Safety syringe abstract
A retractable safety syringe has a hub at the end of its plunger
which engages a needle carrier when the plunger is depressed so
that the needle carrier can be withdrawn into the syringe along
with the needle. To facilitate breaking off the plunger shaft, thereby
trapping the spent needle within the syringe, there is a conically
shaped flangible section between the plunger and the shaft which
defines a sharp notch allowing the shaft to be broken off at any
angle.
Safety syringe claims
What is claimed is:
1. A retractable safety syringe comprising:
a hollow cylindrical barrel having an open upper end, an open lower
end, an inwardly projecting lip at the lower end and a finger flange
at the upper end;
a cylindrical needle carrier mounted within said barrel, seated
on said lip and retained in place by engagement between an internal
circumferential ridge on said lip and a circumferential groove in
an outer peripheral wall of said needle carrier, said needle carrier
having an extension protruding through the lower end of said barrel
and an enlarged extension facing the upper end of said barrel to
aid in retaining said carrier in place during use;
a hypodermic needle embedded within said extension of said carrier;
a plunger slidably mounted in said barrel through the upper end
and defining a fluid chamber between said carrier and said plunger;
a central bore through said carrier and extension for fluid communication
between said needle and said chamber;
a shaft having a longitudinal axis extending from an upper end
of said plunger through the upper end of the barrel for depressing
the plunger;
a hub extending from a lower end of said plunger adapted to lock
into said bore for withdrawing the needle carrier and needle into
the barrel;
a rubber seal around said plunger; and
a conical section between the plunger and the shaft defining a
sharp notch above said plunger to allow said shaft to be broken
off in any angular direction about the longitudinal axis when the
needle carrier and needle are withdrawn into the barrel.
2. A syringe as claimed in claim 1 wherein the plunger includes
a disk at its upper end, the shaft comprises a plurality of radially
extending flanges and said conical section extends between said
disk and said flanges, said flanges tapering inwardly to merge with
the conical section.
3. A syringe as claimed in claim 1 wherein said lip is eccentric
to a longitudinal axis of the barrel and the hub is correspondingly
eccentric to a longitudinal axis of the plunger.
4. A syringe as claimed in claim 1 wherein the plunger includes
an elliptical disk adjacent said conical section and the barrel
includes an internal rim at the upper end to retain the disk within
the barrel.
5. A syringe as claimed in claim 4 wherein the shaft comprises
radially extending flanges and said internal rim has slots receiving
the flanges.
6. A syringe as claimed in claim 1 wherein the hub is elliptical.
Safety syringe description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
It is well know that needle stick injuries by protruding needle
cannula can result in innocent transmission of hepatitis B and AIDS
(acquired immune disease syndrome). There have been several known
cases of death resulting from accidental needle stick with contaminated
needles. With the advent of the up to now incurable AIDS disease,
there is an ever growing concern for a safer medical device to substantially
reduce the possibility of hospital personnel being injured by the
protruding needle during and after use. Also in order to prevent
the spread of disease among drug abusers sharing the same syringes,
a safer syringe against needle transmitted diseases is required.
There has been a lot of efforts in our hospitals to educate hospital
personnel to take every possible caution to prevent needle stick
injuries and to take appropriate medical treatments after needle-stick.
However, a more fundamental solution to prevent the injuries as
strongly recommended by senior medical professionals, is to develop
a new syringe with improved structures which eliminate the operation
procedures mostly responsible for the currently reported injuries
cases. As a result, until the end of 1992 there have been over
50 U.S. patents disclosing various devices to prevent the sharp
needle cannula from coming in contact with human skin. These devices
generally fall into two catagories.
The first of the two catagories involved sheathing the needle cannula
with an extra plastic tube slidable axially along the syringe barrel
and which can be locked in the desired position to protect the sharp
needle point from sticking whoever is using and disposing of the
syringes, during or after use. The second category falls into a
device for retracting the needle cannula into the syringe barrel
after use in order to eliminate recapping the needle after an injection
and to eliminate disposing of the protruding needles in the waste
container. Representative examples with a device capable of retracting
the needle and S the needle carrier into the barrel are U.S. patents
to John E. Hall, U.S. Pat. No. 4935015; Walter W. Gloyer, U.S.
