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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A cap for sealing Luer-tapered intravenous tubing couplings, comprising:
means for capping off a male Luer-tapered tubing end having a Luer-tapered
surface; and
means for capping off a female Luer-tapered tubing end having a
Luer-tapered surface and being connected to and protruding from said male
end capping off means;
said male end capping off means including a back plate with a cylindrical
structure extending therefrom, said cylindrical structure having a
constant outside diameter, a tapered bore which is reduced going into said
cylinder and an end parted off perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of
said bore;
said female end capping off means including a tapered plug extending from
said back plate and tapering down to a free end being perpendicular to the
extension of said plug, and a cylindrical skirt extending from said back
plate about said tapered plug;
said cylindrical structure, said tapered bore, said tapered plug and said
cylindrical skirt having a same centerline axis and being of dimensional
sizes to permit stacking, male-end-to-female-end, and
female-end-to-male-end, of said cap with identical caps.
2. The cap of claim 1 also including:
a pair of triangularly shaped flange sections being positioned
diametrically opposed on the outside diameter of said cylinder near said
cylinder free end; and
screw threads extending from the inner surface of said cylindrical skirt.
3. The cap of claim 2 wherein said tapered plug is hollow, having uniform
side and end wall thickness and wherein said hollow plug is formed by the
continuation of a hole through said back plate to almost the end of said
tapered plug.
4. The cap of claim 3 wherein said cylindrical structure, said tapered plug
and said cylindrical skirt are made out of a single piece of injection
molded plastic. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In many phases of medical practice, including use in the operating room and
the treatment room, intravenous tubing is an important part of medical
treatment apparatus. Most often tubing connections are not permanent but
must be made, broken and remade according to the usage of the equipment.
During these construction phases, the sterility of tubing must be
maintained.
Intravenous tubing connections are most often made utilizing the medical
industry's standardized Luer taper fittings. These fittings, which may
either be male couplings or female couplings, include a tapered end of
standardized dimensions. Coupling is made by the press-fit of mating
parts.
Tubing caps are often used to seal the ends of unused or unnecessary
tubing. These caps protect the sterility of the tubing and prevent fluid
loss and/or particulate contamination.
Intravenous tubing caps available in the prior art of which there are many,
have been for a single purpose, that is, they have been either male
fitting closures or female fitting closures. These caps invariably have
had flat end sections which complete the closure, the seal being made by a
pressure fit of the mating tapered surfaces. A threaded lock-fit may or
may not also have been utilized. They have been made of plastic or rubber.
These prior art caps have several disadvantages which make them difficult
to use and hard to keep track of in an operating room environment. These
caps are hard to grasp, especially when wet, because of their smooth
plastic bodies and because of their small size. Moreover, the supply of
male caps verses the supply of female caps needed to service closure must
constantly be monitored. Additionally, caps which are not in use are
troublesome to manage. They easily bounce around, roll off of surfaces and
fall to the floor.
It is desirable, therefore, to have a tube cap which is multifunctional or
dual purpose. It is also desirable that this cap be easy to work with and
that it be easy to store. It is, moreover, desirable to lower inventory
costs and inventory management problems.
An objective of this invention, therefore, is to provide a dual purpose,
male-female closure cap, for any product having Luer taper intravenous
fittings.
Another objective of this invention is to provide a cap which is easily
grasped even when wet.
A further objective of this invention is to provide a cap which can easily
be stored by stacking.
Another objective is to provide a method of storing unused caps.
An even further objective is to provide a cap with which a cost reduction
in production and inventory may be obtained.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The objectives of this invention are provided by a dual-ended tubing cap
for plugging a male or a female Luer-taper tube fitting. A Luer-tapered
plug portion may be surrounded for its entire length by a cylindrical
skirt having a serrated outer surface. The skirt may be circumferentially
positioned a sufficient distance from the male plug to allow clearance for
flanged lock-fittings present on some tubing couplings.
A Luer-tapered female plug may abut the skirted male portion, in back to
back fashion, to form a cap having the female plug on one end and the male
plug on the other end. The outside diameter of the female plug portion is
preferably less than the inside diameter of the male plug protective
skirt.
The entire cap may be injection molded as a single piece of polyethelene
plastic.
Caps may be stored by stacking one upon another, in tandom fashion, by
mating respective male and female portions. A stack of caps may be stored
by placing one end of the stack in a receptacle socket. When stored in
this manner, caps are ready for use when removed from the stack one at a
time.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The features of this invention can be easily understood from the following
detailed description and the appended claim, read in conjunction with the
following drawings, in which like numerals refer to like parts and in
which:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the female end of the cap.
FIG. 2 is a perspective view of the male end of the cap.
FIG. 3 is a longitudinal cross section of a stack of the subject caps in a
receptacle socket.
FIG. 4 is a longitudinal cross section of the subject cap mating a female
tubing fitting.
FIG. 5 is a longitudinal cross section of the subject cap mating a male
tubing fitting.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
A dual purpose intravenous tubing cap is provided for sealing both male and
female Luer-tapered intravenous tubing end fittings.
