Title of Invention

"A STORAGE CONTAINER FOR AT LEAST ONE HYPODERMIC NEEDLE"

Abstract A storage container for at least one hypodermic needle (2) having a connecting end (2a) which has connectors (2b) complementary with connectors (3a) on the tip of an injection instrument (4), in which the hypodermic needle is retracted inside a cylindrical barrel (5), one of the connectors (2b, 3a) having radial elasticity and devices for converting an axial force exerted between the needle (2) and the cylindrical barrel (5), into at least one radial component capable of deforming the elastic connector, said container having a housing (1; 21) designed for holding this needle in a determined position, and an opening (7; 27) giving access to the housing (1, 11, 21), characterized in that a second cylindrical wall (1c; 11c; 21c) surrounds the cylindrical wall (1b) of housing (1; 11; 21) and an upper lip (1a) extends between said two walls (1b, 1c), a radial portion (1d) of said second wall extends outwards and terminates in a third cylindrical wall (1e; 11e; 21e) coaxial with the longitudinal axis of the housing (1, 21) and the inner surface of which is a guiding surface designed to engage with a complementary guiding surface of the cylindrical barrel (5) so that the engagement of these guiding surfaces (1e; 11e; 21e; with each other allows the complementary connectors (2b, 3a) to be put in the assembling position following the exertion on the devices for converting an axial force into at least one radial component.
Full Text Field Of Invention:
The present invention relates to a storage container for at least one hypodermic needle.
Background of th* invention
The invention relates to a storage container for at least one hypodermic needle. The connecting end of the needle has connectors which are complementary to connectors on the tip of an injection instrument, one of the connectors having radial elasticity and means for converting an axial force exerted between the needle and the injection instrument into at least one radial component capable of deforming the elastic connectors, and with a housing designed to hold the hypodermic needle in a determinate position and an opening affording access to the housing.
Hypodermic needles of this type are found on the market. Fixing them to the tip of an Injection instrument is easier and faster because it is no longer necessary to screw in the needle, mere pressure along the axis sufficing to make the complementary connectors engage. Theoretically it should also be possible to separate them by traction along the axis, but the absence of purchase makes this operation difficult and it is performed in the traditional manner, by unscrewing.
In the case of chronic disorders, the patient may perform the injection himself. It is therefore important that the means
of storing, handling and disposing of injection needles be not only safe, but relatively foolproof and easy to understand and manipulate.
United States patent no. 5,968,021 (October 19, 1999) describes a magazine for storing injection needles. The user inserts an injection instrument in a predetermined radial orientation to the magazine. The needle can be released from the injection instrument by applying pressure at predetermined radial locations on the magazine.
International publication WO 92/13585 (August 20, 1992) describes a needle container comprising a conical housing. Prior to use, the needle is held by frictional forces at the open end of the conical housing. After use of the needle, the user can re-insert the needle into the conical housing, pushing the needle below elastic tabs at the open end of the conical housing. The resilient tabs snap back after the needle is fully inserted, preventing the needle from being withdrawn.
In all of the prior art cases, when the neddle is fixed at the outlet end of the syringe, the user is no longer protected from injury by the needle. Several injection devices have been proposed to obviate this inconvenience and comprise to this end a mechanism for effecting the injection, which is movable by a cocking means counter to the force of a spring into a cocking position, from which it can be released to effect an injection process, so as to act upon a piston containing fluid to be injected.
A device of this type is disclosed for example in EP 0 359
761. The housing of this device is approximately the shape of an oversize fountain pen, and the injection needle is inside the device as long as an injection process has not to be effected. The injection device has a mechanism used to effect the injection process, which mechanism can be moved by means of a cocking element counter to the force of a spring into a cocked position from which it can be released in order to effect an injection process. This mechanism moves axially the hypodermic needle in order it protrudes from the forward end of the housing of the device which is put into contact whith the skin of the patient so that it is inserted through the skin and the liquid is injected.
