US3605749A - Urinary drainage apparatus - Google Patents

Urinary drainage apparatus Download PDF

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US3605749A
US3605749A US776591A US3605749DA US3605749A US 3605749 A US3605749 A US 3605749A US 776591 A US776591 A US 776591A US 3605749D A US3605749D A US 3605749DA US 3605749 A US3605749 A US 3605749A
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tubing
catheter
urine
drainage
limp
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US776591A
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Henry J Heimlich
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61MDEVICES FOR INTRODUCING MEDIA INTO, OR ONTO, THE BODY; DEVICES FOR TRANSDUCING BODY MEDIA OR FOR TAKING MEDIA FROM THE BODY; DEVICES FOR PRODUCING OR ENDING SLEEP OR STUPOR
    • A61M25/00Catheters; Hollow probes
    • A61M25/10Balloon catheters
    • A61M25/1002Balloon catheters characterised by balloon shape

Definitions

  • This invention relates to urinary drainage apparatus and more particularly to the tubing and catheter forming part of such an apparatus.
  • a urinary drainage apparatus includes, generally, a catheter for insertion through the patients urethra into the bladder, a drainage tubing connected at one end to the catheter, and a drainage or collection bag connected to the other end of the tubing.
  • the catheter is essentially a tube
  • the catheter and drainage tubing will sometimes be referred to hereinafter by the term tubing.
  • the drainage tubing and catheter are formed of material (eg. rubber or plastic) which is flexible but stiff enough to retain its cross-sectional shape, usually circular, even when no liquid is flowing through it.
  • Use of such tubing presents several problems, two of which stem from the fact that, when the apparatus is in use, the catheter and drainage tube always remain filled with a column of urine.
  • the column of urine is formed, and retained, because the only opening in the tubing is at the end within the patients bladder. Hence, no air can enter the tubing above the column of liquid.
  • the presence of the urine within the tubing leads to infection of the bladder, since it remains in direct communication with the urine column.
  • the force of gravity acting upon the column of urine produces a partial vacuum, or negative pressure, within the bladder causing trauma to the bladder mucosa.
  • the invention employs tubing formed of material without stiffness, and having a degree of limpness such that it cannot maintain any particular cross-sectional shape, but instead collapses when not filled with liquid.
  • a column of urine cannot remain in such a tube, since as the urine enters the tube, the combined forces of gravity acting on the liquid and air pressure acting on the exterior of the tubing, cause the urine to flow through the tubing into the drainage receptacle.
  • such a tube does not have sufiicient stiffness to be self-supporting, and therefore it moves with the urethra.
  • a protective sheath of more rigid material may surround the limp tubing.
  • the catheter may be difiicult to insert through the urethra.
  • a relatively stiff, but flexible, rod may be separably associated with the catheter, the rod being removed after the catheter has been applied to the patient.
  • an outer tubing of stiffer material may surround the catheter.
  • FIG. 1 is an elevational view of a urinary drainage apparatus, of the type to ⁇ which this invention relates, provided with tubing according to the invention;
  • FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view taken along line 2-2 of FIG. 1, the tubing being shown substantially larger than actual size;
  • FIG. 3 is a view, partly in cross-section, of a feature of the invention.
  • FIG. 4 is a longitudinal cross-sectional view of a catheter according to this invention.
  • FIG. 5 is a transverse cross-sectional view taken along line 5 5 of FIG. 4;
  • FIG. 6 is a fragmentary view similar to FIG. 5 showing an alternative catheter construction
  • FIG. 7 is an elevational view of another embodiment of the invention.
  • An arrangement chosen to illustrate the present invention, and shown in FIG. 1, includes a catheter 10 connected by means of a fitting 9, to one end of a drainage tubing 11, the other end of which is connected to a drainage or collection bag 12.
  • the bag 12 is provided with means, such as a hook 13, for suspending it at a level below the level of the patient to which it is connected.
  • the end 14 of the catheter 10, which is inserted through the patients urethra into the bladder, is formed with an opening 15 in its wall through which urine enters the catheter. The urine fiows through the catheter 10 and tubing 11 into the bag 12.
  • the bag may be furnished with a fitting 16 to which the lower end of tubing 11 is connected, or the tubing 11 and bag 12 may be made integral.
