Medical syringe abstract
To protect patients, medical and hospital personnel against the
spread of infectious diseases, a molded syringe vial is equipped
on its exterior with an array of tracks, rails, stops and detents
which can cooperate with elements on an external shield to enable
the shield to be first held on the vial in a position allowing normal
usage of the medical syringe for injecting or withdrawing fluids,
and to be subsequently moved to a non-releasable locked position
on the vial in which the contaminated needle of the syringe is completely
covered. The shield is manipulated on the vial through a series
of simple longitudinal and rotational movements. The syringe lends
itself to current mass production economical molding techniques
with no alteration of the vial piston bore or piston.
Medical syringe claims
I claim:
1. A medical syringe comprising a syringe vial having an attached
needle and a piston bore, a piston operatively engaged in said bore,
a shield rotationally and longitudinally movably engaged on said
vial, cooperative means on said shield and vial to releasably hold
said shield in a retracted position on the vial allowing normal
usage of the syringe and to permanently lock the shield in a forward
needle-enclosing position on the vial following normal usage of
the syringe, said cooperative means on the vial being formed entirely
by molding the exterior of the vial to produce an arrangement of
tracks, rails, detents and stop surfaces thereon, said shield including
a sleeve body portion having telescoping engagement with the exterior
of the vial and being divided at its rear end, the divided rear
end parts of the sleeve body portion including a pair of spaced
parallel edge partition chords adapted to engage the tracks of the
vial and to yieldingly engage detents of the vial, and the sleeve
body portion having rail notches adjacent to said partition chords
adapted to engage and follow rails of the vial.
2. A medical syringe as defined in claim 1 and the vial having
a volumetric liquid scale visibly marked thereon, and the sleeve
body portion of the shield being transparent to enable reading of
the volumetric liquid scale on the vial therethrough.
3. A medical syringe comprising a syringe vial having an attached
needle and a piston bore, a piston operatively engaged in said bore,
a shield rotationally and longitudinally movably engaged on said
vial, cooperative means on said shield and vial to releasably hold
said shield in a retracted position on the vial allowing normal
usage of the syringe and to permanently lock the shield in a forward
needle-enclosing position on the vial following normal usage of
the syringe, said cooperative means on the vial being formed entirely
by nolding the exterior of the vial to produce an arrangement of
tracks, rails, detents and stop surfaces thereon, said tracks rolded
on the exterior of the vial including pairs of forward and rear
tracks defining flat surfaces on diametrically opposite sides of
the vial and another pair of tracks on the vial at diametrically
opposed locations thereon defining flat surfaces, and the tracks
of the last-named pair being circumferentially spaced on the vial
from the tracks of the first-named pairs.
4. A medical syringe as defined in claim 3 and said rails of the
vial extending longitudinally of the vial along longitudinal margins
of the tracks of the vial, and said detents of the vial being defined
on the exterior of the vial as longitudinal ridges at lines of intersection
of planes occupied by adjacent pairs of said tracks.
5. A medical syringe as defined in claim 4 and said stop surfaces
on the vial comprising radial stop surfaces located at corresponding
interior ends of the forward and rear pairs of tracks.
6. A medical syringe as defined in claim 5 and another pair of
radial stop surfaces on said vial on diametrically opposite sides
thereof at corresponding ends of said another pair of tracks on
the vial.
7. A medical syringe as defined in claim 6 and a ramp element
on the vial at one side only of the vial adjacent to one of the
last-named stop surfaces and defining another radial stop surface
which is offset on the vial somewhat longitudinally rearwardly from
the last-named stop surface.
8. A medical syringe as defined in claim 7 and a lock ramp element
including a substantially radial lock surface within the rear end
portion of said shield and being adapted during relative rotation
of the shield and vial to engage and ride on said ramp element on
the vial.
