US2529836A - Applicator for treatment of diseases of the udder - Google Patents

Applicator for treatment of diseases of the udder Download PDF

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US2529836A
US2529836A US145241A US14524150A US2529836A US 2529836 A US2529836 A US 2529836A US 145241 A US145241 A US 145241A US 14524150 A US14524150 A US 14524150A US 2529836 A US2529836 A US 2529836A
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tip
cap
applicator
udder
diseases
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US145241A
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Darlington Henry Saulnier
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AH Wirz Inc
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AH Wirz Inc
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61DVETERINARY INSTRUMENTS, IMPLEMENTS, TOOLS, OR METHODS
    • A61D1/00Surgical instruments for veterinary use
    • A61D1/02Trocars or cannulas for teats; Vaccination appliances

Definitions

  • Patentecl Nov. 14, 1950 APPLICATOR FOR TREATMENT OF DISEASES OF THE UDDER Henry Saulnier Darlington, Media, 2a., assignor to A. H. Wirz, Inc., Chester, Pa., a. corporation of Pennsylvania.
  • the present inventionv relates to applicators for treating mastitis and other diseases of the udder in cattle.
  • a purpose of the invention is to avoid inJury to the udder of a cow in injecting through the teat penicillin ointment, or amycin ointment, or other medicines for treatment of mastitis or other diseases of the udder.
  • a further purpose is to close the tip of an applicator without employing threads or other sharp or rough surfaces which could abrade or irritate the teat.
  • a further purpose is to seal the applicator effectively when not in use by frictional engagement of an elastomeric cap to the tip, preferably by a taper of the inside of the cap converging toward the closed end.
  • a further purpose is to make a dust seal around the end of the cap adjacent the shoulder of the tube to protect the tip against contamination.
  • Figure l is a fragmentary perspective showing the applicator tube and the cap removed therefrom.
  • Figure 2 is an enlarged fragmentary axial section of the applicator with the cap partially applied thereto.
  • Figure 3 is a view corresponding to Figure 2 with the cap fully applied.
  • Figure 4 is a section of Figure 3 on the line 4-4.
  • Figure 5 is an axial section of the cap free from the tip.
  • the teat canal has a very tight constriction near the outer end, extending for a length of from V to V inch, depending on the breed of cattle, and then enlarging into a cavity in which the infection is likely to be present.
  • Penicillin ointment, 0r amycin ointment and other ointments have been successfully used in treating mastitis by injecting the ointment through the teat into the cavity beyond the teat. The application of the ointment has, however,
  • the present invention is designed to overcome this difficulty by providing an' applicator which is smooth and free from abrading surfaces, and which nevertheless can be adequately sealed by a cap and kept sterile.
  • the present invention ofi'ers the further advantage that the applicator can be inserted reliably to the shoulder or to the taper which is ahead of the shoulder without danger of damage to the cow and thus the extent of insertion is self-limiting and does not require special care to avoid contact between the udder and threads or the like on the applicator.
  • the cap arrangement tightly conforms to the tip, and thus reliably insures clean and sterile conditions on the tip when the cap is removed.
  • the applicator of the invention comprises a collapsible tube 20 of any suitable material such as tin base alloy, lead base alloy 01' aluminum.
  • the collapsible tube is preferably made of a size which will hold the required dosage of penicillin or other ointment for injection into one teat.
  • the collapsible tube is provided with a skirt or side wall 2
  • the tip has an interior bore 24 terminating at the forward end in a discharge opening 25. Immediately around the discharge opening the tip has an external gradually curved or filleted portion 26 which is smooth and will not mar the teat canal.
  • the forward portion of the tip is externally a straight tubular portion 21 desirably of uniform outside diameter which in practice is desirably of the order of to $4; of an inch in the preferred embodiment. (In a typical example the outside diameter is approximately 0.099 plus or minus 0.001 inch.) At the very end, the outside diameter may permissibly be increased slightly by 0.0005 to 0.001 inch, for example, if desired. Close to the shoulder, the straight portion 21 joins an outwardly tapering portion 28, which strengthens the tip where it joins the shoulder.