With such a device, the means for connecting the needle to the injection device is inside the housing so that the user cannot see the precise position of the needle to be connected to the injection device, since it is hidden from sight by the housing of the injection device.
There remains a need for a safe and simple system for needle storage, handling and disposal, in particular for injection devices of the above-mentionned type.
Summary of the invention
It is an object of the invention to provide an easy-to-use and safe method for handling, storing and disposing of injection needles.
In a first aspect, the invention provides a storage container for at least one hypodermic needle, the hypodermic needle having a connecting end which has connectors complementary with connectors on the tip of an injection instrument, one of the connectors having radial elasticity and devices for converting an axial force exerted between the needle and the injection instrument into at least one radial component capable of deforming the elastic connectors, having a housing for the needle, designed so as to hold this needle in a determined position, and an opening giving access to the housing, characterized in that
the exterior wall bounding the housing has guides coaxial with the longitudinal axis of the needle positioned in the housing and designed to engage with a complementary surface of the instrument so that, once these guides are engaged with each other the complementary connectors are in the assembling position, following the exertion of the axial pressure on the instrument . The presence of an ergonomic interface between the hypodermic needle and the user makes the handling and therefore the attachment of this needle easier and places the operation within the reach of a larger number of people.
Detailed description of the invention
Advantageously, this container also has devices for facilitating the separation of a used needle from the injection instrument and for stocking it, so that' the user may, given the same ergonomic support, connect and remove the needles much more simply and easily than in the case of needles supplied in bulk.
It is preferable that used needles which have been detached from the injection instrument stay trapped by the needle stand and are therefore no longer accessible, so that the used needles can be safely disposed of.
Other special features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following description, which is supported by the attached drawings illustrating, schematically and by way of example, one embodiment and variations of the container to which the present invention refers.
Figure la is a vertical section of a first embodiment seen during the connection of a hypodermic needle to an injection instrument;
Figure 1b is a section similar to Figure la shown after the needle has been connected;
Figure 2 is a vertical section of a first variation;
Figures 3a, 3b, 3c are vertical sections of a second variation, showing three successive stages in the use of a hypodermic needle;
Figures 4a, 4b, 4c are sections of a third variation, showing three successive stages in the use of a hypodermic needle.
The storage container which is illustrated by Figures la and 1b has a housing delimited by a cylindrical wall 1 for receiving a hypodermic needle 2- forming one piece with a connecting end in the form of a hollow socket 2a whose inner face has a connector formed of at least one rib 2b. The hollow socket 2a is preferably made from an elastically deformable
material so that it can dilate elastically and thereby allow the rib 2b to engage with a complementary connector, for example a rib, a" groove or a thread 3a located on the outer face of a tip
3 of an injection instrument 4. As Figure 1 shows the profile
of the rib 2b allows a pressure along the axis to be converted
into a radial ' component capable of elastically deforming the
socket 2a.
In the embodiment illustrated here the injection instrument
4 resembles a ball-point pen in that it has a cylindrical barrel
5 accommodating a cartridge 6 which is intended to hold a dose
of medicinal substance to be injected and whose forward end
terminates in the connecting tip 3 intended to be pushed into
the socket 2a of the hypodermic needle 2. This injection
instrument 4 is of a known type, such as those disclosed e.g. in
US 5'092'842, in US 5'114'406 or in EP 0 359 761, in which the
hypodermic needle is retractable inside the cylindrical barrel
in its rest position. Since this instrument is not part of the
present invention, the rest of its structure and operation will
not be described in greater detail.
The diameter of the cylindrical wall 1b of the housing 1 for the hypodermic needle 2 is calculated so as to allow the adjustment of an intermediate portion 2c located between the socket 2a and the needle properly so called, in order to position the needle 2 correctly. The upper lip la of the cylindrical wall 1b serves as a stop to a length of travel provided between the socket 2a and the intermediate portion 2c of the needle 2. A second cylindrical wall 1c, coaxial with the cylindrical wall Ib of the housing 1 for the needle 2 surrounds
