Cannula insertion detection

US9872633B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-9872633-B2
Application numberUS-201414499517-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateSep 29, 2014
Priority dateSep 29, 2014
Publication dateJan 23, 2018
Grant dateJan 23, 2018

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  3. Assignees and inventors

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  4. Key dates

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  5. First independent claim

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  6. CPC / IPC classifications

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  7. Citations and related patents

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Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

Sensors are disclosed that detect whether a cannula is properly inserted to its full depth in a subject's skin. The sensors may be used with a blood glucose monitor, or with a continuous insulin infusion pump, infusion set, or other system involving intermittent or continuous testing and/or drug delivery.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. An insertion monitor, comprising: a housing having a top and a base adapted to be positioned flush with a subject's skin adjacent an insertion site; a cannula, catheter or probe having a distal end with a bevel adapted for insertion into the subject's skin protruding distally from the base and a proximal end secured within the housing; and at least a pair of mechanical posts, each post having a distal end protruding distally from the base in a central area of the base proximate the cannula, catheter or probe and having a proximal end within the housing; each post independently traveling proximally within the housing in correspondence with insertion of the cannula, catheter or probe into the subject's skin to provide an indication of insertion status, the distal ends of said posts being flush with the base when the base is flush against the subject's skin. 2. The insertion monitor according to claim 1 , wherein angled insertion of the cannula, catheter or probe is indicated when one of said pair of posts moves a greater distance proximally in the housing than the other of said pair of posts. 3. The insertion monitor according to claim 1 , wherein the proximal end of each mechanical post makes contact with a surface in the housing when the cannula, catheter or probe reaches full penetration depth. 4. The insertion monitor according to claim 3 , wherein contact with the surface in the housing closes an electrical circuit powering at least one selected from the group consisting of visible light, audible alarm, sensible vibration and a signal transmitted to a remote device to generate an indication of insertion status. 5. The insertion monitor according to claim 1 , further comprising windows on a top surface of the housing through which the proximal ends of the posts are visible to provide a visible indication that the cannula, catheter or probe has reached full penetration depth. 6. The insertion monitor according to claim 1 , further comprising a polymeric color-change material in the housing, wherein contact of one or both of the posts with the polymeric color change material causes a visible color change to provide indication that the cannula, catheter or probe has reached full penetration depth. 7. The insertion monitor according to claim 1 , wherein each of the pair of mechanical posts independently protrudes from the top of the housing when the cannula, catheter or probe is fully inserted at the insertion site, providing a tactile landmark for a user on the surface of the housing and creating a tactile indication that the cannula, catheter or probe has reached full penetration depth. 8. The insertion monitor according to claim 1 , further comprising a blood glucose monitor remote from the insertion site receiving an indication of insertion status. 9. The insertion monitor according to claim 1 , further comprising a medication source remote from the insertion site receiving an indication of insertion status. 10. The insertion monitor according to claim 1 , further comprising an automatic insertion mechanism in the housing for propelling the cannula, catheter or probe into a subcutaneous space beneath the subject's skin. 11. An insertion monitor, comprising: a housing having a base adapted to be positioned flush with a subject's skin adjacent an insertion site; a cannula, catheter or probe having a distal end adapted for insertion into the subject's skin extending distally from the base; and at least a pair of mechanical posts, each post having a distal end extending distally from the housing; wherein each post independently travels proximally in correspondence with insertion of the cannula, catheter or probe into the subject's skin to provide an indication of insertion status, the distal ends of said posts being flush with the base when the base is flush against the subject's skin; and angled insertion of the cannula, catheter or probe is indicated when one of said pair of posts moves a greater distance proximally than the other of said pair of posts. 12. The insertion monitor according to claim 11 , wherein a proximal end of each mechanical post makes contact with a surface in the housing when the cannula, catheter or probe reaches full penetration depth. 13. The insertion monitor according to claim 12 , wherein contact with the surface in the housing closes an electrical circuit powering at least one selected from the group consisting of visible light, audible alarm, sensible vibration and a signal transmitted to a remote device to generate an indication of insertion status. 14. The insertion monitor according to claim 11 , further comprising windows on a top surface of the housing through which proximal ends of the posts are visible to provide a visible indication that the cannula, catheter or probe has reached full penetration depth. 15. The insertion monitor according to claim 11 , further comprising a polymeric color-change material in the housing, wherein contact of one or both of the posts with the polymeric color change material causes a visible color change to provide indication that the cannula, catheter or probe has reached full penetration depth. 16. The insertion monitor according to claim 11 , wherein each of the pair of mechanical posts independently extends from the top of the housing when the cannula, catheter or probe is fully inserted at the insertion site, providing a tactile landmark for a user on the surface of the housing and creating a tactile indication that the cannula, catheter or probe has reached full penetration depth. 17. The insertion monitor according to claim 11 , further comprising a blood glucose monitor remote from the insertion site receiving an indication of insertion status. 18. The insertion monitor according to claim 11 , further comprising a medication source remote from the insertion site receiving an indication of insertion status. 19. The insertion monitor according to claim 11 , further comprising an automatic insertion mechanism in the housing for propelling the cannula, catheter or probe into a subcutaneous space beneath the subject's skin.

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • Needle inserters · CPC title

  • comprising an immobilised reagent · CPC title

  • Alarms related to a physiological condition, e.g. details of setting alarm thresholds or avoiding false alarms · CPC title

  • Needles · CPC title

  • A61B5/063Primary

    using impedance measurements · CPC title

Patent family

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Frequently asked questions

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What does patent US9872633B2 cover?
Sensors are disclosed that detect whether a cannula is properly inserted to its full depth in a subject's skin. The sensors may be used with a blood glucose monitor, or with a continuous insulin infusion pump, infusion set, or other system involving intermittent or continuous testing and/or drug delivery.
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Becton Dickinson Co
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification A61B5/063. Mapped technology areas include Human Necessities.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Jan 23 2018 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 1 related publication on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).