  • the length of the entire tip is of the order of A of an inch to 1 inch and the tapered portion extends over about the last inch of the tip toward the shoulder.
  • the taper should be reasonably gradual and in the preferred embodiment is at an angle of about per side.
  • the tip is closed by a cap 30 of elastomeric material, preferably polyethylene, although it can be permissibly made from polyvinyl chloride, polyvinyl chloride-acetate, rubber or synthetic rubber.
  • the resilient expansion and gripping of the cap is relied upon to hold it in place.
  • the cap comprises a relatively thick hub II desirably fluted at 32 on the outside to aid in gripping, a relatively thin sleeve portion 83 and an end closure 34.
  • An internal bore- 35 runs through the cap and comprises a tapered mount 36 desirably tapering less steeply than the taper at!!!
  • the cap and the tip will occur at some location 38 along the length of the cap and the cap must expand beyond that point.
  • the amount of interference will vary with the design, but it has been found that good results are obtained if the inside diameter of the gripping portion of the cap is between 0.005 and 0.010 inch less than the outside diameter of the straight portion 21 of the tip.
  • the gripping portion causes expansion of the relatively thin sleeve of the cap and tends to hold the cap in place.
  • the mouth 36 makes a dust seal at 40 on the tapered portion of the tip when the cap is in place, keeping the entire tip sterile until the cap is removed.
  • the applicator is ready for use as the tip is maintained clean by the cap.
  • the cap When it is desired to use the applicator, and immediately before the applicator is to be used, the cap is taken off by pull, or pull combined with rotation. The tip is then inserted into the udder canal of the cow until it is stopped by the contact of the tapered portion 28 of the tip or the shoulder 22 of the tube with the mouth of the teat. The user then merely collapses the tube to extrude the ointment into the udder canal for the treatment of the cow. This operation is desirably repeated for each teat, a separate applicator and tube being employed for each treatment, thus avoiding the possibility of carrying infection from one teat to another and thus permitting accurate measuring of dosage, since the full contents of each tube are applied to each teat.
  • the tube and cap are normally thrown away after a single use.
  • An applicator for treatment of diseases 0 the udder in cattle comprising a collapsible tube, a tip on the collapsible tube of unbroken smooth exterior having an externally tapered portion adjoining the collapsible tube and an elongated smooth tubular extension of uniform outside di ameter from the forward end of the tapered portion clear to the end of the tip and a cap on the tip of elastomeric material comprising a thickened hub, a relatively thinner sleeve extending forward of the hub and a closed end wall on the sleeve, the hub and sleeve having an internal bore substantially as long as the tip which closely conforms to the tip throughout the length and at least in part has a free inside diameter smaller than the outside diameter of the tip.
  • An applicator for treatment of diseases of the udder in cattle comprising a collapsible tube, a tip on the collapsible tube of unbroken smooth exterior having an elongated smooth tubular extension of uniform outside diameter from near the tube clear to the end of the tip and a cap on the tip of elastomeric material comprising a thickened hub, a relatively thinner sleeve extending forward of the hub and a closed end wallon the sleeve, the hub and sleeve having an internal bore substantially as long as the.tip, which bore is tapered toward the closed end of the cap, the bore closely conforming to the tip throughout the length of the tip, and the bore at least in part having a free inside diameter smaller than the outside diameter of the tip.
  • An applicator for treatment of diseases of the udder in cattle comprising a collapsible tube, a taper on the collapsible tube of unbroken smooth exterior, having an elongated smooth tubular portion of uniform outside diameter extending from a point near the tube to the end of the tip and a cap on the tip of elastomeric material comprising a thickened hub, a relatively thinner sleeve extending forward of the hub and a closed end wall on the sleeve, the hub and sleeve having an internal bore substantially as long as the tip, the bore closely conforming to the tip throughout the length and the bore having inside the sleeve toward the end of the cap remote from the hub a free inside diameter which is slightly smaller than the outside diameter of the tip, whereby the cap is held in place by expansion of the sleeve.