  • the fitting 16 can, if desired support a one-way valve 17, such as a flattened, tubular rubber flutter valve, to prevent reverse flow of urine from the bag should the bag inadvertently be raised above the patient.
  • a one-way valve 17 such as a flattened, tubular rubber flutter valve
  • the bag Near its bottom, the bag may have an outlet tube 18 normally closed by clamp 19.
  • a bag 12 has been shown as the urine collection receptacle, it is understood that any suitable receptacle may be employed, including a drain. In fact, the receptacle itself forms no part of the present invention.
  • the drainage tubing 11 (FIGS. 1 and 2) is formed of a limp material, completely without stiffness.
  • the tubing is unable to sustain, without support, any preselected cross-sectional shape.
  • the tubing 11 tends to assume a flattened condition in which its walls 22 and 23 lie against each other (a relatively large spacing being shown between the walls in FIG. 2 for the sake of clarity).
  • Any suitable material may be used to form the tubing 11.
  • thin polyethylene film of the type used to make plastic bags in which merchandise is packaged may be employed. Any tendency of the walls 22 and 23 to stick together after their inner surfaces have become wetted with urine can be avoided by making these inner surfaces rough rather than smooth.
  • the tubing may be surrounded for some or all of its length by a sheath 24 (FIG. 3) of stiffer material, such as a suitable plastic.
  • the sheath 24 may be formed of flexible tubing, as long as it has sutlicient stiffness so that it will not ilatten when, for example, the patient rests his leg on it.
  • the ends of the sheath may be secured to the tubing 11 by bands 25, in which case the sheath is furnished with a hole 26 to permit atmospheric pressure to act on the tubing 11. It the bands 25 are eliminated, or so formed as to leave at least one end of the sheath 24 open to the atmosphere, the hole 26 may be eliminated.
  • a conventional catheter may be employed with the drainage tube 11 of this invention, but preferably the catheter is also formed of limp material, as described above, and shown in FIGS. 4 and 5.
  • FIGS. 4 and 5 show the catheter on a scale larger than actual size.
  • the catheter includes a main tube formed by walls 29 and 30 of limp material.
  • the catheter illustrated is of the so-called Foley type, having an air passageway 31 extending longitudinally along the main tube 29, 30.
  • the passageway 31 terminates at one end in an inflatable balloon portion 32, and at its other end in a titting 33 containing a valve.
  • the fitting is adapted to accommodate the end of a hypodermic syringe or needle, and after the end 14 of the catheter has been inserted into the patients bladder, operation of the syringe causes air to pass through passageway 31 into portion 32 whereby the latter becomes distended.
  • the resultant enlargement on the end of the catheter within the bladder prevents accidental withdrawal of the catheter.
  • the present invention provides means for stiffening the catheter.
  • the stiifening means includes a still, but flexible, rod or stylet 36 accommodated within a channel or pocket 37 extending longitudinally along the main tube of the catheter. After the catheter has been inserted into its position of use, the rod 36 may be removed by grasping its handle 38 and pulling it out of the pocket 37. If desired, the pocket 37 could be eliminated and the rod 36 carried within the passageway 31, the rod being removable after the catheter is positioned for use. Alternatively, the pocket 37 could be made solid to give the catheter suflicient lirmness to allow its insertion.
  • a catheter formed cornpletely of limp material is susceptible to being flattened, and its interior occluded, by the prostate gland of male patients. This can be avoided by forming the catheter portion 39 adjacent to the end 14 of a stiffer material, such as the material of which conventional catheters are made.
  • the portion 39 should be short enough so that it does not reach the exterior opening to the patients urethra. Consequently, the portion of the catheter passing through the urethra opening will be limp, and therefore will move with, rather than rub against, the opening, thereby avoiding irritation and possible infection of the patient.
  • the embodiment of the catheter illustrated in FIG. 6 presents another way of providing sufficient stillness for insertion of the catheter, and preventing occlusion of the catheter within the patients body.
  • the main tube 42 of the catheter is formed of limp material, as described above, and extends from directly behind the opening 15', at the forward end 14 of the catheter, along the length of the catheter.