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the female plugging portion of the cap 10.
A cylindrical structure 11 extends from a back surface 13 and has a
concentrically-positioned, longitudinal Luer tapered-bore 15. This
cylinder 11 has a constant outside diameter and a bore 15 which is reduced
in diameter at an angle of one-degree, forty-five minutes going into the
cylinder 11. The end of the cylinder 11 has been parted-off to be
perpendicular with the longitudinal axis of the bore 15. The back plate 13
is circularly shaped and is situated to have the same centerline axis as
the cylinder 11 and the bore 15.
Extending about the longitudinal centerline-axis of the cap, which axis
being referred to above, and away from the female plugging cylinder 11 and
beginning at the back plates 13, is a cylindrically shaped skirt, FIG. 2.
The skirt 17 has a large cylindrical center bore of a dimension larger
than the outside diameter of cylinder 11. Serrations 19 are longitudinally
cut into the outer surface of this skirt 17. The end of the skirt 17 is
parted off perpendicular to its longitudinal center line.
A concentrically-positioned, male, Luer-tapered cylindrical plug 21 extends
out of the back plate 13 away from the cylinder 11 and concentrically
within the protective skirt 17, to a point short of the end of the skirt
17. This plug 21 tapers down at an angle of 1.degree., 45 min. from the
back plate 13 to its free end, this free end being perpendicular to the
extension of the plug 21.
Luer-tapered plugs, both male and female as stated above have a taper angle
of one-degree, forty-five minutes. The outside diameter of the plug and
the length of the plug are also defined within specified tolerances. Thus,
the dimensions of the instant invention may be varied from those to be
given below without departing from the scope or application of the
invention.
A stack of three caps 10 inserted within and extending out of a receptacle
20 are shown in sectional view in FIG. 3. As seen from the FIG. 3, these
caps 10 may be stacked together, end to end, with the male end of a
succeeding cap mating with the female end of a proceeding cap. A plurality
of caps 10 may be easily stored and handled while stacked. These caps may
be injection molded as a single piece of polyethelene plastic. The
cylinder 11 is 0.280+0.005 inches long and has a 0.265 inch diameter. The
tapered bore 15 of cylinder 11 extends to its full depth at a taper of
1.degree.45' from an outer diameter of 0.163+0.004 inches. The cylinder 11
has a nominal wall thickness of 0.045 inches. The back plate 13 has an
outer diameter of 0.385+.002 inches and a thickness of 0.55+0.60 inches. A
hole may exist through the center of the back plate 13 as a result of the
injection molding process. This hole continues through the plate 13 to
almost the end of the plug 21 to render the plug hollow and having a
uniform wall thickness on its side and end walls. The skirt 17 can be
0.280+0.005 inches long with an outer diameter dimension of 0.385+0.002
inches and an inner diameter of 0.315+0.003 inches. The nominal wall
thickness of the skirt 17 is 0.035 inches. The serrations 19 are 0.015
inches deep around a 0.385 inch outer diameter. The tapered male plug 21
is 0.245+0.005 inches long and has a 1.degree.45' taper from an outer
diameter of 0.153+0.002 inches. The male plug 21 has a nominal wall
thickness of 0.04 inches.
FIG. 4 shows a sectional of the female portion of the cap 10 mating and
sealing off a male tubing coupling 30 via a pressure or friction fit or
lock along the tapered mating surfaces. The dimensions of the cap 10 are
such so as to clear any threads 31 which may protrude from the coupling
30. In an alternate embodiment, the cap 10 may have a pair of protruding
flanges 23 FIG. 1., which would engage these threads 31, FIG. 4, providing
a positive lock. The flanges 23 may comprise a pair of triangularly shaped
sections 23 (FIG. 1) positioned diametrically opposed on the outside
diameter of the cylinder 11 near its free end away from back plate 13.
A sectional view of the male portion of the cap 10, mating and sealing off
a female tubing coupling 40 via a pressure fit is shown in FIG. 5. The
dimensions of the skirt 17 portion of the cap 10 are such that protruding
flanges 41 present on the end of the coupling 40 is not engaged. In the
alternate embodiment mentioned above, the skirt 17 of the cap 10 would
have screw threads 25, FIG. 1, extending toward the plug 21 from the inner
surface of the skirt for engaging the flanges 41 or the flanges 23 and for
providing a positive screw lock in addition to the pressure fit or lock.
A single dual purpose cap 10, is therefore, available for sealing off or
capping off the ends of either male or female tubing couplings to stop the
flow of fluids and to seal against contamination. The utilization of this
cap permits a cost reduction to the user, in that the injection molded
dual-ended cap 10 costs about as much as one of the prior art single
purpose male caps or female caps. The user can additionally realize a
reduction in inventory and handling costs by storing a single dual-ended
cap where before he stored two single ended caps. Moreover, there is an
increased efficiency in use by medical personnel.
The above description is to be taken as illustrative and not in the
limiting sense. Many modifications may be made to the design without
deviating from the scope thereof.
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Description  |
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