9. A medical disposable syringe adapted to be formed substantially
from a moldable plastics material comprising a vial having an attached
needle at its forward end and having a piston bore opening through
its rear end, a piston operatively engaged in said piston bore,
a shield engaged movably on the exterior of said vial and adapted
in a fully retracted releasably locked position on the vial to expose
the needle of the vial whereby the syringe can be used in a normal
manner and adapted when in a forwardly advanced permanently locked
position on the vial to substantially fully enclose said needle,
means molded entirely on the exterior of the vial and cooperative
means on the shield to releasably lock the shield in said fully
retracted position, to permanently lock the shield in said forwardly
advanced position and to allow controlled relative rotational and
longitudinal movements of the shield and vial between said positions,
said means molded entirely on the exterior of the vial comprising
a first diameterically opposed pair of flat surface tracks on the
vial extending forwardly from the rear end of the vial, a second
pair of diametrically opposed flat surface tracks on the vial extending
forwardly from the rear end of the vial to a point longitudinally
forwardly of the first pair of tracks, the second pair of tracks
being circumferentially spaced on the vial from the first pair of
tracks, a third pair of flat surface diametrically opposed tracks
on the vial longitudinally aligned with the first pair of tracks
and extending through the forward end of the vial and being somewhat
overlapped longitudinally at their rear end portions with forward
end portions of the second pair of tracks, longitudinal detent ridges
on the vial between the first and second pairs of tracks at the
rear of the vial on diametrically opposite sides thereof, additional
longitudinal detent ridges on the vial between the second and third
pairs of tracks on diametrically opposite sides of the vial and
being longitudinally aligned with the first-named detent ridges,
longitudinal rails on the vial at diametrically opposite sides thereof
between the forward ends of the first pair of tracks and the rear
ends of the third pair of tracks, additional longitudinal rails
on the vial along corresponding sides of the first, second and third
pairs of tracks, a pair of front longitudinally spaced radial stop
surfaces on the vial on diametrically opposite sides thereof, a
pair of rear longitudinally spaced radial stop surfaces on the vial
on diametrically opposite sides thereof, a ramp element defining
a radial lock surface on the vial on one side thereof adjacent to
one side of one track of the third pair of tracks and being located
on one track of the second pair at the forward end thereof, a longitudinally
offset radial stop surface on the vial on one side thereof at the
forward end of said ramp and the forward end of the adjacent track
of said second pair, said cooperative means on the shield comprising
a pair of laterally spaced transverse parallel edge partition chords
on the rear end of the shield adapted to selectively engage the
tracks of the first, second and third pairs and to ride over said
detents during rotation of the shield and to engage said radial
stop surfaces of the vial, said shield having laterally spaced pairs
of notches formed therein at the opposite sides of said partition
chords and being adapted to selectively engage said rails of the
vial in rotated positions of the shield on the vial, and a lock
ramp having a radial lock surface on the shield at the forward side
of one partition chord and adapted to engage and ride over said
ramp element on the vial during rotation of the shield relative
to the vial.
10. A medical syringe comprising a syringe vial having an attached
needle and a piston bore, a piston operatively engaged in the piston
bore, a shield rotationally and longitudinally movably engaged on
the vial, cooperative means on the shield and vial operable in response
to a predetermined sequence of relative rotational and longitudinal
movements of the shield and vial to releasably hold the shield in
a retracted position on the vial allowing normal usage of the syringe
and to permanently lock the shield in a forward needle-enclosing
position on the vial following normal usage of the syringe, and
said cooperative means on the vial being formed entirely on the
exterior of the vial.
11. A medical syringe as defined in claim 10 and the cooperative
means on the vial including an arrangement of diametrically opposed
tracks near opposite end portions of the vial, an arrangement of
longitudinal guide rails along said tracks, a further arrangement
of tracks partly coextensive longitudinally with the first-named
arrangement of tracks, a further arrangement of longitudinal guide
rails along the second-named arrangement of tracks and between the
first-name arrangement of tracks on an intermediate portion of the
vial, an arrangement of longitudinal and rotational stop surfaces
and rotational detents, and the cooperative means on said shield
including a divided end portion of the shield having parts adapted
to engage with said tracks, guide rails, stop surfaces and detents
during said relative rotational and longitudinal movements of the
shield and vial.