Pat. No. 5112315 and No. 4747830; Michael L. Haining, U.S. Pat.
Nos. 4950251 and 4790822 and 5152750; Dinesh L. Vadher, U.S.
Pat. Nos. 4988339; Laurel A. Novacek, U.S. Pat. No. 5030209;
Joseph W. Blake, U.S. Pat. No. 4986813; Edward D. Dysarz, U.S.
Pat. Nos. 4973316 and 4978343; and Lynn E. Davis, U.S. Pat.
No. 5098492. Other representative examples of being able to retract
only the needle, without a needle carrier into the barrel, are U.S.
patents to Christine M. Szuszkiewicz, U.S. Pat. No. 5163907; Michael
J. Nusbaum, U.S. Pat. No. 5088986; James Deluccia, U.S. Pat. No.
4675005; Terry M. Haber, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4770655 and 4804370
and 4813426 and 4820275 and 4826484 and 4935014 and 4909794
and 4908022; Edward F. Allard, U.S. Pat. No. 4838869; Alan B.
Ranford, U.S. Pat. No. 4950241; Dinesh L. Vadher, U.S. Pat. No.
4946446; Kristen A. Ridderheim, U.S. Pat. No. 4955870; James
J. Lennox, U.S. Pat. No. 4966593; R. Kern McGary, U.S. Pat. No.
5053010; Richard A. Jaffe, U.S. Pat. No. 5067942; Deborah G.
C. Stevenson-Michener, U.S. Pat. No. 5066281; Gerald R. Paxton,
U.S. Pat. No. 511404; Jonathan Weisslet, U.S. Pat. No. 5046508;
Morris. J. Baskas, U.S. Pat. No. 4955870; Michael J. Botich, U.S.
Pat. No. 4994034; Baldwin P. Jennings, U.S. Pat. No. 4643200;
Irene Haller, U.S. Pat. No. 4692156; Laurel A. Novacek, U.S. Pat.
Nos. 5112318 and 5122124.
Nevertheless, those patents having a device capable of retracting
only the needle, without the carrier, such as those disclosed in
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5163907 5088986 4675005 . . . , 5112318
and 5122124 have several drawbacks, which are either too complicated
structure or having too many components to be made at competitive
prices against the currently available syringes, or practically
impossible to function properly, although seemingly applicable theoretically.
For example, in order to inject the medication or fluid into the
huamn tissue, the frictional force between the needle and the plastic
embedding it must be large enough to ensure that the needle will
not retract prematurally when puncturing the skin for injection
prior to intended retraction after use. Since the contact area between
the needle and the plastic embedding the needle is very small, from
the mechamics points of view, the frictional coefficient between
the needle and the plastic has to be very large which is very difficult
since, in order to reduce the pain of puncture, a thin silicon film
is already on the needle to reduce the frictional coefficient, and
that is contradictory to the requirement of the design with retractable
needle. Moreover, in the manufacturing processes, it is practically
impossible to assemble the needle into the tiny hole of the plastic
barrel without very precise instruments and extreme care, to prevent
damage of the tip of the needle. The industries can hardly manufacture
these syringes at competitive prices with mass production. Although
others proposed a screw locking device, for example, James Deluccia,
U.S. Pat. No. 4675005 however, it is practically very inconvenient
for a big hand to rotate a tiny plunger several turns in order to
retract the needle. In addition, screws on injection molded parts
makes them slow in production and expensive.
Those patented designs with needle and carrier retracting into
the barrel after use are free from the above mentioned drawbacks
and are more likely to be accepted if the structure is simple and
the cost is truely competitive. Edward D. Dysarz, U.S. Pat. Nos.