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  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Veterinary Medicine (AREA)
  • Surgery (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Zoology (AREA)
  • Animal Behavior & Ethology (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Public Health (AREA)
  • Pharmaceuticals Containing Other Organic And Inorganic Compounds (AREA)

Description

Nov. 1-4, 1950 H. s. DARLINGTON APPLICATOR FOR 0 DISEASES'OF THE UDDER Filed Feb. 20, 1950 INVENTOR lien/r Jpzalnker flawyzmyiaw.
ATTORNEYS.
Patentecl Nov. 14, 1950 APPLICATOR FOR TREATMENT OF DISEASES OF THE UDDER Henry Saulnier Darlington, Media, 2a., assignor to A. H. Wirz, Inc., Chester, Pa., a. corporation of Pennsylvania.
Application February 20, 1950, Serial No. 145,241
3 Claims.
The present inventionv relates to applicators for treating mastitis and other diseases of the udder in cattle.
A purpose of the invention is to avoid inJury to the udder of a cow in injecting through the teat penicillin ointment, or amycin ointment, or other medicines for treatment of mastitis or other diseases of the udder.
A further purpose is to close the tip of an applicator without employing threads or other sharp or rough surfaces which could abrade or irritate the teat.
A further purpose is to seal the applicator effectively when not in use by frictional engagement of an elastomeric cap to the tip, preferably by a taper of the inside of the cap converging toward the closed end.
A further purpose is to make a dust seal around the end of the cap adjacent the shoulder of the tube to protect the tip against contamination.
Further purposes appear in the specification and in the claims.
In the drawings I have chosen to illustrate one only of the numerous embodiments in which my invention may appear, selecting the form shown from the standpoints of convenience in illustration, satisfactory operation and clear demonstration of the principles involved.
Figure l is a fragmentary perspective showing the applicator tube and the cap removed therefrom.
Figure 2 is an enlarged fragmentary axial section of the applicator with the cap partially applied thereto.
Figure 3 is a view corresponding to Figure 2 with the cap fully applied.
Figure 4 is a section of Figure 3 on the line 4-4.
Figure 5 is an axial section of the cap free from the tip.
Describing in illustration but not in limitation and referring to the drawings:
Diseases of the udder in cattle, particularly mastitis, have become very prevalent, so much so that it is estimated that one-third of the cattle in the United States are infected with mastitis. The teat canal has a very tight constriction near the outer end, extending for a length of from V to V inch, depending on the breed of cattle, and then enlarging into a cavity in which the infection is likely to be present. Penicillin ointment, 0r amycin ointment and other ointments have been successfully used in treating mastitis by injecting the ointment through the teat into the cavity beyond the teat. The application of the ointment has, however,
been a serious problem as the dose required is large, often being 7.5 grams for each teat. Efforts have been made to use collapsible tube applicators having elongated tips, provided with threaded ends which receive a cap. These have caused irritation and abrasion of the teat canal and this efiect appears to be due to the comparatively sharpnature of the threads on the tip of the applicator.
The present invention is designed to overcome this difficulty by providing an' applicator which is smooth and free from abrading surfaces, and which nevertheless can be adequately sealed by a cap and kept sterile. The present invention ofi'ers the further advantage that the applicator can be inserted reliably to the shoulder or to the taper which is ahead of the shoulder without danger of damage to the cow and thus the extent of insertion is self-limiting and does not require special care to avoid contact between the udder and threads or the like on the applicator.
The cap arrangement tightly conforms to the tip, and thus reliably insures clean and sterile conditions on the tip when the cap is removed.
The applicator of the invention comprises a collapsible tube 20 of any suitable material such as tin base alloy, lead base alloy 01' aluminum. The collapsible tube is preferably made of a size which will hold the required dosage of penicillin or other ointment for injection into one teat. The collapsible tube is provided with a skirt or side wall 2|, a shoulder 22 and a tip 23 integral with the tube and extruded therewith.
The tip has an interior bore 24 terminating at the forward end in a discharge opening 25. Immediately around the discharge opening the tip has an external gradually curved or filleted portion 26 which is smooth and will not mar the teat canal.
The forward portion of the tip is externally a straight tubular portion 21 desirably of uniform outside diameter which in practice is desirably of the order of to $4; of an inch in the preferred embodiment. (In a typical example the outside diameter is approximately 0.099 plus or minus 0.001 inch.) At the very end, the outside diameter may permissibly be increased slightly by 0.0005 to 0.001 inch, for example, if desired. Close to the shoulder, the straight portion 21 joins an outwardly tapering portion 28, which strengthens the tip where it joins the shoulder.
In the preferred embodiment the length of the entire tip is of the order of A of an inch to 1 inch and the tapered portion extends over about the last inch of the tip toward the shoulder. The taper should be reasonably gradual and in the preferred embodiment is at an angle of about per side.