  • Surrounding the main tube 42 is an outer tubing 43, which may be of the same stiffness as conventional catheters.
  • the outer tubing is formed with a hole 44 through which atmospheric pressure acts on the tube 42, or in the alternative, the end of the tube 43 remote from the forward end 14 may be open to the atmosphere.
  • the invention also contemplates that the catheter 10 and drainage tube 11 may be formed as a single, integral unit 46 of limp material.
  • parts similar to those in FIG. 4 have been given the same reference numeral followed by a double prime.
  • a tubing for draining urine from a patients bladder said tubing having an interior adapted to communicate with the interior of the drainage receptacle and means at one end to permit introduction of urine into said tubing, at least a portion of the length of said tubing being formed of material having a degree of limpness such that said tubing portion is not self-supporting and cannot by itself maintain any preselected cross-sectional shape and therefore normally assumes a dat collapsed condition in which its Walls lie against each other across an entire transverse dimension of said tubing, whereby urine entering said tubing at the patients bladder will ilow through said limp tubing portion to the drainage receptacle and will not remain as a column of liquid in said limp portion despite the fact that air may not enter the tubing between said limp portion and the bladder, and an outer sheath resistant to radial compression surrounding at least a portion of the length of said limp tubing portion, said tubing being devoid of means for permitting
  • tubing as deiined in claim 1 wherein said tubing includes a drainage tube connected to the drainage receptacle, and a catheter connected to said drainage tube and adapted to pass through the patients urethra.
  • a tubing as defined in claim 4 including a rod of stiff ilexible material, and means for separably hold ing said rod alongside said catheter, said rod giving said catheter suicient stiffness to be inserted through the patients urethra into the bladder.
  • a urinary drainage catheter for draining urine from a patients bladder comprising a length of tubular ma terial having a degree of limpness such that it is not self-supporting and cannot by itself maintain any preselected cross-sectional shape and therefore normally assumes a at collapsed condition in which its walls lie against each other, said tubular material having means at one end to permit introduction of urine into said tubing, and means extending longitudinally along said length of tubular material for providing the latter with suicient stitness to permit insertion of the catheter into a patents bladder, said stlening means including an outer sheath resistant to radial compression surrounding at least a portion of the length of said limp tubular material, said tubular material being devoid of means for permitting uid flow communication between the interiors of said tubular material and sheath, whereby uid external to said sheath cannot ow from the interior of said sheath into said tubular material.

Abstract

CATHETER FOR INSERTION INTO PATIENT''S BLADDER CONNECTED TO TUBING WHICH TERMINATES AT A URINE COLLECTION RECEPTACLE. TUBING FOMED OF LIMP MATERIAL SO THAT IT NORMALLY ASSUMES A COLLAPSED CONDITION. PORTION OF CATHETER MAY ALSO BE FORMED OF LIMP MATERIAL, AND STIFF, FLEXIBLE ROD EXTENDS LONGIDUDINALLY ALONG CATHETER BUT IS SEPARABLE FROM IT.

Description

Sept 20, 1971 H. J. HElMLlcH URINARY DRAINAGE APPARATUS 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed Nov. 18, 1968 /,f ATTORNEYS INVENTOR Hen/@Y .I /fF/Mz/c# iff/@5.5
Sept. 20, 1971 H. J. HEIMLICH URINARY DRAINAGE APPARATUS 2 SheetsSheet 2 Filed Nov. 18, 1968 INVENTOR-l /fewfer J Mf/ML/cf/ ATTORNEYS 3,605,749 URINARY DRAINAGE APPARATUS Henry I. Heimlich, 650 Main St., New Rochelle, N .Y. 10801 Filed Nov. 18, 1968, Ser. No. 776,591 Int. Cl. A61m 25/00 U.S. Cl. 12S-349R 9 Claims ABSTRACT F THE DISCLOSURE Catheter for insertion into patients bladder connected to tubing which terminates at a urine collection receptacle. Tubing formed of limp material so that it normally assumes a collapsed condition. Portion of catheter may also be formed of limp material, and stiff, fiexib-le rod extends longitudinally along catheter but is separable from it.
This invention relates to urinary drainage apparatus and more particularly to the tubing and catheter forming part of such an apparatus.
