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Infusion pump with a sealed drive mechanism and improved method of occlusion detection

  • US 6,656,148 B2
  • Filed: 05/07/2002
  • Issued: 12/02/2003
  • Est. Priority Date: 06/18/1999
  • Status: Expired due to Term
First Claim
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1. An occlusion detector for use with an infusion pump for dispensing volumetrically proportioned doses of pharmaceutical product to a patient, the infusion pump having a pharmaceutical storage area for containing a supply of pharmaceutical product and adapted to be connected to, an infusion path between the storage area and the patient, an incrementally operated urging mechanism for urging contents of the storage area to infuse a volumetrically proportioned dose of the contents along the infusion path to the patient, the urging mechanism traveling a complete increment in a delivery cycle, and a drive mechanism operably linked to the urging mechanism to control the incremental movement of the urging mechanism for dispensing a volumetrically proportioned dose of pharmaceutical product to the patient by way of the infusion path, the occlusion detector comprising:

  • a force transducer which provides a signal representative of force incident to the urging mechanism within the storage area;

    a memory which stores information representative of the transducer signal;

    a processor connected to the force transducer which monitors and receives the force transducer signal prior to a delivery cycle and actuation of the drive mechanism for dispensing of pharmaceutical product along the infusion path, the signal defined as a cycle signal, stores information representative of the cycle signal in the memory, compares a current cycle signal level to a previous cycle signal level stored in the memory and determines whether the current cycle signal level has increased over the previous cycle signal level to identify an increase in force incident to the urging mechanism within the storage area; and

    an alarm to alert the patient, triggered by the processor upon the identification of a predetermined number of increasing cycle signal levels whereby the increasing signal levels indicate an occlusion in the infusion path.

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