12. A disposable medical syringe formed substantially from molded
plastics components comprising a vial having an attached needle
at its forward end and having a piston bore opening through its
rear end, a piston operatively engaged in said piston bore, a sleeve-like
shield engaged movably on the exterior of said vial, cooperative
means on the shield and vial operable in response to a predetermined
sequence of relative rotational and longitudinal movements of the
shield and vial to releasably secure the shield in a retracted position
on the vial and to permanently lock the shield in a forward needle-enclosing
position on the vial, and the cooperative means on the vial being
formed on the exterior of the vial by molding, the cooperative means
on the shield including a pair of somewhat yielding spaced opposed
rear extensions on the shield.
Medical syringe description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Technical Field
The present invention relates to a medical syringe of the type
in which the syringe needle is shielded to protect against the spread
of infectious diseases, including AIDS and serum hepatitis.
2. Description of the Prior Art
U.S. Pat. No. 4425120 Sampson et al., discloses a shielded hypodermic
syringe for the general purposes of the present invention. However,
the syringe structure in the Sampson et al. patent does not lend
itself to manufacturing by mass production molding techniques with
maximum economy, partly due to the necessity of installing on the
exterior of the syringe barrel or vial track-engaging rollers. Therefore,
it is a prime objective of this invention to improve on the prior
patented device by providing a disposable shielded syringe which
lends itself to the most economical modern day molding processes
to produce a geometric form on the exterior of the syringe barrel
or vial, whereby the operation of the exterior shield on the syringe
vial is rendered more convenient, more positive and safer in terms
of locking the shield in its contaminated needle enclosing position
on the vial.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is best summarized as a molded plastics disposable
shielded medical syringe in which an exterior syringe shield is
formed with elements which cooperate with external surface elements
on the syringe vial to allow placing the shield in a locked retracted
position enabling normal usage of the syringe, and later placing
the shield in an extended non-releasably locked position on the
vial for fully enclosing the contaminated syringe needle, all by
a simple sequence of rotational and longitudinal movements of the
external shield relative to the vial and needle without disturbing
normal construction and cooperative functioning of the syringe plunger
and the bore of the vial which receives the plunger.
Other objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent
to those skilled in the art during the course of the following detailed
description .
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is an enlarged tri-metric view of a shielded medical syringe
according to the present invention as the device would be received
from a medical supplier.
FIG. 2 is an exploded tri-metric view of the syringe shown in FIG.
1.
FIG. 3 is a further tri-metric view of the syringe with a needle
shielding scabbard removed to expose the needle for normal usage.
FIG. 4 is a similar view of the syringe with its piston retracted,
indicating that the syringe is loaded with fluid.
FIG. 5 is a similar view showing the piston pushed forwardly, indicating
that the fluid has been discharged and the needle is contaminated.
FIG. 6 is a similar view of the syringe following counterclockwise
rotation and partial advancement of the shield on the syringe vial
to a position where the shield partially covers the contaminated
needle.
FIG. 7 is a similar view showing the shield fully advanced against
front forward stops of the syringe vial, the syringe having been
rotated clockwise from its position in FIG. 6 by way of overriding
detents and the ramp lock on the vial, the shield now being non-releasably
locked in the needle enclosing position.
FIG. 8 is a side elevation in actual size of the syringe according
to the invention showing another type of needle which can be assembled
onto the nozzle of the syringe vial removably.
FIG. 9 is an actual size side elevation of the syringe vial showing
its three track system, the rear and front forward stops, the ramp
lock, and the track side rails, all on the exterior of the molded
vial.
FIG. 10 is a similar view showing the diametrically opposite side
of the vial with a three track system, rear and forward stops, and
the track side rails on the exterior of the molded vial.
FIG. 11 is an enlarged transverse vertical section taken on line
11--11 of FIG. 9.
FIG. 12 is a similar section taken on line 12--12 of FIG. 9.
FIG. 13 is a similar section taken on line 13--13 of FIGS. 9 and
10.
FIG. 14 is a similar section taken on line 14--14 of FIGS. 9 and
10.