A urinary drainage apparatus includes, generally, a catheter for insertion through the patients urethra into the bladder, a drainage tubing connected at one end to the catheter, and a drainage or collection bag connected to the other end of the tubing. Since the catheter is essentially a tube, the catheter and drainage tubing will sometimes be referred to hereinafter by the term tubing. Conventionally, the drainage tubing and catheter are formed of material (eg. rubber or plastic) which is flexible but stiff enough to retain its cross-sectional shape, usually circular, even when no liquid is flowing through it. Use of such tubing presents several problems, two of which stem from the fact that, when the apparatus is in use, the catheter and drainage tube always remain filled with a column of urine.
The column of urine is formed, and retained, because the only opening in the tubing is at the end within the patients bladder. Hence, no air can enter the tubing above the column of liquid. The presence of the urine within the tubing leads to infection of the bladder, since it remains in direct communication with the urine column. Secondly, the force of gravity acting upon the column of urine produces a partial vacuum, or negative pressure, within the bladder causing trauma to the bladder mucosa.
Another problem caused by use of a catheter of relatively stiff material involves the fact that the meatus, or entrance to the urethra, continually rubs against the exterior of the catheter and thus becomes irritated, and consequently susceptible to infection.
In the past, attempts have been made to diminish the incidence of infection ascending from the drainage bag to the patient by providing air inlets in the bag, thus breaking the continuity between the urine in the tubing and in the bag. This expedient, however, does not solve the problems outlined above since a column of urine remains in the tubing. Furthermore, the mechanism for admitting the air increases the cost of the drainage apparatus, and the air admitted may itself cause contamination of the interior of the apparatus and infection of the patient.
It is an object of the present invention to overcome the problems outlined above by providing tubing, for connecting the patient to the urine receptacle, incapable of supporting a column of urine even though the tubing is not provided with any air inlets.
It is another object of the invention to provide such tubing which moves with the patients urethra, thereby avoiding the troublesome rubbing contact referred to above.
To accomplish these objectives, the invention employs tubing formed of material without stiffness, and having a degree of limpness such that it cannot maintain any particular cross-sectional shape, but instead collapses when not filled with liquid. A column of urine cannot remain in such a tube, since as the urine enters the tube, the combined forces of gravity acting on the liquid and air pressure acting on the exterior of the tubing, cause the urine to flow through the tubing into the drainage receptacle. Furthermore, such a tube does not have sufiicient stiffness to be self-supporting, and therefore it moves with the urethra. To prevent the tubing from becoming occluded should the patients leg, or some object, come to rest upon it, a protective sheath of more rigid material may surround the limp tubing. If the catheter is formed of the limp material described above, it may be difiicult to insert through the urethra. To tavoid this problem, a relatively stiff, but flexible, rod may be separably associated with the catheter, the rod being removed after the catheter has been applied to the patient. In the alternative, an outer tubing of stiffer material may surround the catheter.
Additional objects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from lthe following description in which reference is made to the accompanying drawings.
In the drawings:
FIG. 1 is an elevational view of a urinary drainage apparatus, of the type to` which this invention relates, provided with tubing according to the invention;
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view taken along line 2-2 of FIG. 1, the tubing being shown substantially larger than actual size;
FIG. 3 is a view, partly in cross-section, of a feature of the invention;
FIG. 4 is a longitudinal cross-sectional view of a catheter according to this invention;
FIG. 5 is a transverse cross-sectional view taken along line 5 5 of FIG. 4;
FIG. 6 is a fragmentary view similar to FIG. 5 showing an alternative catheter construction; and
FIG. 7 is an elevational view of another embodiment of the invention.
An arrangement chosen to illustrate the present invention, and shown in FIG. 1, includes a catheter 10 connected by means of a fitting 9, to one end of a drainage tubing 11, the other end of which is connected to a drainage or collection bag 12. The bag 12 is provided with means, such as a hook 13, for suspending it at a level below the level of the patient to which it is connected. The end 14 of the catheter 10, which is inserted through the patients urethra into the bladder, is formed with an opening 15 in its wall through which urine enters the catheter. The urine fiows through the catheter 10 and tubing 11 into the bag 12. The bag may be furnished with a fitting 16 to which the lower end of tubing 11 is connected, or the tubing 11 and bag 12 may be made integral. Within the bag, the fitting 16 can, if desired support a one-way valve 17, such as a flattened, tubular rubber flutter valve, to prevent reverse flow of urine from the bag should the bag inadvertently be raised above the patient. Near its bottom, the bag may have an outlet tube 18 normally closed by clamp 19. Although a bag 12 has been shown as the urine collection receptacle, it is understood that any suitable receptacle may be employed, including a drain. In fact, the receptacle itself forms no part of the present invention.
