Syringe needle abstract
A safety syringe with a needle sleeve lock is provided. The needle
sleeve lock is put around a cap of the syringe with radially outward
projected second stoppers at rear end of the cap located between
a shoulder portion and two radially inward projected first stoppers
inside the needle sleeve lock, such that the cap, a hub tightly
fitted in the cap, and the needle sleeve lock together form a needle
sleeve lock assembly, which allows the hub to temporarily locate
closely before a neck portion of a barrel of the syringe, so that
the syringe may be sterilized under high temperature without stress
deformation and thermal deformation. When the cap is turned to separate
the second stoppers on the cap from the first shoulder portion and
the first stoppers of the needle sleeve lock and then depressed,
the hub and a cannula held thereto are caused to move backward and
be stably retained to the neck portion of the barrel in an airtight
relation. And when the cap is pulled forward again, it brings the
needle sleeve lock to together separate from the hub to expose the
cannula for injection.
Syringe needle claims
What is claimed is:
1. A safety syringe with a needle sleeve lock comprising a barrel
having a diameter-reduced front neck portion, a plunger slidably
mounted in said barrel, a hub located at a front end of said barrel
for holding a cannula thereto, and a cap into which said hub is
tightly fitted so that said cannula is protectively covered by said
cap, said safety syringe being characterized in a needle sleeve
lock that is put around joints of said hub and said neck portion
of said barrel and of said hub and said cap; said needle sleeve
lock being a hollow tube defining is an inner space therein, a front
part of said inner space of said needle sleeve lock having a reduced
inner diameter, and an inner peripheral wall of this front part
being tapered toward a front end of said safety syringe, that is,
an end with said cannula, and a rear part of said inner space of
said needle sleeve lock having an expanded inner diameter relative
to said front part, and an inner peripheral wall of the rear part
also being tapered toward the front end of said safety syringe,
so that a first shoulder portion is formed between said inner peripheral
wall of said front part and said inner peripheral wall of said rear
part of said inner space of said needle sleeve lock ; two diametrically
opposite square through holes being formed on said rear part of
said needle sleeve lock immediately behind said first shoulder portion,
and areas on said inner peripheral wall separately immediately adjacent
to rear edges of said two square through holes radially projecting
inward to form two first stoppers; said needle sleeve lock being
put around said hub and said cap from a front end of said cap, so
that two radially outward projected second stoppers at a rear end
of said are located between and abut on said first shoulder portion
inside said needle sleeve lock and said first stoppers inside said
needle sleeve lock to separately extend into the two square through
holes to form a needle sleeve lock assembly, said needle sleeve
lock being assembled to said diameter-reduced neck portion of said
barrel with a part of said inner peripheral wall surface of said
rear part of said needle sleeve lock contacting with an outer peripheral
wall of said diameter-reduced neck portion of said barrel in a tight
fit relation, allowing said hub to locate closely before a front
open end of said neck portion without being extended into said neck
portion; whereby when said cap is turned to move said second stoppers
away from positions between said first shoulder portion and said
first stoppers on said needle sleeve lock and then depressed, said
hub tightly fitted in said cap is brought to move backward into
said neck portion of said barrel and be retained thereto by a second
shoulder portion inside said neck portion, and when said cap is
pulled forward again and said second stoppers on said cap abut against
said first shoulder portion inside said needle sleeve lock in the
case said second stoppers are not axially aligned with said first
stoppers, or against said first stoppers in the case said second
stoppers are axially aligned with said first stoppers, said needle
sleeve lock along with said cap are removed from said hub to expose
said cannula for injection.
2. A safety syringe with a needle sleeve lock as claimed in claim
1 wherein said two first stoppers are provided at their one end
each with an axially and forward extended third stoppers, against
which one end of said two second stoppers on said cap abut, so that
said cap is prevented from being overly turned relative to said
needle sleeve lock.
3. A safety syringe with a needle sleeve lock as claimed in claim
1 wherein said first and said second stoppers have inclined contact
surfaces between them to allow tight contact with one another through
turning said cap relative to said needle sleeve lock.
