Surgery – Means for introducing or removing material from body for... – Treating material introduced into or removed from body...
Reexamination Certificate
1999-12-30
2001-11-27
Nguyen, Anhtuan T. (Department: 3763)
Surgery
Means for introducing or removing material from body for...
Treating material introduced into or removed from body...
C604S110000, C604S163000, C604S263000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06322537
ABSTRACT:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to the field of medical devices and in particular to a safety intravenous (IV) catheter.
BACKGROUND
Blood borne diseases such as AIDS and Hepatitis present significant risks to medical personnel administering vascular injections. The means by which a patient's vessel and skin are pierced to either draw or introduce fluids can just as effectively pierce the hands and arms of attending medical personnel. Gloves or similar protective garb may provide some protection, but making such items entirely resistant to needle penetration oftentimes sacrifices the wearer's mobility and dexterity proportionate to the degree of protection. Therefore, protective wear is not a total answer to the problem.
In order to adequately protect medical personnel from inadvertent puncture and wounding, catheter systems have been developed to cover and shield the distal needle point after its withdrawal from the patient. These systems have taken a number of embodiments and have various degrees of elaboration. One such mechanism includes a cylindrical sheath of plastic which telescopes out from the flash chamber to surround the needle shaft, including the distal tip. Such mechanism increases costs of manufacture substantially and may malfunction, especially in a fluid filled environment where it may stick or slip. The need for locking parts under these circumstances also increases risk of failure. Other types of needle caps require moving parts, such as a spring activation, to close off the needle in the cap after its withdrawal. These sometimes combine moving parts with specially tooled needles having two or more separate widths so that the larger circumference and diameter either trips the spring and/or blocks the needle's removal from the cap.
Given that the needle protector, however configured, will be contaminated upon each use, cost-benefit requirements dictate that a desirable shielding system be disposable along with the needle. Furthermore, the system must be quick and easy to use as to present as little imposition as possible to the administration and function of the catheter. Moving parts which may malfunction or stick such as springs and similar biasing mechanisms, as well as telescoping sheaths requiring deployment from the flash chamber, are less desirable in this regard and can drive up the manufacturing cost for a disposable unit. Lathering the needle circumference to alter the circumference over particular segments requires precise tooling and hence substantially added cost. The further requirements for sealing the system against fluid leakage and backflow may also show such designs to be problematic.
Therefore, it is desirable that a protective system be simple and dependable in its is deployment, cheap to manufacture, expedient in its operation and effective in sealing off the distal point and preventing fluid leakage or backflow.
SUMMARY
A medical intravenous (IV) catheter is described comprising a needle cannula having a distal point, a proximal end and further having a shaft with a circumference, a tip protector having a base and defining an opening to receive the needle cannula shaft. The tip protector is slideably mounted on the cannula shaft. The catheter also include means coupled to the tip protector for blocking the tip protector opening so as to enclose the needle cannula distal point within the tip protector, a gasket coupled to the tip protector base defining an opening of a size to receive the needle cannula shaft, means coupled to the needle cannula shaft impeding movement of the tip protector along the needle cannula shaft beyond a pre-determined distance from the needle cannula distal point, and a flash chamber coupled to the needle cannula at the needle cannula proximal end.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the accompanying drawings and from the detailed description that follows below.
REFERENCES:
patent: 4929241 (1990-05-01), Kulli
patent: 4952207 (1990-08-01), Lemieux
patent: 4964854 (1990-10-01), Luther
patent: 4978344 (1990-12-01), Dombrowski et al.
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patent: 5085648 (1992-02-01), Purdy et al.
patent: 5092845 (1992-03-01), Chang
patent: 5135504 (1992-08-01), McLees
patent: 5147327 (1992-09-01), Johnson
patent: 5215528 (1993-06-01), Purdy et al.
patent: 5419766 (1995-05-01), Chang et al.
patent: 5601536 (1997-02-01), Crawford et al.
Blakely & Sokoloff, Taylor & Zafman
Ethicon Inc.
Nguyen Anhtuan T.
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