FIG. 15 is a similar section taken on line 15--15 of FIG. 9.
FIG. 16 is a similar section taken on line 16--16 of FIGS. 9 and
10.
FIG. 17 is a side elevation of a nozzle front piece of the exterior
shield as molded separately.
FIG. 18 is a similar view of the shield rear piece or body portion
as molded separately showing stress riser relief notches.
FIG. 19 is an end elevation of the sleeve body portion shown in
FIG. 18 showing details of track registration chord partitions used
as rear and front displacement stops, counter-rotational lock, track
side notches and stress riser relief flanges.
FIG. 20 is a side elevation of the assembled shield components
in FIGS. 17 and 18 following ultrasonic fusing together thereof.
FIG. 21 is a greatly enlarged fragmentary vertical section of the
abutting end of the nozzle front piece in FIG. 17.
FIG. 22 is a vertical section in tri-metric projection taken on
line 22--22 of FIG. 17 and showing a front wall partition having
an aperture to accommodate the syringe needle therethrough.
FIG. 23 is a similar tri-metric section of a shield nozzle without
the front wall according to a variant of the invention.
FIG. 24 is an enlarged tri-metric sectional view of the shield
body portion taken on line 24--24 of FIG. 19.
FIG. 25 is a similar section taken on line 25--25 of FIG. 19.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Referring to the drawings in detail in which like numerals designate
like parts, a medical syringe 10 according to the present invention
includes a vial 11 to the forward end of which is permanently affixed
a syringe needle 12. The needle 12 is mounted in a vial nozzle 13
by cold forming, as shown in FIG. 2. The rear end of the vial 11
is equipped with finger flanges 14 and the bore 15 or well of the
vial is cylindrical and smooth in accordance with conventional practice.
In accordance with the essence of the invention, the exterior surface
of the vial 11 is configured by molding techniques to provide thereon
tracks 16 17 and 18 and rails 19 20 21 and 22. A ramp 23 and
lock surface 24 with the foregoing elements, are all on one side
of the vial 11 as shown clearly in FIGS. 2 and 9.
FIG. 10 illustrates the diametrically opposite side of the vial
11 whose molded configuration differs from the side shown in FIG.
9 in that the ramp 23 and lock 24 are omitted. To form the lock
surface 24 FIG. 9 it was necessary to continue the surface 24
at 25 in the tool design, for a proper steel shut-off. The extended
surface 25 has no function in the product. Front stops 26 and 27
are also provided on the side of the vial 11 shown in FIGS. 2 and
9 having the lock 24.
The front stop 26 is interrupted by the construction of ramp 23
and is continued as an offset stop surface 28. Additionally there
are two rear stops 29 and 30 on the opposite sides of the vial 11
FIGS. 9 and 10. The rear stop 29 is also shown in FIGS. 2 and 8.
A detent 31 FIGS. 2 8 and 9 is formed at the chord intercept
surfaces of tracks 16 and 17. Tracks 16a and 17a, FIG. 10 also
form a detent 32. Tracks 17 and 18 likewise form a detent 33 FIG.
9 and tracks 17a and 18a, FIG. 10 form between them a detent 34.
Finger flanges 14 are 90.degree. out of phase with the above-described
vial surface construction. Without this arrangement, the vial could
not be molded in a straight draw in the tool, and would necessitate
forming the required geometry by side cam construction of the tool,
which is expensive. The construction according to this invention
can be produced within a die set of core and cavity construction
having a simple draw opening.
The vial 11 as an option, may have imprinted on its surface a
liquid scale 35 in accordance with the current state of the art.
The scale 35 is located on the non-configured surface 36 of the
vial 11 if used. The scale 35 would be red through a clear plastics
shield 37 the details of which will be described. The imprinting
of the scale 35 on the vial is a secondary operation following the
molding step.
The shield 37 is a very important feature of the invention which
protects careless and unsuspecting personnel while administering
to infected patients against AIDS, serum hepatitis and the like.