According to this invention, the drainage tubing 11 (FIGS. 1 and 2) is formed of a limp material, completely without stiffness. As a result, the tubing is unable to sustain, without support, any preselected cross-sectional shape. Instead, the tubing 11 tends to assume a flattened condition in which its walls 22 and 23 lie against each other (a relatively large spacing being shown between the walls in FIG. 2 for the sake of clarity). Any suitable material may be used to form the tubing 11. For example, thin polyethylene film of the type used to make plastic bags in which merchandise is packaged may be employed. Any tendency of the walls 22 and 23 to stick together after their inner surfaces have become wetted with urine can be avoided by making these inner surfaces rough rather than smooth.
No column of urine can exist in the tubing 11y formed of the material described above. The reason is that as urine enters the tubing, temporarily separating the walls 22 and 23, it ilows through to the bag 12 under the influence of gravity. Although no air is permitted to enter the tubing from above the urine, a vacuum which might prevent ow of the urine is prevented from forming within the tubing by the collapse of the tube, above the urine, under the inlluence of atmospheric pressure acting upon the exterior of the tubing.
To prevent the tubing 11 from being inadvertently fiattened, and its interior occluded, the tubing may be surrounded for some or all of its length by a sheath 24 (FIG. 3) of stiffer material, such as a suitable plastic. The sheath 24 may be formed of flexible tubing, as long as it has sutlicient stiffness so that it will not ilatten when, for example, the patient rests his leg on it. The ends of the sheath may be secured to the tubing 11 by bands 25, in which case the sheath is furnished with a hole 26 to permit atmospheric pressure to act on the tubing 11. It the bands 25 are eliminated, or so formed as to leave at least one end of the sheath 24 open to the atmosphere, the hole 26 may be eliminated.
A conventional catheter may be employed with the drainage tube 11 of this invention, but preferably the catheter is also formed of limp material, as described above, and shown in FIGS. 4 and 5. FIGS. 4 and 5 show the catheter on a scale larger than actual size. The catheter includes a main tube formed by walls 29 and 30 of limp material. The catheter illustrated is of the so-called Foley type, having an air passageway 31 extending longitudinally along the main tube 29, 30. The passageway 31 terminates at one end in an inflatable balloon portion 32, and at its other end in a titting 33 containing a valve. As is well known, the fitting is adapted to accommodate the end of a hypodermic syringe or needle, and after the end 14 of the catheter has been inserted into the patients bladder, operation of the syringe causes air to pass through passageway 31 into portion 32 whereby the latter becomes distended. The resultant enlargement on the end of the catheter within the bladder prevents accidental withdrawal of the catheter.
A catheter formed completely of limp material lacks suiiicient stiffness to enable its ready insertion through the urethra into the bladder. Therefore, the present invention provides means for stiffening the catheter. In the embodiment of FIGS. 4 and 5, the stiifening means includes a still, but flexible, rod or stylet 36 accommodated within a channel or pocket 37 extending longitudinally along the main tube of the catheter. After the catheter has been inserted into its position of use, the rod 36 may be removed by grasping its handle 38 and pulling it out of the pocket 37. If desired, the pocket 37 could be eliminated and the rod 36 carried within the passageway 31, the rod being removable after the catheter is positioned for use. Alternatively, the pocket 37 could be made solid to give the catheter suflicient lirmness to allow its insertion.
Another problem presented by a catheter formed cornpletely of limp material is that it is susceptible to being flattened, and its interior occluded, by the prostate gland of male patients. This can be avoided by forming the catheter portion 39 adjacent to the end 14 of a stiffer material, such as the material of which conventional catheters are made. However, the portion 39 should be short enough so that it does not reach the exterior opening to the patients urethra. Consequently, the portion of the catheter passing through the urethra opening will be limp, and therefore will move with, rather than rub against, the opening, thereby avoiding irritation and possible infection of the patient.
