Special receptacle or package – For body treatment article or material – Ligatures
Reexamination Certificate
2000-12-13
2002-10-15
Foster, Jim (Department: 3728)
Special receptacle or package
For body treatment article or material
Ligatures
Reexamination Certificate
active
06464071
ABSTRACT:
TECHNICAL FIELD
The invention relates to packaging for surgical suture material, with a base in which a thread duct which runs in a spiral-like way is formed, which opens at its first end to form a thread removal zone in the periphery area of the base, and with a cover for the base.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Packages for surgical suture material are known and are described for example in EP 0 471 458 A1. At least one surgical thread can be housed in the thread duct, and can then be removed from the packaging via the thread removal zone after opening the packaging. Being guided through the thread duct is to prevent the surgical thread from sticking or becoming entangled with other thread parts. As the thread duct is constructed in a spiral-like way, relatively long surgical threads can be housed in a compact packaging.
In the packaging for surgical suture material known from EP 0 471 458 A1, there is located at the thread removal zone in the cover an opening through which a needle projects which is attached to the end of a surgical thread stored in the packaging. To remove the suture material, it is necessary to pull on the needle. The thread then slides through the relatively small opening and can rub against the edge of the opening, which is a disadvantage. A further disadvantage of the previously known packaging is that the front end of the thread, here in the area of the point of attachment to the needle, must be guided through the opening in the cover with a fairly small radius of curvature, as the front end area of the thread or the needle is otherwise not safely accessible after the packaging is opened (which is carried out by folding down a flap covering the opening away from the cover). In areas with a small radius of curvature or at kinks, a surgical thread does not generally reassume its original straight form after removal from the packaging (thread memory effect), which is not desired.
DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION
The object of the invention is to provide a packaging for surgical suture material from which surgical suture material can be removed easily and without problems, a thread memory effect being essentially avoided.
This object is achieved by a packaging for surgical suture material with the features of claim
1
. Advantageous versions of the invention result from the subsidiary claims.
The packaging according to the invention for surgical suture material has a base in which a thread duct running in a spiral-like way is formed. The thread duct opens at one end, its first end, to form a thread removal zone in the periphery area of the base. The packaging also has a cover for the base. An edge segment of the base can be folded down about a fold line provided in the bottom area, preferably on the underside, of the base, for access to the thread removal zone.
In order to open the packaging according to the invention, the edge segment of the base is thus folded down away from the cover so that the thread removal zone is freely accessible. The packaging can then be held so that the cover points upwards and the edge segment can be folded downwards, but also the other way round. Surgical suture material need not be fed through a relatively narrow opening in the cover but instead can be pulled via the freely accessible thread removal zone directly out of the first end of the thread duct. Surgical suture thread situated in the packaging can therefore be laid so that no unwanted kinks form. The thread duct can serve to house one, but also several surgical threads. The packaging according to the invention is particularly suited to needleless suture material, i.e. for surgical threads to which no surgical needle is attached, but can also be used for threads with needles. In this case, the thread removal zone serves to house the surgical needle or needles when the packaging is unopened. To avoid a thread memory effect, it is advantageous to have the thread removal zone situated in the periphery area of the base, as the initially more closely wound coils of a surgical thread which are located in the inner area of the packaging when packed are extended to ever-greater radii of curvature when pulled out through the thread duct.
In a preferred version of the packaging according to the invention, the edge segment has a raised wall of the height of the thread duct, which extends along the periphery of the base. The wall need not run over the entire periphery of the edge segment as, if the packaging is stored in a tight outer wrapper, it also remains sterile if it has openings itself. A stop lug preferably extends from the raised wall.
In a preferred version, the stop lug is constructed to hold one edge of the cover when the edge segment is not folded down. On the one hand, therefore, the down-foldable edge segment can be locked at the cover with the help of the stop lug. On the other hand, the raised wall ensures, depending on the design in co-operation with the stop lug, that the surgical threads contained in the packaging lie curved in the area of the thread removal zone prior to opening and do not come into contact with an outer wrapper, e.g. a foil outer wrapper. When the edge segment is folded down, the stop lug disengages from the cover and the end areas of the surgical threads located in the thread removal zone are no longer held by the raised wall or the stop lug. They tend therefore to straighten up so that the end areas of the threads or the surgical needles attached to them project from the packaging. It is therefore easy to grip an individual thread end (or where appropriate the surgical needle attached to it) and to pull the corresponding surgical thread out of the thread duct. If several threads are contained in the packaging, these can be removed bundled if necessary.
In a similar preferred version, the stop lug is designed to hold the end area of one or more surgical threads contained in the packaging when the edge segment is not folded down (packaging in the closed state). The stop lug can additionally engage at the edge of the cover, but it need not. In the latter case, the stop lug, acting in cooperation with the section of the raised wall from which it extends, holds the thread end areas laid curved (or where appropriate the surgical needles attached to them) when the packaging is closed. The surgical suture material is removed in a similar way to the previous version. When the edge segment is folded down, the curved thread areas spring from the stop lug and more or less straighten up. Thus any thread end can easily be individually gripped and the corresponding surgical thread can be pulled out of the packaging. If necessary, a bundle of surgical threads can also be removed as a whole.
The cover is preferably constructed as a flat sheet and can contain cardboard or paper, the cover preferably containing polyethylene or polypropylene on its underside facing the base. The cover can for example consist of a sheet or film made from polyethylene or polypropylene. In a particularly advantageous version of the invention, the cover is made from a piece of cardboard which is coated on its underside with polyethylene. A cover of this kind has various advantages. Cardboard is suitable for imprinting, so that the packaging can be easily provided with a product label. Furthermore, cardboard acts as a hydrostore, i.e. it is able to absorb residual quantities of water after a packaging with surgical suture material has been introduced into a tight outer wrapper. The cover seals off the thread duct to the top and thus protects the surgical suture material contained in it. Such a cover acts as a lid for the base and thus reinforces the entire package. Furthermore, the paper fibres of the cardboard are bound by the polyethylene coating on the side of cover facing the surgical suture material so that no contamination of the product contained in the packaging can occur. In principle the cover can be glued onto the base for example by dispersion varnish or adhesive, but is sealed up in the particularly advantageous version (see below).
The base is preferably formed as an injec
Ethicon Inc.
Foster Jim
Skula Emil Richard
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