The tip is closed by a cap 30 of elastomeric material, preferably polyethylene, although it can be permissibly made from polyvinyl chloride, polyvinyl chloride-acetate, rubber or synthetic rubber. The resilient expansion and gripping of the cap is relied upon to hold it in place. The cap comprises a relatively thick hub II desirably fluted at 32 on the outside to aid in gripping, a relatively thin sleeve portion 83 and an end closure 34. An internal bore- 35 runs through the cap and comprises a tapered mount 36 desirably tapering less steeply than the taper at!!! on the top (preferably tapering about 3 on a side for inch) and a more gradually tapering main bore portion 31, for example tapering 0.5 per sid from a diameter larger than the tip to a diameter smaller thanthe tip (where the tip outside diameter at 21 is approximately 0.099 inch the large inside diameter will desirably be about 0.107 inch and the small inside diameter at the closed end is desirably about 0.0915 inch). Thus interference between the cap and the tip will occur at some location 38 along the length of the cap and the cap must expand beyond that point. The amount of interference will vary with the design, but it has been found that good results are obtained if the inside diameter of the gripping portion of the cap is between 0.005 and 0.010 inch less than the outside diameter of the straight portion 21 of the tip. Thus it is seen that the gripping portion causes expansion of the relatively thin sleeve of the cap and tends to hold the cap in place. At the same time the mouth 36 makes a dust seal at 40 on the tapered portion of the tip when the cap is in place, keeping the entire tip sterile until the cap is removed.
As soon as the cap is removed, the applicator is ready for use as the tip is maintained clean by the cap.
In operation, when the cap is applied to the tip, it slips on rather readily until the interference at the forward end of the bore of the cap encounters the forward end of the tip. Further longitudinal force applied by the user on the cap then results in slightly expanding the sleeve portion 30 of the cap, which grips the straight portion of the tip over a length of at least of an inch, holding the cap quite firmly in place and preventing the possibility of leakage inwardly or outwardly to the end of the cap, which might serve to contaminate the tip.
When the cap is fully in place, as shown in Figure 3, the slightly enlarged mouth of the bore of the cap engages the taper 28 on the tip and makes a dust seal.
When it is desired to use the applicator, and immediately before the applicator is to be used, the cap is taken off by pull, or pull combined with rotation. The tip is then inserted into the udder canal of the cow until it is stopped by the contact of the tapered portion 28 of the tip or the shoulder 22 of the tube with the mouth of the teat. The user then merely collapses the tube to extrude the ointment into the udder canal for the treatment of the cow. This operation is desirably repeated for each teat, a separate applicator and tube being employed for each treatment, thus avoiding the possibility of carrying infection from one teat to another and thus permitting accurate measuring of dosage, since the full contents of each tube are applied to each teat.
The tube and cap are normally thrown away after a single use.
The tube and cap of the invention, while priof the benefits of my invention without copying the structure shown, and I, therefore, claim all such insofar as they fall within the reasonable spirit and scope of my claims.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent is: 1
1. An applicator for treatment of diseases 0 the udder in cattle comprising a collapsible tube, a tip on the collapsible tube of unbroken smooth exterior having an externally tapered portion adjoining the collapsible tube and an elongated smooth tubular extension of uniform outside di ameter from the forward end of the tapered portion clear to the end of the tip and a cap on the tip of elastomeric material comprising a thickened hub, a relatively thinner sleeve extending forward of the hub and a closed end wall on the sleeve, the hub and sleeve having an internal bore substantially as long as the tip which closely conforms to the tip throughout the length and at least in part has a free inside diameter smaller than the outside diameter of the tip.
2. An applicator for treatment of diseases of the udder in cattle comprising a collapsible tube, a tip on the collapsible tube of unbroken smooth exterior having an elongated smooth tubular extension of uniform outside diameter from near the tube clear to the end of the tip and a cap on the tip of elastomeric material comprising a thickened hub, a relatively thinner sleeve extending forward of the hub and a closed end wallon the sleeve, the hub and sleeve having an internal bore substantially as long as the.tip, which bore is tapered toward the closed end of the cap, the bore closely conforming to the tip throughout the length of the tip, and the bore at least in part having a free inside diameter smaller than the outside diameter of the tip.
3. An applicator for treatment of diseases of the udder in cattle comprising a collapsible tube, a taper on the collapsible tube of unbroken smooth exterior, having an elongated smooth tubular portion of uniform outside diameter extending from a point near the tube to the end of the tip and a cap on the tip of elastomeric material comprising a thickened hub, a relatively thinner sleeve extending forward of the hub and a closed end wall on the sleeve, the hub and sleeve having an internal bore substantially as long as the tip, the bore closely conforming to the tip throughout the length and the bore having inside the sleeve toward the end of the cap remote from the hub a free inside diameter which is slightly smaller than the outside diameter of the tip, whereby the cap is held in place by expansion of the sleeve.
HENRY SAULNIER DARLINGTON.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 1,117,207 Mars Nov. 1'7, 1914 1,604,915 Houser Oct. 26, 1926 2,065,795 Calvin Dec. 29, 1936 2,452,006 Werner Oct. 19, 1948
US145241A 1950-02-20 1950-02-20 Applicator for treatment of diseases of the udder Expired - Lifetime US2529836A (en)