4978343 and 4973316 disclosed a design with a spring to assist
retracting the needle into the barrel, which was a two piece structure
connected in one supposedly by untrasonic welding. However, this
structure required more intensives labor to assemble and thus higher
costs and furthermore, it required extreme care and costly precision
instruments to install the needle in place without damaging the
needle tip. Walter W. Gloyer, U.S. Pat. Nos. 5112315 and 4747830
and Dinesh L. Vadher, U.S. Pat. No. 4988339 also disclosed syringes
with retractable needle carrier. Nevertheless, the structures were
still too complicated with redundant structural elements to be manufactured
at very competitive prices. Alternative designs were proposed by
Joseph W. Blake, U.S. Pat. No. 4986813 in which the needle cannula
was screwed onto the base of the barrel. The processes of assembly
requires that the needle have no protection cap on the needle tip
to guard against tip damage. Despite the fact that the structures
of the plunger and the barrel were very complicated and expensive
to make, the retracted needle engaged on the plunger after retraction
may still easily fall off due to vibration and might protrude out
of the open end of the barrel and incidentally injure whoever touches
it. Another patented design by Laurel A. Novacek, U.S. Pat. No.
5030208 disclosed a too complicated structure with redundant elements
and hence higher costs. The needle engaged and retracted by the
plunger could still fall off accidently with vibration. Lynn E.
Davis, U.S. Pat. No. 5098402 proposed another syringe design
with retractable needle. Regretfully, it involved too many little
components making assembly processes tedious and time consuming.
From the functional points of view, the requirement to rotate the
tiny plunger with force in order to undo and retract the needle
into the barrel is very inconvenient in practice. During this rotational
processes, the fragile section on the plunger could be broken by
shear force due to the resistance arising from the tight engagement
between the needle and the barrel to prevent medication or fluid
leakage. In this design, the needle after retraction can still fall
off the carrier inside the barrel and moves freely and even comes
out of the barrel to injure whoever touches it.
A further patent design as disclosed by Richard C. Terrill, U.S.
Pat. No. 4978340 also has several disadvantages. The needle tip
was not well protected with a cap when assembling the needle onto
the barrel, and hence extreme caution is required. In addition to
the fact that the structure is complicated, requiring expensive
tooling, a more serious problem is that after the retraction of
the needle into the barrel either the needle can easily fall off
the needle carrier and move freely or the needle carrier can easily
disengage itself from the plunger since there is no permanent engagement
device between them. The needle could easily injure people. The
problems associated with the patent by John E. Hall, U.S. Pat. No.
4935015 are similar to the above mentioned designs. The needle
tip without a cap to protect from damage during assembly of the
needle onto the barrel requires extreme caution and expensive precise
instruments. Moreover, since the needle is tightly engaged with
screws on the distal end of the barrel to prevent leakage of medication
or fluid, in the process of retracting the needle into the barrel
by twisting the plunger, the fragile section on the plunger could
easily be broken and hence could not retract the needle. Even if
the needle is successfully retracted into the barrel, the engagement
device between the needle and the plunger is too weak to permanently
secure the needle from falling off the plunger. Therefor, these
is also a potential danger for needle stick injuries even after
needle retraction.
Furthermore, since plastic materials are very notch sensitive,
the ease to break the plunger depends upon the notch tip at the
fragile section on the plunger. John E. Hall's design of the plunger
has directional problems around the plunger. This means that if
bending force is applied between the flanges along the plunger,
several bendings may be required to break the plunger and these
repeated bending may disengage the needle from the plunger momentarily.
Screws existing inside the distal end of the barrel also results
in slow production, expensive parts and shorter tooling life due
to more serious tooling wear.
The inventions by Michael L. Haining, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4790822
4950251 and 5152750 also have several drawbacks which keep these
designs away from being a safer device. As a matter of fact, the
manufacturer and the end user can hardly tolerate a safer device
being more expensive than the currently available syringes Haining's
design also required more component parts and hence was more expensive
than the commercially available syringes. Yet, his design wasn't
really safer since it didn't actually resolve all the problems.