The shield 37 is manufactured as a unit from two components which
are ultrasonically joined. A nozzle 38 FIG. 17 is formed separately
from a sleeve body 39 of the shield 37 FIG. 18. These two components
are seen ultrasonically joined as a unit in FIG. 20. The shield
37 is constructed to slip over and contain the syringe vial 11 which
is ba2sically cylindrical except for its molded exterior geometry.
The shield 37 therefore, is also cylindrical and sized to engage
slidably on the cylindrical surface portion of the vial 11. Since
the inside geometry of the sleeve body 39 cannot be molded integrally
with the nozzle 38 the two components are formed separately and
joined as described to form the shield 37.
FIG. 21 shows the ultrasonic bead 40 of the nozzle 38 which unifies
the components 38 and 39. A plastics solvent can also be used to
join the two components of the shield 37 but the ultrasonic method
is preferred because of the hygienic cleanliness of the bead 40.
A modified type of nozzle 38a for the shield 37 is shown in FIG.
22. This nozzle includes a front wall 41 having a needle orifice
42 formed therethrough to accommodate a demountable needle assembly
43 shown in FIG. 8. The needle of this assembly is affixed in a
plastics cone 44 which is then fitted onto the vial nozzle 45 frictionally.
This arrangement corresponds to the conventional state of the art.
Should the needle assembly 43 become loose, it can be repositioned
on the nozzle 45 by medical personnel. If the cone 44 were to be
used with the shield 37 it could present problems because, when
the shield 37 is in place, the demountable needle assembly 43 becomes
inaccessible. Therefore, the use of the assembly 43 with the shield
37 is not recommended.
Similarly, the nozzle 38 has an advantage over the nozzle 38a.
When a needle passes through the orifice 42 of nozzle 38a, some
contamination will be deposited on wall 41. Any arrangement which
leaves contamination on a protected housing component is not the
most recommended for the present invention. Therefore, the permanently
fixed needle 12 FIG. 2 is ideal because the needle cannot be accidentally
displaced during handling or shipping of the product. It further
enhances the safeguards provided by the preferred nozzle 38 on which
the needle orifice 42 is omitted along with the end wall 41. A larger
nozzle opening 46 is provided as shown in FIG. 23.
The sleeve body 39 FIGS. 18 19 24 and 25 is provided with opposite
side openings 47 having arcuate end walls 48. This construction
forms a stress riser relief for the sleeve body portion 39. FIG.
24 depicts the lock half 49 of the sleeve component and shows a
finger flange 50 partition chord 51 and rail notches 52 and 53.
Thers is also a lock ramp 54 on the lock half 49 of the sleeve body
portion 39 and a lock surface 55 FIG. 24. Circumferential edge
56 FIG. 24 is used to unite with the matching circumferential
face of nozzle 38. The inside surface 57 of component 49 concentrically
positions the sleeve body portion 39 accurately in abutment with
the nozzle 38 during the sonic assembly process by receiving the
end projection 58 of the nozzle 38 FIG. 21. FIG. 24 shows the sleeve
body 39 as viewed along section line 24--24 of FIG. 19.
FIG. 25 shows the sleeve body portion 39 as viewed along the section
line 25--25 of FIG. 19. The ramp 54 and lock surface 55 are absent.
In all other respects, the sleeve half component 49a, FIG. 25 is
the same as the component 49 of FIG. 24 and includes a finger flange
50a, partition chord 51a, rail notches 52a and 53a, circumferential
edge 56a and inside surface 57a.
The syringe further comprises a conventional piston 59 and a needle
cover or scabbard 60 as shown in the drawings.
ASSEMBLY OF COMPONENTS
All components must be hygienically clean. To complete the assembly
of the syringe 10 as shown in FIG. 1 refer to FIG. 2 of the drawings.
The piston 59 is first inserted into the bore 15 of vial 11. The
outside diameter of the vial is slightly smaller than the inside
diameter of shield 37. Partition chords 51 and 51a are parallel
and the distance between their edges is somewhat smaller than the
outside diameter of the vial 11. The vial nozzle 13 is inserted
into the rear opening of the shield 37. The parallel edges of partition
chords 51 and 51a are aligned with tracks 17 and 17a of the vial
11. The parallel edges will spread apart to the limit of the outside
diameter of vial 11 due to the resiliency of the plastics material.