Syringe needle description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In the medical practices of early days, a used syringe would be
thoroughly sterilized for repeated use later. Any incomplete sterilization
would dangerously cause a second time infection of a patient and/or
any other people. To avoid such second time infection, disposable
syringes are largely produced. However, large amount of discarded
disposable syringes also bring us new problems of environmental
pollution and safety of syringes in use. This is because no specific
measures have been taken in disposing cannulas of the discarded
syringes and exposed cannulas tend to easily stab nursing or cleaning
personnel and result in even more infected people. To prevent discarded
syringes and/or cannulas from unexpectedly stabbing and therefore
undesirably injuring and infecting other people, including nursing
and cleaning persons, many safety syringes are particularly developed,
such as U.S. Pat. Nos. 5562627; 5405327; 5569203; 5899887;
5395346 etc., all disclose syringes having specially associated
hubs and barrels, so that hubs and cannulas held thereto of used
syringes can be pulled back into the barrels without the risk of
unexpectedly stabbing other people.
However, all these safety syringes of prior art developed to improve
conventional syringes have a common issue, that is, the hubs of
these safety syringes must be able to be stably connected to the
barrels and be pulled back into the latter after the syringes have
been used, while the hubs must be connected to the barrels in an
absolutely airtight relation that is a very important factor in
providing good quality safety syringes. As it is known that, when
such safety syringes are assembled in the manufacturing process
thereof, the hubs and the barrels must first be associated with
one another before the syringes are sterilized, so that the assembled
syringes would not be contaminated after the sterilization due to
contact of any part of the syringes. However, the assembled hubs
and barrels are subject to stress deformation and thermal deformation
during the sterilization under high temperature and such deformation
would have adverse influence on the stable and airtight connection
of the hubs to the barrels.
It is therefore tried by the inventor to develop a further improved
safety syringe to eliminate the drawbacks existing in the safety
syringes of prior art.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A primary object of the present invention is to provide a safety
syringe with a needle sleeve lock that is particularly made to improve
a conventional safety syringe with a retractable hub. The needle
sleeve lock of the safety syringe of the present invention allows
the syringe to be sterilized with the hub and the barrel thereof
in a contacted but non-engaged state, so that no stress deformation
of the syringe would occur to adversely affect the stable and airtight
connection of the hub to the barrel of the syringe after the sterilization.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a safety
syringe with a needle sleeve lock, so that the needle sleeve lock
firmly holds the cap, the hub and the barrel together, allowing
the cannula and the hub to be isolated from external environment
and protected against contamination due to any external contacting
of the cannula before the syringe is used to inject. The needle
sleeve lock also allows easy retaining of the hub to the barrel
of the safety syringe simply by depressing the cap. And, the cap
can be then pulled forward again to bring the needle sleeve lock
to together separate from the syringe to expose the cannula for
injection.
The needle sleeve lock of the present invention is provided at
an inner wall with two diametrically opposite and radially inward
projected stoppers against which two radially outward projected
stoppers at rear end of the cap abut, preventing the cap from being
undesirably depressed to cause undesired early engagement of the
hub with the barrel before the syringe is to be used for injection.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The structure and the technical means adopted by the present invention
to achieve the above and other objects can be best understood by
referring to the following detailed description of the preferred
embodiments and the accompanying drawings, wherein
FIG. 1 is an exploded perspective of a safety syringe with a needle
sleeve lock according to the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a vertical sectional view of the needle sleeve lock of
the present invention;
FIG. 2A is a cross sectional view of the needle sleeve lock of
FIG. 2 taken on line 2--2;
FIG. 3 is a sectional view of the hub and the cap of the safety
syringe of the present invention in an assembled state;
FIG. 4 is a sectional view similar to that of FIG. 3 but with the
needle sleeve lock of the present invention put around the assembled
hub and cap to form a needle sleeve lock assembly;
FIG. 5 is a sectional view showing the needle sleeve lock assembly
of FIG. 4 being assembled to but not extended into a neck portion
of a barrel of the safety syringe of the present invention;
FIG. 6 is a sectional view showing the needle sleeve lock assembly
of FIG. 5 being retained to the neck portion of the barrel of the
safety syringe of the present invention;
FIG. 7 illustrates the manner of removing the cap and the needle
sleeve lock from the hub and the barrel of the safety syringe of
the present invention;
FIG. 8 shows the engagement of a plunger of the safety syringe
with the hub when the plunger has been fully pushed forward in the
barrel of the safety syringe;
FIG. 9 shows the hub and the cannula are pulled backward by the
plunger into the barrel when the cannula has been used; and
FIG. 10 shows a variant of the needle sleeve lock of the present
invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Please refer to FIG. 1 that is an exploded perspective of a safety
syringe with a needle sleeve lock according to the present invention.
