Abstract: A shipping system for a medical device, such as implantable lens for an eye, is provided that may be reconfigured from a shipping mode into an injection mode without manually handling the contained lens or other device. Upon manufacture, a lens may be placed within the system assembly in the shipping configuration. While in the shipping configuration, the lens is kept in its desired shape and within a selected environment. Upon arrival at the destination, the user may attach a nozzle assembly for injecting the device into a body. The process of changing from the shipping to the injection mode deforms the device into a shape suitable for injection. A new assembly for a medical device utilizing the shipping systems is also disclosed. The insertion assembly includes a body for containing the medical device, a plunger casing, a finger-engaging flange, and a resilient ring member all of which are formed as a single piece assembly.
Type:
Application
Filed:
February 21, 2011
Publication date:
June 16, 2011
Applicant:
LENSTEC, INC.
Inventors:
Thomas L. Isaacs, Hayden Beatty, John Clough
Abstract: A shipping system for a medical device, such as implantable lens for an eye, is provided that may be reconfigured from a shipping mode into an injection mode without manually handling the contained lens or other device. Upon manufacture, a lens may be placed within the system assembly in the shipping configuration. While in the shipping configuration, the lens is kept in its desired shape and within a selected environment. Upon arrival at the destination, the user may attach fittings for injection of the device into a body. The process of changing from the shipping to the injection mode deforms the device into a shape suitable for injection. A new assembly for insertion of a medical device utilizing the shipping systems is also disclosed.
Type:
Application
Filed:
September 4, 2009
Publication date:
February 11, 2010
Applicant:
Lenstec, Inc.
Inventors:
Thomas L. Isaacs, Hayden Beatty, William B. Wright, John Clough
Abstract: An intraocular lens, with equal conic surfaces, is intended to replace the crystalline lens in the posterior chamber of a patient's eye, in particular after a cataract extraction. The lens provides optical power to focus objects onto a patient's retina. In addition the lens surfaces are shaped to reduce optical aberrations at the retina and are tolerant to lens tilt and decentration within the eye. The lens is designed to have zero longitudinal ray aberrations at a specific ray height.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
June 13, 2006
Date of Patent:
April 1, 2008
Assignee:
Lenstec Inc.
Inventors:
John Clough, Edwin J. Sarver, Donald R. Sanders