The embodiment of the catheter illustrated in FIG. 6 presents another way of providing sufficient stillness for insertion of the catheter, and preventing occlusion of the catheter within the patients body. The main tube 42 of the catheter is formed of limp material, as described above, and extends from directly behind the opening 15', at the forward end 14 of the catheter, along the length of the catheter. Surrounding the main tube 42 is an outer tubing 43, which may be of the same stiffness as conventional catheters. The outer tubing is formed with a hole 44 through which atmospheric pressure acts on the tube 42, or in the alternative, the end of the tube 43 remote from the forward end 14 may be open to the atmosphere.
As illustrated in FIG. 7, the invention also contemplates that the catheter 10 and drainage tube 11 may be formed as a single, integral unit 46 of limp material. In FIG. 7, parts similar to those in FIG. 4 have been given the same reference numeral followed by a double prime.
The invention has been shown and described in preferred form only, and by way of example, and it is understood therefore, that many variations may be made in the invention which will still be comprised within its spirit.
What is claimed is:
1. For use with a urinary drainage receptacle intended to receive urine from a patient, a tubing for draining urine from a patients bladder, said tubing having an interior adapted to communicate with the interior of the drainage receptacle and means at one end to permit introduction of urine into said tubing, at least a portion of the length of said tubing being formed of material having a degree of limpness such that said tubing portion is not self-supporting and cannot by itself maintain any preselected cross-sectional shape and therefore normally assumes a dat collapsed condition in which its Walls lie against each other across an entire transverse dimension of said tubing, whereby urine entering said tubing at the patients bladder will ilow through said limp tubing portion to the drainage receptacle and will not remain as a column of liquid in said limp portion despite the fact that air may not enter the tubing between said limp portion and the bladder, and an outer sheath resistant to radial compression surrounding at least a portion of the length of said limp tubing portion, said tubing being devoid of means for permitting iuid flow communication between the interiors of said tubing and sheath, whereby uid external to said sheath cannot flow from the interior of said sheath into said tubing.
2. A tubing as deiined in claim 1 wherein said tubing includes a drainage tube connected to the drainage receptacle, and a catheter connected to said drainage tube and adapted to pass through the patients urethra.
3. A tubing as deiined in claim 2 wherein only said drainage tube is formed of said limp material.
4. A tubing as defined in claim 2 wherein said drainage tube and catheter are both formed of said limp material.
S. A tubing as defined in claim 4 wherein the portion of said catheter adjacent to the end which enters the patients bladder is formed of a material stiffer than said limp material.
6. A tubing as defined in claim 4 including a rod of stiff ilexible material, and means for separably hold ing said rod alongside said catheter, said rod giving said catheter suicient stiffness to be inserted through the patients urethra into the bladder.
7 A tubing as defined in claim 4 wherein said catheter and drainage tube are integral.
8. A urinary drainage catheter for draining urine from a patients bladder, comprising a length of tubular ma terial having a degree of limpness such that it is not self-supporting and cannot by itself maintain any preselected cross-sectional shape and therefore normally assumes a at collapsed condition in which its walls lie against each other, said tubular material having means at one end to permit introduction of urine into said tubing, and means extending longitudinally along said length of tubular material for providing the latter with suicient stitness to permit insertion of the catheter into a patents bladder, said stlening means including an outer sheath resistant to radial compression surrounding at least a portion of the length of said limp tubular material, said tubular material being devoid of means for permitting uid flow communication between the interiors of said tubular material and sheath, whereby uid external to said sheath cannot ow from the interior of said sheath into said tubular material.