this latter wall up to the level where it reaches the base of the housing 1 delimited by the cylindrical wall 1b. A radial portion 1d of this wall extends outwards and terminates in a third cylindrical wall le, concentric with the other two but extending back to a higher level than they do and bounding an access opening 7 (Figure Ib).
As Figure la shows the overall shape of the illustrated container 1-le for the needle 2 is that of a cylindrical stand whose base plate 1d is intended to provide a stable supporting surface when the tip 3 of the injection device 4 is being connected to the connecting end 2a of the hypodermic needle 2. In addition, the exterior cylindrical wall le has an internal diameter selected to match the external diameter of the body 5 of the injection instrument 4 so that it offers a guiding surface for that body when the tip 3 of the injection instrument 4 is being connected to the socket formed by the connecting end 2a of the needle 2. The ergonomic shape of the container 1-le and the guiding surface make it possible to connect the instrument 4 to the needle 2 without holding the container and simply by placing it on a flat surface and applying sufficient pressure along the axis of the instrument 4 to deform a rib 2b located on the inner face of the socket 2a and allow it to engage with a groove or thread 3a located on the tip 3 of the injection instrument 4. The instrument 4 needs then merely to be withdrawn from the container as shown in Figure 1b to be ready for the injection of the product contained in its cartridge 6.
In a preferred version of the invention several containers 1-le are arranged side by side and linked to one another by a
flat surface If forming a shared stand and extending as far as the upper ends of the exterior cylindrical walls le of the different containers 1-le. This arrangement substantially enlar-ges the shared surface supporting the individual containers attached to one another, making it easier to grasp and thereby facilitating the operations involved in connecting the individual needles to the injection instrument 4.
In a still more advantageous version of the invention, illustrated in Figure 2, the flat surface 1f linking the individual containers 1-le can also serve to link to them the extractors of the needles 2 used to separate them from the injection instrument 4.
Figure 2 shows part of an assembly of containers arranged side by side comprising two containers of which that marked 1-le is identical with the container in Figures la, Ib. The other container serves as a needle extractor. Its overall aspect is similar to that of container 1-le which is intended to contain a sterile needle 2. It also has a housing 11 for receiving a needle 2. This housing 11 is identical to the housing 1. Its upper end terminates in a lip lla on which rests the outer face of the socket forming the connecting end 2a of the needle 2. In this extractor the second cylindrical wall lie surrounding the wall bounding the housing 11 is continued upwards as far as the upper end of the exterior wall lie by several elastic arms 12, forming between them a cylindrical receptor whose diameter matches that of the connecting end 2a of the hypodermic needle 2.
These elastic arms terminate in locking elements 13 projecting inwards into the receptacle formed between the elastic arms 12 and bounding an opening 17 of variable diameter. The length of the elastic arms 12 is selected so that the lower face of the locking elements 13 is located precisely at the level of the upper face of the connecting end 2a of the needle 2 when the lower face of this same end 2a is resting against the lip lla. The upper face 13a of these locking elements is bevelled. This bevelled face 13a has the effect, when the used hypodermic needle 2 is moved against it, guided by the cylindrical surface 5 of the barrel of the injection instrument 4 which is guided by the inner face of the exterior cylindrical surface lie of the extraction container 11-lle, and when pressure is exerted downwards along the axis, of creating a centrifugal radial component allowing the elastic arms 12 to be parted, thereby increasing the diameter of the opening 17 and making it possible to insert the connecting end 2a of the hypodermic needle 2 through the opening 17 into the receptacle formed between the arms 12.
The elastic arms 12 resume their initial position as soon as the lower face of the connecting end 2a of the needle 2 rests against the lip lla of the housing 11. The lower face of the locking elements 13, engaged with the upper surface of the connecting end 2a, prevents the needle 2 from escaping from the container, in which it is now trapped. By exerting traction on the injection instrument 4 while holding on to the extraction container 11-lle it is possible to separate the injection instrument 4 from the hypodermic needle 2 which remains trapped.