In his design, as the plunger is pushed to a stop but before it
pushes further to engage with the needle carrier for retracting
the needle into the barrel, the syringe is pulled out of the skin
of the patient being injected, because this further push really
hurts the patient. In the meantime, the dead space between the carrier
and the plunger carrying significant amount of expensive residual
medication or fluid is hence wasted. This could waste significant
amounts of expensive medical resources, considering the number of
syringes used every year. Furthermore, the notch on the plunger
is a very poor design, from the mechanics points of view. In order
to easily break the plunger, the notch tip has better be as sharp
as possible and be sharp all around. Haining's design of the plunger
made it difficult to break the plunger easily since stress concentration
could not be effectively generated on the notch tip in any direction
the plunger may be rotated. The result is that you will in some
cases have to repeatedly break the plunger several times, which
creates problems, in that during the repeated binding processes
of the plunger, the needle on the carrier will be forced to heavily
touch the inner wall of the barrel several times and that will loosen
the needle from the carrier. It happens quite often that the needle
will fall off the carrier and injure whoever touches it, because
there is no way to guarantee that the needle will stay permanently
together with the carrier inside the barrel no matter what happens
and consequently this is not a really safe design. It is therefore
the intention of the invention to come up with a new design of syringe
with retractable needle, which is simple in structure using the
same number of component parts as the currently available syringe,
and which costs no more than the current syringes. Yet it has all
the desired retractable function, without any foreseeable drawbacks
as discussed above. This new design should be able to be produced
and used without special care or caution and it requires no skillful
workers and expensive instruments to assemble. The dead space carrying
the residual medication or fluid should be no higher than the current
type. Furthermore, the needle should not fall off the carrier to
injure people by any chance no matter what happens. It is also the
intention of the invention to develop a syringe with retractable
needle substantially free from all the above mentioned disadvantages
or other foreseeable drawbacks.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a hypodermic safety syringe with
retractable needle which is designed to have the same number of
component parts as the currently available non-retractable syringe
and costs no more than the traditional syringes. Yet, it is equipped
with all the desired characteristics an ideal retractable syringe
should better have without any other foreseeable drawbacks. It requires
no precise, expensive instruments to assemble and no special caution
when using it.
This syringe comprises a hollow cylindrical barrel having open
ends at both ends, with a finger flange at the upper end and a collar
at the lower end, namely distal end. A rigid needle carrier made
of plastics seated inside the collar of the lower end of the barrel,
with a projection extending out of the barrel. Within this projection
holds a needle. This needle carrier holding a needle as an integral
piece has an annular groove to engage with the annular bore on the
inner wall of the distal end of the barrel, and has a close fit
with barrel to prevent leakage of medication or fluid and to provide
the carrier with necessary resistance against going backwards into
the barrel while withdrawing medication or injecting the needle
into human tissues. A plunger is slidably mounted inside the barrel,
and the space between the carrier and the lower end of the plunger
inside the barrel defines the fluid chamber. This plunger terminated
with an elliptical hub at the lower end, which is to be engaged
with and locked onto the bore inside the carrier. A rubber seal
is located around the shaft between the hub and the end of the plunger.
At the end of the injection processes, the plunger is pushed to
near the lower end of the barrel and a further push engenders the
hub of the plunger to click and lock onto the carrier. Then the
plunger is pulled backwards towards the upper end of the barrel,
with the carrier attached on the hub. As the plunger reaches the
limit of the upper end of the barrel by a bore inside a barrel,
the plunger is then broken off at the fragile section on the plunger,
leaving the carrier and the broken part of the plunger in the barrel
and allowing no chance for the needle to leave the barrel and injure
whoever touches the disposed syringes. As to a barrel with large
volume capacity, say 20 c.c. for example, the needle is located
eccentric to the center of the barrel and the open end of the barrel
is eccentric as well. Its mechanisms and operational procedures
are basically the same as a smaller barrel having coaxial or concentric
opening as described above.
