Aerosol enhancement device
An aerosol medication delivery apparatus includes a fixed volume holding chamber which is constructed to allow for a uniformly mixed, concentrated bolus of medicated aerosol to be delivered with each breath. The device further includes a universal inlet, so that any standard small volume nebulizer, as well as any standard metered dose inhaler (MDI), may be utilized therewith. Also filtration can be added to address contaminated patient air and aerosol. A one-way valve is positioned in the patient mouthpiece, to help control the loss of aerosol, and thereby reduce waste.
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This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 09/610,801, also entitled Aerosol Enhancement Device, filed on Jul. 6, 2000, which is commonly assigned and herein expressly incorporated by reference.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThis invention relates generally to an improved aerosol inhalation device, and more particularly to an aerosol enhancement device which is usable in combination with both a nebulizer and a metered dose inhaler.
Aerosol inhalation devices, for the purpose of delivering medication, entrained in an aerosol spray, to a patient using inhalation therapy, as an alternative to oral medications such as capsules or pills, or to injected medications, are well known in the art. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,210,155 to Grimes is representative of the prior art. In the Grimes patent there is disclosed a fixed volume mist accumulation chamber for use in combination with a nebulizer and a tee connection of an inhalation conduit for accumulating medicated mist and facilitating its delivery to a patient.
However, the Grimes device, as is typical for prior art devices, is plagued with problems typical of such devices. These problems include, for example, non-uniform concentrations of medication, resulting in difficulties in regulating patient dosage, and significant waste of medication. Additionally, the Grimes device is relatively complex, so that it is expensive to manufacture and difficult to use.
Many other such devices are available which do not include a mixing chamber. In other words, the nebulizer is attached directly to the aforementioned tee connection. Of course, such devices are even less suited to satisfactory regulation of the medication being delivered to the patient than the Grimes device, because there is substantially no ability to uniformly mix the medication with entrained fluid, such as air, before delivery to the mouthpiece on which the patient is inhaling.
In addition to nebulizers, metered dose inhalers (MDI) are also available for delivering a medicated aerosol to a patient. These MDI devices differ from nebulizers primarily in that a propellant is used to deliver the medication.
It would be advantageous to have an aerosol medication delivery device which included a mixing chamber between the medication delivery apparatus and the mouthpiece, wherein the medication could be uniformly mixed with entrained air in an improved manner over that achieved by the Grimes patent apparatus. It would also be beneficial for such a device to be simple to manufacture and assemble, and easy to use. Finally, if such a device could be made universally adaptable for use with any known nebulizer on the market, as well as with MDI's, this would be a great advance in the art.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention provides an aerosol medication delivery apparatus which incorporates the aforementioned advantages. The inventive device includes a fixed volume holding chamber which is constructed to allow for a uniformly mixed, concentrated bolus of medicated aerosol to be delivered with each breath. The device further includes a universal inlet, so that any standard small volume nebulizer, as well as any standard MDI, may be utilized therewith. Also filtration can be added to address contaminated patient air and aerosol. A one-way valve is positioned in the patient mouthpiece, to help control the loss of aerosol, and thereby reduce waste.
More particularly, an aerosol enhancement device is provided which comprises a mouthpiece and a spacer member fluidly attached to the mouthpiece. The spacer member has interior walls which define an interior volume, which comprises a mixing chamber. An inlet port is disposed in the spacer member for receiving a medicated aerosol from an exterior source into the mixing chamber. An air inlet port is disposed in the spacer member, as well, for receiving air into the air passage. Advantageously, the mixing chamber is generally octagonal in configuration, which the inventors have found assists in collecting and re-using excess medication .