In the variation described in connection with Figure 2 two separate containers marked respectively 1-le, 11-lle, are needed for each needle 2, one for the sterile needle 2 and the other for the needle 2 after use. We shall now describe, in connection with Figures 3a through 3c, a variation in which one single container can successively receive a sterile needle 2 and then be used to extract and stock the used needle 2.
In this variation there is a container 21-21e more or less identical to the preceding containers, with three cylindrical walls 21b, 21c, 21e, but in which the housing 21 formed by the cylindrical wall 21b, instead of receiving the hypodermic needle 2 directly, receives another receptacle 22 formed by two cylindrical coaxial parts, a lower one 22a, housed and fixed inside the wall 21b of the housing 21, and an upper one 22b, extending as far as the upper end of the exterior cylindrical surface 21e of the container 21-21e.
This differs from the preceding embodiments in that the upper part of the receptacle 22, installed above the housing 21 of the needle 2 properly so called, is of a height approximately twice that of the connecting end 2a of the hypodermic needle 2. Elastic arms 22c are located in the lower part of the upper cylindrical wall 22b of the receptacle 22. These elastic arms 22c are designed similarly to the elastic arms 12 in Figure 2. They too terminate at their upper ends in locking elements 23, identical to the locking elements 13 in Figure 2. These elastic arms 22c and the locking elements 23 play the same role as the corresponding parts in Figure 2.
As is shown in Figure 3a a ring 24, having passages 24a at its base, surrounds the connecting end 2a of the needle 2. The dimensions of this ring 24 permit it to project slightly beyond the upper surface of the connecting end 2a of the needle 2, so that the locking elements 23 and the elastic arms 22c are kept back, as is shown in Figure 3a. The diameter of the ring 24 is selected so that it will be retained by friction around the connecting end 2a. A cap 25 which can be pierced closes the upper opening of the container 21-21e.
When the user wishes to connect the needle 2 enclosed in the container 21-21e to the tip 3 of the injection instrument 4 the lower rim of the cylindrical wall 5 of the barrel of the instrument 4 is centred on the cap 25 and then pressure is exerted on this instrument 4 along its axis. The first effect of this pressure is to pierce the cap 25. The instrument 4 is then guided by the cylindrical wall 21e of the container 21-21e, bringing the tip 3 of the instrument 4 into the cavity of the socket forming the connecting end 2a of the hypodermic needle 2. The connection between this needle 2 and the interior wall of this socket is effected in the manner described above with regard to the embodiment in Figure la.
When the needle 2 connected to the tip 3 is withdrawn along its axis it draws with it the ring 24 until it rests against a lip 22d formed at the upper end of the cylindrical wall of the upper part 22b of the receptacle 22. The internal diameter of this lip 22d matches approximately that of the connecting end 2a of the needle 2, thus allowing this needle to be easily extracted from the container 21-21e by causing slippage between the
connecting end 2a and the ring 24, obviously, the frictional force between these two pieces must be leas than the tractional force which must be exerted between the needle 2 and the injection instrument 4 for the needle 2 to be separated from the instrument.
As ia shown in Figure 3b, at the end of the movement of the
ring 24 the passages 24a are opposite the locking elements 23,
allowing the devices to pass through them because of the
elasticity of the arms 22c which resume their initial shape and
to project from the inner face of the ring 24.
As soon as the sterile needle has been removed from the container as described above the latter is ready to receive the used needle and to separate it from the injection instrument 4. As can be seen, this separation is effected in a manner identical to that described in connection with Figure 2. The parts of the locking elements 23 which project within the ring 24 have oblique upper faces 23a, so that the axial pressure exerted upon these oblique faces when the connecting end 2a of the needle 2 is inserted will force them back allowing this connecting end to be pushed until it comes to rest against the lip 21a formed at the upper end of the housing 21 for the needle 2. At this moment the locking elements 23 are freed, so that they can close again above the upper face of the connecting end 2a of the needle 2, trapping the needle in the container 21-21e. The injection instrument 4 can then be separated by exerting axial traction on it while holding the container 21-21e whose ergonomic shape forms an interface making it easy to grasp, whereas this operation would be very difficult, in fact impos-
sible, for an inexperienced user to perform if the container were not there. The advantage of the ergonomic interface is further increased when several containers are arranged side by side, linked by a shared horizontal wall If, which improves the purchase on the stand shared by these containers 21-21e.
In the variation illustrated in Figures 4a through 4c the container takes the form of a tubular body 31 bounding a cylindrical housing 36 accessed through an opening 38. The hypodermic needles 2 are inserted successively in the housing 36. In this variation the connecting socket 2a of the needle 2 serves also as a spacer keeping the needles separated along their axes. As this connecting socket 2a has to dilate radially when it is being connected to, the tip 3 of the injection instrument 4 the external diameter of this connecting socket 2a is very slightly less than the internal diameter of the tubular body 31, so as to prevent the connection operation from causing the needle to become jammed in the tubular body 31 and thereby making it difficult to remove. There is another portion 2d, located between the connecting socket 2a and the needle 2, whose diameter matches the internal diameter of the tubular body 31, which serves to keep the needles within this body.
These needles 2 are accessible from one end of the tubular body 31 and connection with the tip 3 of the injection instrument is effected in the manner described above. In this example there are six needles lodged in the tubular body. The first needle 2, which will be the last to be used, is held in place by a supporting device 32 positioned by sliding it into the tubular body 31. The frictional force between this supporting device 31and the interior wall of the tubular body 31 is however selected so that it will resist the pressure required to connect the needle 2 and the injection instrument 4. This supporting device 32 has two housings 32a, 32b positioned with mirror symmetry in relation to the centre of the device 32, with their ends facing outwards and open. The diameter of these housings is selected so that they can receive the intermediate portion 2c of the hypodermic needle.
This supporting device 32 and the axial housings 32a, 32b make it possible for the needles 2 withdrawn from the tubular body 31 to be inserted after use through the other end of the tubular body 31 and then separated from the injection instrument 4. For this purpose the other end has elastic arms 33 terminating in locking elements 34 like those in the embodiments described above. These locking elements 34 have bevelled outer faces 34a bounding an opening 37 of variable diameter. These bevelled faces 34a are intended to convert the axial force exerted upon them by the portion 2d of the needle 2 into a radial component which makes it possible to bend the elastic arms 33 and thus increase the diameter of the opening 37 in order to allow the connecting end 2a to pass through. The supporting device 32 must therefore slide each time a used needle 2 is inserted through the end of the tubular body 31 provided with the locking elements 34.
As is shown in Figure 4c the locking elements 34 become
engaged in a space created between the end of the connecting
socket 2a and the cartridge 6, so that traction exerted between
the injection instrument 4 and the tubular body 31 makes it

