Patent classifications
A61B1/121
Stopcock for an endoscope
A stopcock for a liquid channel of a medical endoscope, having a housing, a spring element and a plug rotatably mounted in the housing, wherein the plug in a working position lies with its conical surface against a seal surface of the housing and can be placed in a medium access position in which the conical and the seal surface have no contact and the housing and the plug remain connected, characterized in that the plug includes one or more transverse grooves, in the outer wall of a conical piece, running transversely to the longitudinal axis of the conical piece and having straight groove bottoms, and the spring element in the medium access position engages with one or more transverse grooves. A medical endoscope having at least one liquid channel, characterized in that it includes at least one stopcock, by which the liquid flow through the channel can be regulated.
MULTIFUNCTIONAL ENCLOSURE FOR MEDICAL PROBES
A multifunctional enclosure is described having an elongated sleeve configured with an enlarged opening for the insertion of an elongated member of a medical probe. The multifunctional enclosure is configured to prevent the elongated member of the medical probe from swinging and becoming damaged during transport. The multifunctional enclosure may further comprise an attachment component for securing the medical probe to the multifunctional enclosure. Furthermore, at least one vent may be configured onto the multifunctional enclosure, such as on a first end closure portion. The vent may allow for adequate flow for sterilization and/or drying.
Reprocessing Case
A reprocessing case may be used to assist in reprocessing an instrument, such as an endoscope in an automated reprocessor. The reprocessing case may include various features such that the case may include and be transitioned between a closed configuration, an open configuration, and a disinfection configuration. In particular the reprocessor may transition the case to a disinfection configuration during a reprocessing procedure.
Scope cleaning device configured to be removably connected to a surgical tool
A cleaning device for a surgical tool includes a housing having at least one opening for accessing an interior of the housing; a sponge and a heater assembly positioned in the interior of the housing; and a connector. The connector includes a first arm and a second arm extending from an outer surface of the housing. An inner surface of the first arm and an inner surface of the second arm define at least a first recess sized to receive a sidewall of a first tubular body having a first diameter, and a second recess sized to receive a sidewall of a second tubular body having a second diameter, different than the first diameter. The connector is configured to removably attach the housing to the sidewall of the first tubular body or to the sidewall of the second tubular body to supporting the housing relative to the tubular body.
MEDICAL SCOPE CLEANING DEVICE
A medical scope cleaning device is configured to receive a distal end of a medical scope, wipe debris from the scope, apply an anti-fog/cleaning solution, and warm the scope in preparation for inserting the scope into a patient for a medical procedure. The cleaning device includes a sponge assembly disposed within a cleaning chamber. The sponge assembly includes expansion spaces. As a scope is moved through the cleaning chamber, the scope radially compresses sponges and urge at least portions of the sponges into the expansion spaces. The sponges wipe the scope and apply the solution. A heating coil warms the solution within the cleaning chamber.
VOLUME EXPANDERS FOR ENDOSCOPES
The disclosed subject matter is directed to volume expanders for use with endoscopes, particularly concerning low-pressure applications, such as sterilization. A volume expander may include an enclosure having a port and a wall including an outer surface and an inner surface, and a vent cap disposed proximate the port. The port may be a single port to which the vent cap is affixed. The volume expander permits gas within recesses of an endoscope to expand, but provides a barrier between the recesses of the endoscope and the surrounding environment.
Endoscope reprocessor, endoscope cleaning tube, and endoscope reprocessing unit
An endoscope reprocessor includes: a connector to which an endoscope is connected; a fluid supplying section that supplies fluid to the connector; an electromagnet arranged at the connector and including a magnetic material and a coil wound around the magnetic material; a current supplying section; a magnetic force switching portion configured to switch a strength of a magnetic force to at least one of a first strength and a second strength weaker than the first strength; and a control section configured to switch the strength of the magnetic force by controlling the magnetic force switching portion while driving the fluid supplying section.
USE OF HUMAN INPUT RECOGNITION TO PREVENT CONTAMINATION
Embodiments of a system and method for processing and recognizing non-contact types of human input to prevent contamination are generally described herein. In example embodiments, human input is captured, recognized, and used to provide active input for control or data entry into a user interface. The human input may be provided in variety of forms detectable by recognition techniques such as speech recognition, gesture recognition, identification recognition, and facial recognition. In one example, the human input recognition techniques are used in connection with a device cleaning workflow used to obtain data and human input during cleaning procedures while minimizing cross-contamination between the contaminated device or person and other objects or persons. In another example, the human input recognition techniques are used in connection with a device tracking workflow used to obtain data and human input while tracking interactions with and locations of the contaminated or uncontaminated device.
Cleaning Device for Cleaning a Scope, Laparoscope or Microscope Used in Surgery or Other Medical Procedures and a Method of Using the Device During Surgical or Other Medical Procedures
A device and method for cleaning or defogging a surgical scope during minimally-invasive surgery, including a casing which houses a sponge and a heating element configured to be accessible to the surgical scope and the casing is configured to removably attach to a trocar during a surgical procedure.
MEDICAL DEVICE TRACKING AND REPROCESSING SYSTEM
The system describes a software implementation to track use and cleaning of medical devices in hospitals and other medical settings. Further, the system may track cleaning (e.g. temperature, movement) and location (e.g. RSSI, etc.) of a medical device. The system may include boxes that sit on the wall in the cleaning rooms, sensors on the medical devices, sensors on the individuals who handle the devices, and a separate Wi-Fi wireless network that relays information from the box to a computer in the facility, that relays the information back to the cloud. In some embodiments, a supervisor or other superior gets notified if proper cleaning and reprocessing methods are not used. In other embodiments, the surgeon/doctor can scan a medical device when presented for use and see its use and cleaning history.