When the front stops 26 and 26a, FIGS. 9 and 10 are passed, the
partition chords will snap onto tracks 17 and 17a. The rail notches
52 and 53 will align with rails 20 and 21 on track 17 and the rail
hotches 52a and 53a will nest with rails 20a and 21a of track 17a
FIG. 10. In this engagement with the vial 11 shield 37 can move
along tracks 17 and 17a and is prevented from rotating by the partition
chords 51 and 51a and is enforced by side rails 21 and 21a. The
vial 11 is pushed forwardly in the shield 37 until the nozzles 13
and 38 are fully nested, at which point the insertion of the vial
into the shield is completed.
It is now possible to rotate the shield 37 clockwise on the vial
11 and the shield is rotated clockwise onto tracks 18 and 18a.
In so doing, the chords 51 and 51a will override detent 33 FIGS.
2 and 9 and detent 34 FIG. 10. These detents resist rotation of
the shield 37 and prevent it from being accidentally rotated while
oriented with a particular set of tracks on the vial. At the location
of full insertion, just beyond front stops 27 and 27a, the shield
37 can be rotated but not otherwise. It should be noted that the
stops 27 and 27a are located in different circumferential planes
on the vial 11 FIGS. 9 and 10. As measured from the finger flanges
14 track 18 is longer than track 18a to accommodate the width of
the ramp 54 shown in FIG. 24.
Therefore, the ramp front face 61 FIG. 24 prevents the shield
37 from moving forwardly against front stop 27 on track 18 while
the inside surface of partition chord 51a prevents the shield from
moving forwardly against the front stop 27a on track 18a, FIG. 10.
Finally, the scabbard 60 is placed on the tapered nozzle 38 removably
with a friction fit. In the prior art pertaining to medical syringes,
the needle is normally protected by the sheath which mounts on the
syringe barrel or vial directly. In contrast to this, in the present
invention, the scabbard 60 or sheath mounts on the shield 37 rather
than on the vial and this concept is unique. The syringe in its
completely assembled state shown in FIG. 1 is ready for use by medical
personnel.
OPERATION
The user of the syringe, as shown in FIG. 1 will first remove
the scabbard 60 from the shield 37 and the scabbard can be discarded.
Its only use is to protect the needle 12 from contamination in transit
and in handling prior to use. After removal of the scabbard 60
the syringe 10 will appear as shown in FIG. 3. The shield 37 is
fully engaged with the vial 11 and partition chord 51 is registered
to track 18. Rail notch 53 is in engagement with outside rail 19
bordering track 18. Rail notch 52 is not engaged with a rail and
simply overlies track 17.
The syringe needle 12 can now draw blood from a patient or draw
medication from a bottle. The volume of extracted fluid can be accurately
measured on a scale 62 FIG. 3 which can be provided on the shield
37 as opposed to a similar scale on the vial 11 in accordance with
conventional practice. The scale 62 on the shield 37 may be preferable
in this invention since the shield overlies the vial 11. Also, the
vial liquid scale 35 shown in FIG. 6 may sustain abrasion when the
shield 37 is placed on the vial resulting in a scrap rate detrimental
to manufacture. On the other hand, the liquid scale 62 could be
misread due to refraction and this would indicate a preference for
placing the scale on the vial 11 to be read through the clear plastics
shield 37. Either scale arrangement could be employed, as found
desirable.
FIG. 4 shows the syringe 10 with the piston 59 fully retracted
indicating that the syringe vial contains fluid. FIG. 5 shows the
piston 59 thrust forwardly to the fluid unloading position. The
needle 12 and the entire device may now be contaminated. Thus far,
the shield 37 has no function and, up to this point, the syringe
has been used in a conventional manner.