possible to separate the instrument 4 from the needle 2 which is trapped in the tubular body 31. The ergonomic shape of the latter offers a firm grip which makes it easy to perform this operation.



We claim:
1. A storage container for at least one hypodermic needle (2) having a
connecting end (2a) which has connectors (2b) complementary with
connectors (3a) on the tip of an injection instrument (4), in which the
hypodermic needle is retracted inside a cylindrical barrel (5), one of the
connectors (2b, 3a) having radial elasticity and devices for converting an axial
force exerted between the needle (2) and the cylindrical barrel (5), into at
least one radial component capable of deforming the elastic connector, said
container having a housing (1; 21) designed for holding this needle in a
determined position, and an opening (7; 27) giving access to the housing (1,
11, 21), characterized in that a second cylindrical wall (1c; 11c; 21 c)
surrounds the cylindrical wall (1b) of housing (1; 11; 21) and an upper lip (1a)
extends between said two walls (1b, 1c), a radial portion (1d) of said second
wall extends outwards and terminates in a third cylindrical wall (1e; 11e; 21e)
coaxial with the longitudinal axis of the housing (1, 21) and the inner surface
of which is a guiding surface designed to engage with a complementary
guiding surface of the cylindrical barrel (5) so that the engagement of these
guiding surfaces (1e; 11e; 21e); with each other allows the complementary
connectors (2b, 3a) to be put in the assembling position following the exertion
on the devices for converting an axial force into at least one radial
component.
2. A container as claimed in claim 1, wherein the base of the container is flat
and perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of said housing to make it possible
to connect the instrument to the needle simply by placing it on a flat surface
and applying sufficient pressure along the axis of the instrument.
3. A container as claimed in claim 1, wherein the second cylindrical wall (11c;
21c) is continued upwards by several elastic arms (12, 22c) terminate in
locking elements (13, 23) projecting inwards into the cylindrical receptacle for
the connecting end (2a) of the hypodermic needle (2), formed between the
elastic arms (12, 22c) and bounding an opening (17, 28) of a variable
diameter and at least one device (13a; 23a) associated with the locking
elements (13; 23) for converting a force along the axis of said cylindrical
guiding surface downwards on the device into at least one radial component which is applied to the locking elements (13; 23) to deform them radially in order that the diameter of the opening (17; 28) be increased to the maximum diameter and that the minimum diameter be resumed after the connecting end (2a) has passed through, allowing the locking elements (13; 23) to be engaged with the rear face of the connecting end (2a), thereby allowing the connecting end (2a) to be separated from the tip (3) by the application of tractional force along the axis of said cylindrical guiding surface.
4. A container as claimed in one of the preceding claims, wherein a number of
the housings (1,11,21) are arranged side by side on a shared stand (1f).
5. A container as claimed in claim 3, wherein the opening (17; 27) delimited by
the radially elastic locking elements (12, 13; 22c, 23) serves as the access
opening of a closed housing. .
6. A container as claimed in claim 1, wherein the access opening (7; 27) is
closed by a cap (15; 25), which is pierced.
7. A container as claimed in one of the proceeding claims, wherein a receptacle
(22) above the housing (21; 21 e) for holding the hypodermic needle (2) in a
determined position has two coaxial opening (27, 28) at a distance from each
other, the first (27) of these openings having a fixed diameter while the
second opening (28) is delimited by elastically radial devices (22c; 23) so as
to allow its diameter to vary between a minimum diameter and a maximum
diameter, and in that a ring (24) movable between two positions inside said
receptacle (22), having an internal diameter approximately equal to that of the
first opening (27) and an axial dimension larger than half of the height of said
receptacle (22) is useful for gripping the connecting end (2a) and while in the
first position keeping back the locking elements (23), this ring (24) having, at
a distance from its projecting end equal to the distance between the two said
openings (27, 28), passages (24a) whose dimensions allow the locking
elements (23) to pass through them and to project within the ring (24) in the
second position, so that, once the complementary connectors (2a, 3a) are
connected together displacing the injection instrument (4) outwards along the longitudinal axis of the housing causes the hypodermic needle (2) and the ring (24) to shift until the ring rests against a lip (22d) of the first opening (27) at the upper end of the receptacle (22), in which position the locking elements (23) pass through the passages (24a) allowing the ring (24) to be separated from the connecting end (2a), while the reinsertion of the connecting end (2a) into the housing causes this connecting end to be held in position by the locking elements (23).