9. A catheter as dened in claim 8 wherein a portion of said catheter adjacent to the end which enters the patients bladder is formed of a material stiier than said limp material, said stiier portion being short enough so as not to reach the exterior opening to the patients urethra when the catheter is in use.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 319,937 `6/1885 Sutton 12S-231 397,256 2/ 1889 Sutton 12S-240 1,596,754 8/1926 Moschelle 12S-350 2,749,913 6/1956 Wallace 12S-350 2,850,015 9/ 1958 Baxter 12S-227 3,169,528 2/1965 Knox et al. 128--350 3,307,549 3/ 1967 Zackheim 128-227 3,384,089 5/1968 Shriner 128-350 3,398,743 S/1968 Shalit 12S-231 3,406,691 10/ 1968 Kettenbach 128--350 3,428,046 2/1969 Remer et Ial. 128-349 3,168,092 2./ 1965 Silverman 12S- 262x 3,419,009 12/1968 Ericson 128-349 FOREIGN PATENTS y1,211,941 10/1959 IFrance 12S-214.4
DALTON L. TRULUCK, Primary Examiner U.S. Cl. X.R. 128--295
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Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3906935A (en) * 1973-06-29 1975-09-23 Gard Ind Inc Medical fluid drainage and sampling system
US4248234A (en) * 1979-03-08 1981-02-03 Critikon, Inc. Catheter with variable flexural modulus and method of using same
US4406656A (en) * 1981-06-01 1983-09-27 Brack Gillium Hattler Venous catheter having collapsible multi-lumens
US4571241A (en) * 1983-12-16 1986-02-18 Christopher T Graham Urinary catheter with collapsible urethral tube
US4809713A (en) * 1987-10-28 1989-03-07 Joseph Grayzel Catheter with magnetic fixation
US4861337A (en) * 1988-03-02 1989-08-29 Sherwood Medical Company Collapsible urethral catheter
US20060247618A1 (en) * 2004-11-05 2006-11-02 Asthmatx, Inc. Medical device with procedure improvement features
US7500968B1 (en) * 2006-03-06 2009-03-10 Nappa Thomas P Unidirectional urine collection reservoir
US20120203210A1 (en) * 2011-02-07 2012-08-09 Schanz Richard W Urinary catheter and method
WO2015019056A1 (en) * 2013-08-07 2015-02-12 Alternatve Urological Catheter Systems Limited Catheter drainage systems
EP2848278A1 (en) * 2013-08-15 2015-03-18 Cook Medical Technologies LLC Drainage catheter and assembly with rotational fitting and methods of use
US20180368745A1 (en) * 2017-06-26 2018-12-27 International Business Machines Corporation Urine catheter ph sensor

Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3906935A (en) * 1973-06-29 1975-09-23 Gard Ind Inc Medical fluid drainage and sampling system
US4248234A (en) * 1979-03-08 1981-02-03 Critikon, Inc. Catheter with variable flexural modulus and method of using same
US4406656A (en) * 1981-06-01 1983-09-27 Brack Gillium Hattler Venous catheter having collapsible multi-lumens
US4571241A (en) * 1983-12-16 1986-02-18 Christopher T Graham Urinary catheter with collapsible urethral tube
US4809713A (en) * 1987-10-28 1989-03-07 Joseph Grayzel Catheter with magnetic fixation
US4861337A (en) * 1988-03-02 1989-08-29 Sherwood Medical Company Collapsible urethral catheter
US20060247618A1 (en) * 2004-11-05 2006-11-02 Asthmatx, Inc. Medical device with procedure improvement features
US8480667B2 (en) * 2004-11-05 2013-07-09 Asthmatx, Inc. Medical device with procedure improvement features
US7500968B1 (en) * 2006-03-06 2009-03-10 Nappa Thomas P Unidirectional urine collection reservoir
US20120203210A1 (en) * 2011-02-07 2012-08-09 Schanz Richard W Urinary catheter and method
WO2015019056A1 (en) * 2013-08-07 2015-02-12 Alternatve Urological Catheter Systems Limited Catheter drainage systems
GB2534490A (en) * 2013-08-07 2016-07-27 Alternative Urological Catheter Systems Ltd Catheter drainage systems
GB2534490B (en) * 2013-08-07 2019-10-30 Alternative Urological Catheter Systems Ltd Catheter drainage systems
EP2848278A1 (en) * 2013-08-15 2015-03-18 Cook Medical Technologies LLC Drainage catheter and assembly with rotational fitting and methods of use
US20180368745A1 (en) * 2017-06-26 2018-12-27 International Business Machines Corporation Urine catheter ph sensor

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