In another aspect of the invention, an aerosol enhancement device is provided which comprises a mouthpiece and a spacer member fluidly attached to the mouthpiece. The spacer member is fluidly attached to the mouthpiece via a mouthpiece port, and has an outer body which defines an interior volume. An inlet port is disposed in the spacer member for receiving a medicated aerosol from an exterior source into the interior volume. Advantageously, an adapter is associated with the medicated aerosol inlet port. The inventive adapter comprises a universal fitting which is capable of attaching the spacer member to either a nebulizer or a metered dose inhaler (MDI).
Preferably, the inventive adapter is reversible, being disposable in a first orientation for attachment of the spacer member to a nebulizer, and being disposable in a second orientation for attachment of the spacer member to an MDI. In its preferred configuration, the universal adapter comprises a first rigid connector end and a second flexible connector end, the first rigid connector end being adapted for attachment to a nebulizer and the second flexible connector end being adapted for attachment to an MDI. The adapter preferably further comprises a flange portion for engaging the adapter with the spacer member.
In still another aspect of the invention, an aerosol enhancement device is provided which comprises a mouthpiece having a first port for fluid communication with a patient's mouth, a second port which is open to atmosphere, and a third port, wherein an airway fluidly communicates with each of the first, second, and third ports. A medication dispenser is attached to the third port and a one-way flap valve is disposed in the second port. The one-way flap valve advantageously includes a valve seat for receiving the flap valve and for preventing the flap valve from entering the airway.
In yet another aspect of the invention, a spacer member is provided which is usable with a mouthpiece, for dispensing medicated aerosol to a patient. The inventive spacer member comprises an outer body which defines an interior volume or mixing chamber. An inlet port is disposed in the spacer member for receiving a medicated aerosol from an exterior source into the mixing chamber. An air inlet port is also disposed in the spacer member for receiving air into the mixing chamber. An outlet port is provided for dispensing a mixture of the medicated aerosol and inlet air from the mixing chamber into the mouthpiece. Advantageously, a one-way valve is disposed in the air inlet port, for ensuring that there is no loss of medicated aerosol from the mixing chamber.
The invention, together with additional features and advantages thereof, may best be understood by reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying illustrative drawing.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Referring now more particularly to
As shown particularly in
In
It should be noted that, although the device 10 has been configured as shown in
As shown in
The purpose for the holding or mixing chamber 18 is to thoroughly mix the incoming medication and air together, which occurs as the two components flow together, in turbulent fashion, through the mixing chamber 18, becoming mixed together and exiting the chamber through port 14, as shown by arrows 32. Once thoroughly mixed, the medicated mixture flows into the mouthpiece 12 for inhalation by a patient. The mouthpiece 12 includes an exhaust port 34 in a sidewall thereof, as shown in the drawings, which preferably includes an optional filter 36, and a one-way valve 38, which may also be a stem valve of the same type as valve 26. The filter 36, though optional, has been found to be useful in dealing with circumstances involving contaminated or infectious patient air and aerosol, to minimize the spread of infection. During inhalation, the one-way valve remains tightly closed, so that the medicated mixture flows through the mouthpiece 12 and out of the proximal mouth port 40 into the patient's mouth. Then, during exhalation, as shown by arrows 42, the airflow from the patient's mouth, back through the mouthpiece 12, exits the mouthpiece through the now-opened one-way valve 38.
A significant advantage the inventors have discovered is gained by use of a valved exhaust port 34, as opposed to an unvalved, open port, is that the valve helps to retain substantially greater quantities of medication in the device by confining medicated aerosol within the mixing chamber 18 and mouthpiece 12 during the critical inhalation phase.