Documents:

in-pct-2002-1025-del-abstract.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-assignment.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-claims.pdf

IN-PCT-2002-1025-DEL-Correspondence-Others (06-11-2009).pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-correspondence-others.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-correspondence-po.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-description (complete).pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-drawings.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-form-1.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-form-13.pdf

IN-PCT-2002-1025-DEL-Form-15 (06-11-2009).pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-form-18.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-form-2.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-form-3.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-form-5.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-gpa.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-pct-210.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-pct-301.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-pct-304.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-pct-308.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-pct-332.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-pct-409.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-pct-416.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-petition-137.pdf

in-pct-2002-1025-del-petition-138.pdf


Patent Number 212543
Indian Patent Application Number IN/PCT/2002/01025/DEL
PG Journal Number 50/2007
Publication Date 14-Dec-2007
Grant Date 04-Dec-2007
Date of Filing 11-Oct-2002
Name of Patentee ARES TRADING S.A.
Applicant Address ZONE INDUSTRIELLE DE 1'OURIETTAZ, CH-1170, AUBONNE, SWITZERLAND.
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 BERGERON LUC CHEMIN DE LA CONDEMINE, CH-1034 BOUSSENS, SWITZERLAND.
2 BOSSET GREGOIRE 39 CHEMIN DE UTTINS, CH-1208, PREVERENGES, SWETZERLAND.
3 MOULIN JEROME 48 GRAND-RUE, CH-1890, ST-MAURICE, SWITZERLAND.
4 SOLDINI LAURENT 14 BIS DRUEY, CH-1018 LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAND.
PCT International Classification Number A61M 5/32
PCT International Application Number PCT/IB01/00827
PCT International Filing date 2001-05-14
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 00810415.0 2000-05-15 EUROPEAN UNION