.P.A. Armlet device with an electrode for picking up physiological electrical potentials
US4978337A (en) * 1988-09-08 1990-12-18 Alza Corporation Formulation chamber with exterior electrotransport delivery device
US5002527A (en) * 1988-04-14 1991-03-26 Inventor's Funding Corp. Ltd. Transdermal drug delivery applicators
US5087241A (en) * 1990-07-24 1992-02-11 Empi, Inc. Iontophoresis electrode with reservoir and injection site
US5125894A (en) * 1990-03-30 1992-06-30 Alza Corporation Method and apparatus for controlled environment electrotransport
US5167617A (en) * 1983-08-18 1992-12-01 Drug Delivery Systems Inc. Disposable electralytic transdermal drug applicator
US5207752A (en) * 1990-03-30 1993-05-04 Alza Corporation Iontophoretic drug delivery system with two-stage delivery profile
US5314502A (en) * 1990-03-30 1994-05-24 Alza Corporation Iontophoretic delivery device
WO1994015669A1 (en) * 1992-12-31 1994-07-21 Alza Corporation Electrotransport system having flexible means
US5358483A (en) * 1983-06-01 1994-10-25 Drug Delivery Systems Inc. Disposable transdermal drug applicators
US5573503A (en) * 1984-10-29 1996-11-12 Alza Corporation Iontophoretic drug delivery
US6004309A (en) * 1990-03-30 1999-12-21 Alza Corporation Method and apparatus for controlled environment electrotransport
US6129696A (en) * 1983-08-18 2000-10-10 Drug Delivery Systems Inc. Transdermal drug applicator
WO2002026316A1 (en) * 2000-09-27 2002-04-04 Servizi Medico-Estetici Italiani-S.M.E.I. S.R.L. Dispenser for endermic administration of drug
US20090304776A1 (en) * 2008-06-06 2009-12-10 Totada Shantha Transmucosal delivery of therapeutic agents and methods of use thereof
US20090311311A1 (en) * 2008-06-16 2009-12-17 Shantha Totada R Transdermal local anesthetic patch with injection port
WO2011031116A2 (en) 2009-09-14 2011-03-17 Kim Hee Gu Pad for herbal medicine in which release of medicinal ingredient can be controlled, and manufacturing method thereof
WO2017053919A1 (en) * 2015-09-25 2017-03-30 Eccrine Systems, Inc. Headgear-mounted sweat sensing devices

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US4177817A (en) * 1978-02-01 1979-12-11 C. R. Bard, Inc. Dual terminal transcutaneous electrode
GB2136297A (en) * 1983-03-15 1984-09-19 Hugh Wilmott Grenfell Electronic Stimulation of Muscles
GB2148717A (en) * 1983-11-05 1985-06-05 Chuo Jzu Wen Portable electro-acupuncture belt
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US2318207A (en) * 1941-04-07 1943-05-04 Francis C Ellis Electrode
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Cited By (36)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3750094A (en) * 1972-03-09 1973-07-31 Zenco Engineering Corp Electrical connector
US4004578A (en) * 1974-09-10 1977-01-25 Salve S.A. Expendable electro-cardiograph electrode
US3989035A (en) * 1975-08-04 1976-11-02 Stemmen Laboratory, Inc. Disposable medical electrode
DE2844980A1 (en) * 1978-10-16 1980-04-24 Robert Tapper Iontophoretic burn protection electrode structure - in which one electrode has a porous material on the skin contact side
EP0011813A1 (en) * 1978-11-22 1980-06-11 Motion Control, Inc. Non-invasive chemical species delivery apparatus
US4332257A (en) * 1980-02-11 1982-06-01 Bunker Ramo Corporation Medical clip and electrode constructions
DE3304246A1 (en) * 1982-02-09 1983-08-18 Richter Gedeon Vegyészeti Gyár R.T., 1475 Budapest INTERMEDIATE IONTOPHORESIS INSERT, CONTACT SOLUTION AND USE OF A MICROTUBULA INHIBITOR FOR TREATING CHRONIC PAIN SYNDROME
US4602909A (en) * 1982-02-09 1986-07-29 Richter Gedeon Vegyeszeti Gyar Rt Iontophoresis intermediary material and contact solution for the treatment of chronic pain syndromes
US5358483A (en) * 1983-06-01 1994-10-25 Drug Delivery Systems Inc. Disposable transdermal drug applicators
US5167617A (en) * 1983-08-18 1992-12-01 Drug Delivery Systems Inc. Disposable electralytic transdermal drug applicator
US6129696A (en) * 1983-08-18 2000-10-10 Drug Delivery Systems Inc. Transdermal drug applicator
US5573503A (en) * 1984-10-29 1996-11-12 Alza Corporation Iontophoretic drug delivery
US4676257A (en) * 1984-12-20 1987-06-30 Pain Prevention, Inc. Dental anesthesia apparatus
US4722726A (en) * 1986-02-12 1988-02-02 Key Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Method and apparatus for iontophoretic drug delivery
US4809700A (en) * 1986-03-21 1989-03-07 Elettronica Trentina S.P.A. Armlet device with an electrode for picking up physiological electrical potentials
US5002527A (en) * 1988-04-14 1991-03-26 Inventor's Funding Corp. Ltd. Transdermal drug delivery applicators
US4978337A (en) * 1988-09-08 1990-12-18 Alza Corporation Formulation chamber with exterior electrotransport delivery device
US6004309A (en) * 1990-03-30 1999-12-21 Alza Corporation Method and apparatus for controlled environment electrotransport
US5207752A (en) * 1990-03-30 1993-05-04 Alza Corporation Iontophoretic drug delivery system with two-stage delivery profile
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CA930429A (en) 1973-07-17

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