The safety syringe mainly includes a barrel A, a plunger B slidably
mounted in the barrel A, a hub C connected to a front end of the
barrel A for holding a cannula Cl thereto, and a cap D for covering
the cannula C1 and is characterized in a needle sleeve lock 1 put
around joints of the hub C and the barrel A and of the hub C and
the cap D, as can be best seen in FIG. 1. Since the barrel A, the
plunger B the hub C, the cannula C1 and the cap D all are structurally
similar to the conventional ones, they are not described in details
herein.
Please refer to FIGS. 1 2 and 2A. The needle sleeve lock 1 is
a hollow tube defining an inner space therein. A front part of the
inner space of the needle sleeve lock 1 has a reduced inner diameter.
And, an inner peripheral wall 12 of this front part is properly
tapered toward a front end of the safety syringe, that is, an end
with the cannula C1. A rear part of the inner space of the needle
sleeve lock 1 has an expanded inner diameter relative to the front
part, and an inner peripheral wall 13 of the rear part is properly
tapered toward the front end of the safety syringe, too. A first
shoulder portion 11 is therefore formed between the inner peripheral
wall 12 of the front part and the inner peripheral wall 13 of the
rear part of the inner space of the needle sleeve lock 1. There
are two diametrically opposite square through holes 14 formed on
the rear part of the needle sleeve lock 1 immediately behind the
first shoulder portion 11. Two areas on the inner peripheral wall
13 separately immediately adjacent to rear edges of the holes 14
radially project inward to form two first stoppers 15.
Please refer to FIGS. 1 3 and 5. The hub C is formed near a middle
portion thereof with a second shoulder portion C2 and at a rear
portion thereof with engaging holes C3. The barrel A has a diameter-reduced
neck portion A2 that defines a front open end of the barrel A. An
inner peripheral wall A1 of the front open end of the neck portion
A2 inclines radially inward. And, a third shoulder portion A3 is
formed between the inclined peripheral wall A1 and a straight inner
peripheral wall of the neck portion A2 behind the inner open end
of the neck portion A2. The cap D includes a slightly forward tapered
cuter peripheral wall surface D1 and two diametrically opposite
and radially outward projected second stoppers D2 located at a rear
bottom of the tapered outer peripheral wall D1.
In assembling the safety syringe of the present invention, first
extend the hub C and the cannula C1 connected thereto into the cap
D. The cap D is so designed that it has an inner diameter similar
to an outer diameter of a portion of the hub C above the second
shoulder portion C2 so that the hub C could be tightly fitted in
the cap D to form a needle assembly, as shown in FIG. 3. Thereafter,
the needle sleeve lock 1 is put around the needle assembly from
a front end of the cap D, so that the second stoppers D2 are located
behind the first shoulder portion 11 inside the needle sleeve lock
1 and before the first stoppers 15 preventing the cap D from moving
rearward relative to the needle sleeve lock 1. At this point, a
rear end portion of the forward tapered outer peripheral wall surface
D1 of the cap D fitly contacts with the front inner peripheral wall
12 of the needle sleeve lock 1 with the second stoppers D2 located
between the first shoulder portion 11 and the first stoppers 15
of the needle sleeve lock 1 as shown in FIG. 4. The needle assembly
and the needle sleeve lock 1 put therearound therefore form a needle
sleeve lock assembly. As can be clearly seen from FIG. 4 the hub
C is completely covered by the needle sleeve lock 1 and isolated
from external environment and accordingly, any contamination possibly
caused by undesirably contacting the cannula. The needle sleeve
lock assembly is then assembled to the barrel A by engaging the
inner peripheral wall 13 of the rear part of the needle sleeve lock
1 with an outer peripheral wall of the reduced neck portion A2 of
the barrel A, as shown in FIG. 5 to form a syringe assembly, that
is, the safety syringe of the present invention. Before being used
to insect a medical liquid, this syringe assembly has a hub C that
has a rear bottom portion contacting with the inclined inner peripheral
wall A1 at the front open end of the neck portion A2 of the barrel
A without being extended into and retained to the neck portion A2.
The syringe assembly is then sterilized under high temperature in
this state.
Since the hub C is not fully extended into and retained to the
neck portion A2 of the barrel A when the syringe assembly is sterilized
under high temperature, there would not be any stress produced at
this sterilization stage. Therefore, any stress deformation and
any thermal deformation of the whole syringe due to such high temperature
sterilization could be avoided.