Advantageously, the mixing chamber 18 in the preferred embodiments is constructed to be defined by interior walls which are arranged to result in a generally octagonal-shaped chamber when viewed in any plane. In other words, the interior wall defining the chamber 18 comprises a plurality of interior generally planar wall segments 42a, 42b, 42c, 42d, 42e, and 42f, for example, which together with the two segments comprising the ports 14 and 22, form the eight generally planar surfaces of the octagon when viewed in cross-section from either the top or the bottom side of the device, as shown in
Of course, as is known, the mixing chamber 18 has a function of collecting aerosol distributed from either the nebulizer or MDI, and permitting it to become denser, for supplying an effective amount of medication to the patient. However, sometimes this results in an aerosol mixture which is overly dense, resulting in the wasting of valuable medication, either by over medicating the patient (which may be dangerous as well as wasteful) or by causing the excess medication to merely drain out of the mouthpiece through the exhaust port 34, into the surrounding environment. Advantageously, Applicants have found that the aforementioned corners or angled surfaces, in combination with the plurality of interior wall segments of the polygonal chamber, minimize this waste of medication, by functioning to reduce the interior wall surface area required to define a desired interior volume, and to thereby promote the “raining out” or draining of excess medication within the aerosol mixture to the bottom of the chamber, where it can be collected and reused, before it flows into the mouthpiece.
The purpose of the adaptive fitting 124 is to permit the tower body 116 to be able to accommodate attachment of the device to both the nebulizer 158 and the MDI 160, as discussed above. As is shown in
Presently preferred design options include holding chamber volumes ranging from 90 cc to 140 cc, and chamber lengths ranging from 2.95 inches to 1.56 inches, depending upon the chamber volume and the internal diameter of the chamber. The total stacked height of the inventive apparatus, including an attached nebulizer, may range from 6.7 to 8.3 inches in the presently preferred embodiments, depending upon chamber volume and internal diameter.
In operation, in any of the illustrated embodiments, the apparatus 10, 110 is particularly adapted for dual use applications, as noted supra. In particular, the device 10, 110 may be utilized in conjunction with a nebulizer, wherein the tower 16, 116, and in particular, the mixing chamber 18, 118 functions to recirculate medication introduced by the nebulizer, in order to provide a denser application of medication to the patient. The provided fittings are universally suitable for attachment to any known nebulizer. In an alternative configuration, wherein the device 10, 110 is utilized in conjunction with an MDI, the tower 16, 116 functions as a spacer, for the purpose of ensuring a more uniformly mixed dose of medication to the patient.
Whether the device 10, 110 is being used with a nebulizer or an MDI, the purpose of the holding chamber 18, 118 is to repeatedly capture the generated aerosol from the nebulizer or MDI into the fixed volume chamber, which allows for a concentrated bolus of medicated aerosol to be delivered with each breath taken by a patient who is breathing through the mouthpiece 12. In the case of a nebulizer 158, the medicated aerosol is drawn therefrom by the vacuum created by inspiration by the patient through the mouthpiece, while in the case of an MDI, a propellant injects the medicated aerosol therefrom into the chamber 18, 118. Though not shown, in some embodiments, a bridge adapter may be employed to adapt the device to various prior art mouthpieces.
The apparatus and method of the present invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from its spirit or essential characteristics. The described embodiments are to be considered in all respects only as illustrative and not restrictive. The scope of the invention is, therefore, indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description. All changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are to be embraced within their scope.
Claims
1.-20. (canceled)
21. A universal adaptive fitting for attaching an inlet port for receiving a medicated aerosol on a spacer member of an aerosol enhancement device to a source of medicated aerosol, comprising:
- a first rigid connector end; and
- a second flexible connector end.
22. The universal adaptive fitting as recited in claim 21, wherein said adaptive fitting further comprises an engagement flange disposed between said first rigid connector end and said second flexible connector end.
23. The universal adaptive fitting as recited in claim 22, wherein said first rigid connector end is tubular.
24. The universal adaptive fitting as recited in claim 22, wherein said second flexible connector end comprises a pliable boot connector.
Type: Application
Filed: Mar 23, 2007
Publication Date: Jul 26, 2007
Applicant: Clinical Technologies, Inc. (Broadview, OH)
Inventors: Robert Johnson (Yucca Valley, CA), Robert DuBose (Oakland, OR)
Application Number: 11/726,967
International Classification: A61M 11/00 (20060101);