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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2873886A (en) * 1954-07-29 1959-02-17 Pfizer & Co C Dispenser
US2895475A (en) * 1956-12-03 1959-07-21 Everett L Cole Container for collecting, storing and dispensing biological fluids
US3066834A (en) * 1959-02-27 1962-12-04 Electrolube Ltd Dispensers for liquids or powders
US3303847A (en) * 1963-09-09 1967-02-14 Chester C Eaton Disposable container and applicator with leak proof cover for dispensing cream and liquid materials
US3308999A (en) * 1965-09-27 1967-03-14 A H Wirz Inc Cap carried axial plug for a fluid dispenser
US4850970A (en) * 1987-03-26 1989-07-25 American Home Products, Corp. Two part mastitis cannula cap
WO1990007913A1 (en) * 1989-01-19 1990-07-26 The Upjohn Company Improved slip cap for cannula use

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1117207A (en) * 1913-02-01 1914-11-17 Fleur De Lis Specialty Company Cream-massage device.
US1604915A (en) * 1924-03-12 1926-10-26 James A Houser Rectal lubricator and irrigator
US2065795A (en) * 1936-07-29 1936-12-29 Henry F Colvin Applicator
US2452006A (en) * 1947-06-26 1948-10-19 Mack M Werner Ointment applicator

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1117207A (en) * 1913-02-01 1914-11-17 Fleur De Lis Specialty Company Cream-massage device.
US1604915A (en) * 1924-03-12 1926-10-26 James A Houser Rectal lubricator and irrigator
US2065795A (en) * 1936-07-29 1936-12-29 Henry F Colvin Applicator
US2452006A (en) * 1947-06-26 1948-10-19 Mack M Werner Ointment applicator

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2873886A (en) * 1954-07-29 1959-02-17 Pfizer & Co C Dispenser
US2895475A (en) * 1956-12-03 1959-07-21 Everett L Cole Container for collecting, storing and dispensing biological fluids
US3066834A (en) * 1959-02-27 1962-12-04 Electrolube Ltd Dispensers for liquids or powders
US3303847A (en) * 1963-09-09 1967-02-14 Chester C Eaton Disposable container and applicator with leak proof cover for dispensing cream and liquid materials
US3308999A (en) * 1965-09-27 1967-03-14 A H Wirz Inc Cap carried axial plug for a fluid dispenser
US4850970A (en) * 1987-03-26 1989-07-25 American Home Products, Corp. Two part mastitis cannula cap
US5059172A (en) * 1987-03-26 1991-10-22 American Home Products Syringe with two part mastitis cannula cap
WO1990007913A1 (en) * 1989-01-19 1990-07-26 The Upjohn Company Improved slip cap for cannula use
US5009640A (en) * 1989-01-19 1991-04-23 The Upjohn Company Slip cap for cannula use
AU627516B2 (en) * 1989-01-19 1992-08-27 Pharmacia & Upjohn Company Applicator for administering mastitis treatment
EP0510729A2 (en) * 1989-01-19 1992-10-28 The Upjohn Company Improved slip cap for cannula use
EP0510729A3 (en) * 1989-01-19 1993-01-13 The Upjohn Company Improved slip cap for cannula use

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