FIG. 6 depicts the first functioning of the shield 37. Finger flanges
50 and 50a are rotated counterclockwise from track 18 as shown
in FIG. 5 onto track 17 FIG. 6 and in circumferential plane maintaining
the flanges 50 and 50a in place until the surface 61 FIG. 24 and
inside partition chord 51a, FIG. 25 clear the forward stop 27
FIGS. 2 and 9 and the forward stop 27a, FIG. 10. Rail notch 53
is disengaged from outside rail 19 in the relationship of rotation
shown in FIG. 6. Rail notch 52 engages outside rail 20 to prevent
override of track 17 FIG. 6. Of course, under the force of physical
rotation, the detents 33 and 34 were overridden by the partition
chords 51 and 51a.
The shield 37 can now be moved forwardly on the vial 11. As this
is done in the interim position shown in FIG. 6 it is seen that
rail notch 53 has picked up outside rail 21 on vial 11 and rail
notch 53a has picked up outside rail 21a on the vial 11 FIG. 10.
In this position of transfer shown in FIG. 6 the shield 37 cannot
be rotated on the vial and can only be displaced along the axis
of the vial 11.
From the interim position of FIG. 6 the shield 37 is moved forwardly
until surface 61 FIG. 24 strikes surface 28 FIG. 2 and the inside
surface of partition chord 51 strikes front stop surface 26. These
four surfaces as paired come into contact simultaneously as stops
for the shield 37 on the lock half 49 of sleeve body portion 39.
Diametrically opposite, when the shield 37 is brought forward, the
inside surface of partition chord 51a strikes the surface of front
stop 26a on the sleeve half component 49a of sleeve body portion
39.
In this forward position, the shield 37 can be rotated clockwise
from track 17 to track 16 as shown in FIG. 7. The following takes
place simultaneously:
(a) Ramp 54 on the inside of the shield 37 FIG. 4 rides up ramp
23 on the vial 11 FIG. 2.
(b) The detent 31 FIGS. 2 and 9 is not touched by partition chord
51 because the chord is raised by the ramp.
(c) The detent 32 FIG. 10 is overridden by the partition chord
51a, and this partition is sandwiched between front stop surface
26a and rear stop surface 30 FIG. 10. While the ramp 23 elevates
ramp 54 only partition chord 51a holds the shield 37 against moving
forwardly or rearwardly.
(d) When ramp 54 overrides ramp 23 the side openings 47 on sleeve
body portion 39 are spread. This spreading is allowed without fracturing
the sleeve element because of the arcuate end walls 48 FIG. 18
which relieve stresses.
(e) In FIG. 24 lock surface 55 on the sleeve body portion 39
FIG. 19 drops off of ramp 23 on vial 11 and the lock surface 55
is then located behind lock surface 24 on the vial 11. These two
surfaces 55 and 24 lie in radial planes to the centers of the component
parts, and therefore are face-to-face with each other. This is an
effective lock which prevents counterclockwise rotation of the shield
37.
(f) The rail notches 52 and 52a were disengaged from outside rails
20 and 20a when the clockwise rotation started.
(g) The rail notches 53 and 53a engage outside rails 22 and 22a
when the clockwise rotation was completed. These notches and rails
act to prevent rotational override of the shield 37 on the vial
11.
It may now be seen that the shield 37 is locked in the position
shown in FIG. 7 and cannot be rotated in either direction, nor
can it be displaced forwardly or rearwardly. When partition chords
51 and 51a are registered to tracks 16 and 16a, respectively, forward
lock surfaces and rear lock surfaces are in position on both sides
of the shield partition surfaces. As seen in FIG. 7 the needle
12 is fully recessed in the nozzle 38 of the shield 37 and is also
within the sleeve body portion 39 of the shield. The permanently
locked syringe assembly can now be safely handled by medical or
hospital personnel without the possibility of accidental needle
puncturing and infection with AIDS, hepatitis or other diseases.
The final disposal of the syringe is accomplished by incineration.
It is to be understood that the form of the invention herewith
shown and described is to be taken as a preferred example of the
same, and that various changes in the shape, size and arrangement
of parts may be resorted to, without departing from the spirit of
the invention or scope of the subjoined claims. |