To use the syringe assembly for injection of any medical liquid,
first turn the cap D so that the second stoppers D2 thereof are
moved away from their original location between the first shoulder
portion 11 and the first stoppers 15. Thereafter, depress a front
end of the cap D, so that the hub C tightly fitted in the cap D
is brought to move downward at the same time. When the second shoulder
portion C2 on the hub C is downward moved to pass through the radially
inward inclined peripheral wall surface A1 and the third shoulder
portion A3 at the front open end of the neck portion A2 of the barrel
A, the hub C would not be able to be pulled forward again to separate
from the barrel A. At this point, an outer peripheral wall surface
of the rear portion of the hub C behind the second shoulder portion
C2 would contact with the straight inner peripheral wall surface
of the neck portion A2 behind the third shoulder portion A3 in a
tight fit relation, as shown in FIG. 6 so that an airtight effect
at the joint of the hub C and the barrel A is accomplished. Finally,
the cap D is pulled forward to expose the cannula C1. When doing
so, the second stoppers D2 on the cap D would be moved to abut against
the first shoulder portion 11 inside the needle sleeve lock 1 and
therefore bring the needle sleeve lock 1 to separate from the hub
C at the same time, as shown in FIG. 7. Alternatively, in the event
the second stoppers D2 and the first stoppers 15 are vertically
aligned with one another when the cap D is forward pulled, the second
stoppers D2 would abut against the first stoppers 15 to bring the
needle sleeve lock 1 to separate from the hub C along with the cap
D. After the cap D and the needle sleeve lock 1 have been removed
to expose the cannula C1 the safety syringe of the present invention
is ready for use.
When using the safety syringe of the present invention to inject
a patient with medical liquid, the plunger B is fully pushed forward
in the barrel A until an engaging cone B2 provided at a front end
of the plunger B engages with the engaging holes C3 provided at
the rear portion of the hub C, as shown in FIG. 8. After the injection,
the plunger B may be pulled backward to bring the hub C, which is
now associated with the plunger B, and the cannula C1 that is connected
to the hub C, to move back into the barrel A, as shown in FIG. 9.
FIG. 10 shows a needle sleeve lock 1' that is a variant of the
needle sleeve lock 1. The needle sleeve locks 1 and 1' are structurally
similar to each other, except that the latter includes two third
stoppers 15' that separately axially extend from one end of the
first stoppers 15 toward a front end of the needle sleeve lock 1',
that is, an end of the needle sleeve lock 1' facing away from the
barrel A. The second stoppers D2 would finally abut against the
two third stoppers 15' when the cap D is turned to locate the second
stoppers D2 between the first shoulder portion 11 and the first
stoppers 15. The third stoppers 15' prevent the cap D from being
overly turned.
As a matter of fact, the fitted contact of the forward tapered
outer peripheral wall surface D1 of the cap D with the front inner
peripheral wall 12 of the needle sleeve lock 1 itself enables the
cap D and the needle sleeve lock 1 to stably connect to each other
without the risk of becoming turnable relative to each other, unless
there is an external force applied to turn them. Thus, the cap D
and the needle sleeve lock 1 could still maintain their stably connected
relation without the third stoppers 15'.
To enhance the stable connection of the needle sleeve lock 1 to
the cap D, it is also possible to provide the first stoppers 15
and the second stoppers D2 with inclined contact surfaces between
them, so that a tightness of contact of the cap D with the needle
sleeve lock 1 increases with a degree of turning of the cap D relative
to the needle sleeve lock 1.
In both of the above two conditions, the cap D is turned counterclockwise
to separate the second stoppers D2 from the first stoppers 15. And
then, the cap D may be depressed to firmly assemble the hub C to
the barrel A for injection.
The following are some of the advantages of the safety syringe
of the present invention: 1. The safety syringe is sterilized under
high temperature before the hub C is tightly fitted into the front
neck portion A2 of the barrel A. Therefore, any stress and thermal
deformation at the joint of the hub and the barrel of the syringe
possibly caused by such high temperature sterilization may be avoided.
The safety syringe can therefore always maintain good airtightness
at such joint. 2. The needle sleeve lock 1 protects the hub C and
the barrel A of the safety syringe against any contamination due
to undesirable contact of the hub before use.
The safety syringe with a needle sleeve lock of the present invention
is therefore superior to the conventional safety syringes and is
practical for use. |