The present design of the invention comprising only four elements,
as with the current commercially available non-retractable syringes,
is price competitive, in addition to all the extra retractable characteristics
to guard against needle sticks associated with our new syringe design.
Our syringe with retractable needle will not cost more than the
current non-retractable type, due to the same number of component
parts, and it requires no special attention since the needle cap
can be always on the needle during the assembly processes. The plunger
is designed to have a fragile section which can be easily broken
off at any angle around the shaft. Dead space between the carrier
and the hub is minimized to be no greater than the current non-retractable
syringe to prevent too much waste of medication or fluid. Yet, since
hub is elliptical in shape, there is sufficient space to accommodate
the residual air, if present, within the medication or fluid.
Furthermore, the unique design with the needle on the carrier in
one integral piece not only reduces material costs but also permanently
prevents the needle from falling off the carrier after retraction.
All these features distinguish this design from the other prior
disclosed patents.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is an exploded perspective view showing all of the parts
of the retractable needle syringe, with concentric barrel opening
at the lower end, of the present invention.
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of the assembled syringe of the
present invention.
FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view of the assembled syringe after
injection, with the plunger hub locked onto the needle carrier,
ready to be retracted into the barrel.
FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view of the assembled syringe, with
the carrier retracted into the barrel and the plunger broken off
at the fragile section.
FIG. 5 is an exploded perspective view showing all of the parts
of the retractable needle syringe, with eccentric barrel opening
to the side of the barrel, of the present invention.
FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view of the assembled syringe with
eccentric barrel opening, after injection; the plunger hub is locked
onto the needle carrier, ready to be retracted into the barrel.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
For a detailed description of the preferred embodiment the reader
is directed to the accompanying figures in which like components
are given like numerals for ease of reference.
FIG. 1 shows the respective parts of this retractable syringe.
The syringe in FIG. 1 generally comprises a hollow barrel 23 made
of semi-rigid deformable plastic with a finger flange 24 on it.
To the left of the barrel is an open end 41 to hold the needle 21
and carrier 22 integral in one piece, within.
This needle and carrier 22 is slidably put into the barrel from
the upper open end near finger flange 24 and seated within the distal
end 41. The annular groove 61 on the carrier closely matches with
the annular bore 231 inside distal end 231 to provide the resistance
against the needle and carrier going backwards into the barrel while
injecting with this syringe and to prevent leakage of medication
or fluid.
A plunger 20 follows the carrier and is slidably placed inside
the barrel. This plunger includes a shaft defined by flanges 18
a hub 11 to engage with the carrier for retraction purpose as will
be discussed in more detail afterwards, a rubber seal 12 seated
around the plunger and, a fragile section with an elliptical disk
14 connected to the four flanges next to it by a conical section
16 extending from the disc half way from the four flanges next to
it, which enables the plunger be broken easily at any direction
with equal stress concentration or stresses generated on a notch
tip between located disk 14 and section 16. Generally plastic materials
are notch-sensitive which means that a sharp notch tip results in
the plastics behaving as brittle and can be easily broken off, while
a plastic with blunt notch makes the material behavior ductile and
difficult to break off. Therefore, it is only with the combination
design of items 14 and 16 that allows for even stress distribution
on the notch tip, no matter what angle or direction a bending force
is applied on the plunger to break it off into two pieces.
FIG. 2 gives the cross-sectional view of the assembled syringe
of our design of the syringe. A needle 21 sits right in the carrier
22 which in turn fits closely within the distal end 231 to the left
of hollow cylindrical barrel 23 by a groove 61 on the carrier 22
and a bore 41 on the inner wall of the distal end 231. The hub 11
on the plunger 20 is elliptical in shape and is larger than the
diameter of the bore 51 in order to snug into the carrier 22 through
bore 51. The structural shape and dimension of the space inside
the carrier 22 and of the hub 11 on the plunger 20 are so designed
that as the plunger 20 is pushed to the lower end and the hub 11
is just in contact with the bore 51 but just before going through
the bore 51 for retraction, the dead space between the carrier 22
and the hub 11 containing residual medication or fluid is thus minimized
to be no greater than that of the conventional syringes. It is in
practice at this stage before the hub 11 going through the bore
51 that the physicians or nurses practicing the injection should
withdraw the needle from the skin of the patient to avoid pain from
that further push of the plunger in the human tissue. In FIG. 2
part 14 is an elliptical disk being able to go through the bore
311 at the right of the upper end of the barrel 23 but serves as
a stop for the plunger from leavning the barrel when retracting,
as will be discussed in more detail in FIG. 4.
FIG. 3 is the cross sectional view of the retractable syringe after
injection and the plunger is pushed further to engage with the carrier.
Now the carrier is ready for retraction into the barrel by pulling
the plunger. From the instinct, it seems that there is no space
left for the residual air possibly existing in the medication or
fluid to stop the residual air from going into the artillery or
human tissue, if an injector carelessly push the plunger all the
way down to the end through the bore 51 although the injector is
supposed to stop just before the hub 11 going through the bore 51.
However, if an injector follows the procedures and stop injection
by feeling from the finger tips that the hub 11 is just right in
front of the bore 51 and pull out the needle from the skin, there
is no chance for air to go into the artillery or human tissue. Even
when an injector carelessly pushed the plunger and the hub 11 all
the way down to the bottom through the bore 51 although it is very
unlikely to happen, because the hub 11 is elliptical in shape, there
is still room for the residual air if there is. This can hardly
be seen from the drawing in FIG. 3 since the drawing is to indicate
the engagement mechanism of the hub with the carrier. The room allocated
for the accommodation of the residual air, if any, can better be
understood from a top view not shown, instead of the side cross
sectional view.
As the plunger retracts the carrier with the needle into the barrel
and come to a stop and break, the detailed drawing of the cross
sections are shown in FIG. 4. While the plunger pulls backwards
the carrier and the elliptical disk 14 is in contact with the bore
311 on the inner wall at the upper end of the barrel, the plunger
can be easily broken off at the fragile section between parts 14
which is a solid elliptical piece and 16 no matter what angle around
the shaft is the bending force applied onto the plunger. While FIG.
5 gives the respective parts of our retractable syringe design suitable
for higher volume capacity, for example a 20 c.c. syringe, in which
the needle is located eccentric to the side of the cylindrical barrel,
for easier injection into the skin, or artillery. The structure
of the hollow cylindrical barrel is basically similar to that of
FIG. 1 except that the bore 311 inside the upper open end has 4
open slots 312 having just enough room for the four flanges 18 which
form the shaft of on the plunger 20 to go through. The plunger is
not allowed to rotate relative to the barrel; it can only move slidably
along the axis of the barrel for accurate positioning of the hub
11 into the carrier 22 which both are eccentric to the sides of
the barrel and the plunger respectively. The needle 21 and carrier
combination 22 basically is the same as the needle and carrier combination
in FIG. 1 except that the needle length and diameter will be different.
Part 14 is also an elliptical disk for stopping the plunger as it
retracts, and 16 not seen in FIG. 5 but seen in FIG. 6 is a solid
concial piece. Parts 14 and 16 result in even stress concentration
in the sharp notch region between them which is the fragile section
of the plunger for easy breaking off after retraction, same as those
described in FIG. 1. FIG. 6 illustrates the cross sectional view
of the assembled syringe for the parts in FIG. 5 very similar to
the indications given to FIG. 3 except that the bore 311 at the
upper end of FIG. 5 has 4 slots 312 for flanges 18 to go slidably
but not rotatably, while the bore 311 in FIG. 3 does not have slots
and therefore the plunger in FIG. 3 can go slidably and rotatably. |