Magnetic stainless steel needles are detectable in processed meat. The previous non magnetic versions, made of 304 stainless steel, aren't. Disposable hypodermic needles made from martensitic and ferritic stainless steel are easily detectable at the smallest size. needles are conveniently made from 420 martensitic stainless steel or 430 ferritic stainless steel.

Patent
   RE43453
Priority
Feb 09 2000
Filed
Jul 12 2004
Issued
Jun 05 2012
Expiry
Feb 09 2020
Assg.orig
Entity
Large
0
52
all paid
1. A system for detecting whether a hypodermic cannulae cannula or portions a portion thereof embedded is present within a meat, sample from an animal, said system comprising;:
a metal detector for detecting the presence of whether metal embedded is present in a the meat sample; and
a hypodermic cannula having a fluid passageway for injecting or drawing fluid and being comprised at least in part of a stainless steel selected from magnetic a magnetically responsive martensitic stainless steel, ferritic stainless steel, mixtures of ferritic stainless steel metals consisting of martensitic, ferritic, or and mixtures thereof, said metals of martensitic stainless steel, and said cannula having been prepared by a plurality of cold drawings drawing and in having a size gauge of between from 14 and to 20 gauge, wherein said cannula is more detectable by said metal detector when said cannula or a portion thereof is present in the meat sample than a cannula or a portion thereof of comparable size and made of standard austenitic stainless steel.
0. 9. A method for injecting an animal with a hypodermic cannula, said method comprising:
providing a hypodermic needle cannula prepared by cold drawing and having a size ranging from 14 to 20 gauge, the needle cannula having a fluid passageway for injecting fluid into or drawing fluid from the animal and comprising at least in part a magnetically responsive stainless steel selected from martensitic stainless steel, ferritic stainless steel, mixtures of ferritic stainless steel, and mixtures of martensitic stainless steel wherein the cannula is more detectable by a metal detector when the cannula or a portion thereof is present in the meat sample than a cannula or a portion thereof of comparable size and made of standard austenitic stainless steel;
injecting the animal with the hypodermic needle cannula; and
subsequently detecting with a metal detector whether the hypodermic cannula or a portion thereof is present in a meat sample from the animal.
0. 12. A method of detecting whether a hypodermic needle cannula or a portion thereof is present within a meat sample of an animal, said method comprising:
providing a meat sample from an animal that has been injected with a hypodermic needle cannula, the needle cannula having a fluid passageway for injecting fluid into the animal or drawing fluid from the animal and comprising at least in part a magnetically responsive stainless steel selected from martensitic stainless steel, ferritic stainless steel, mixtures of ferritic stainless steel, and mixtures of martensitic stainless steel, the cannula being prepared by cold drawing and having a size from 14 to 20 gauge, and wherein the cannula or a portion thereof is more detectable by a metal detector when the cannula or a portion thereof is present in the meat sample than a cannula or a portion thereof of comparable size and made of standard austenitic stainless steel;
providing a metal detector for detecting the presence of metal in the meat sample;
exposing the meat sample to the metal detector; and
detecting with the metal detector whether the needle cannula or a portion thereof is present in the meat sample with the metal detector.
2. The system as set forth in claim 1, wherein said martensitic stainless steel, consists of comprises 420 stainless steel.
3. The system as set forth in claim 1, wherein said ferritic stainless steel, consists of comprises 430 stainless steel.
0. 4. A hypodermic needle cannula or portion thereof having high detectability in a meat sample, comprising:
a metal selected from magnetic stainless steel metals consisting of martensitic, ferritic, or mixtures thereof, said metals prepared, in a preparation step by a plurality of cold drawings and in a size gauge of between 14 and 20, whereby detectability of said needle cannula or portion thereof prepared according to said preparation step is greater than those prepared in the absence of said preparation step.
0. 5. The hypodermic needle cannula as set forth in claim 4, wherein said stainless steel is selected from the group consisting of 430 and 420 stainless steel, or mixtures thereof.
0. 6. A method of detecting hypodermic needle cannulae or portions thereof embedded within a meat sample, comprising:
providing a hypodermic needle cannula or portion thereof to as set forth in claim 4;
providing a metal detector for detecting the presence of metal in a meat sample;
providing a meat sample for exposure to said metal detector;
exposing said sample to said detector; and
detecting the presence of said needle cannula or portion thereof.
0. 7. The system as set forth in claim 1, wherein said stainless steel of said cannula comprises at least in part ferritic stainless steel and martensitic stainless steel.
0. 8. The method as set forth in claim 15, wherein said stainless steel comprises at least in part a mixture of 430 stainless steel and 420 stainless steel.
0. 10. The method of claim 9, wherein said metal comprises martensitic stainless steel and ferritic stainless steel.
0. 11. The method of claim 9, wherein said metal comprises ferritic stainless steel.
0. 13. The method as set forth in claim 15, wherein said martensitic stainless steel comprises 420 stainless steel.
0. 14. The method of claim 12, wherein said metal comprises martensitic stainless steel and ferritic stainless steel.
0. 15. The method of claim 12, wherein said metal comprises ferritic stainless steel.

This invention relates to a new use of stainless steel. Stainless steel hypodermic needles are used in raising livestock to be processed in meat packing plants. The needles break leaving metal in processed meat. Although metal detectors are employed in most meat packing plants, currently they don't detect stainless steel needles in meat.

Needles, which have broken off in livestock, are a problem in processed meat. Although disposable, in the field they are used repeatedly until they snap or break off in livestock (pigs and cattle). The needle has a stainless steel cannula fixed in a hub. The cannula breaks away from the hub or the cannula itself breaks, and remains unrecovered in the animal. Hubs are generally plastic (often polypropylene), aluminum, or chromium coated brass. Broken needles are more common in pork than beef because of the sheer volume of pigs processed each year. Needles will be present in processed meat from all livestock subject to injection. The current disposable needles used in the raising of livestock are usually made of 304 stainless steel, an austenitic alloy typically about 18 to 20% chromium and 8 to 12% nickel. It is not magnetic and needles made of it are not detectable by metal detectors currently used in meat plants, nor are other disposable hypodermic needles made of non-magnetic metals and alloys. One hundred million disposable hypodermic needles are used yearly. The current usage of disposable needles in the raising of livestock causes them to break. These undetectable needles end up in processed meat and pass through packing plants, which are sold to consumers, domestically and internationally. Many meat packing plants in North America use metal detectors in an attempt to detect and remove disposable hypodermic needles from processed meat. Despite this practice few, if any, disposable needles are detected and removed. For all practical purposes disposable hypodermic needles of austenitic 304 stainless steel and other non-magnetic metals and alloys are not detectable.

The problem is as at least as old as disposable hypodermic needles, and the meat packing industry is well aware of it. The problem has not been addressed by the needle manufacturers, who are also aware of the problem. The suggestion sometimes made that the stainless steel disposable needles should not be used in livestock raising, or at any rate not repeatedly used, is fanciful and not at all practical.

Although this suggestion is obviously ridiculous it is the sole suggestion to emerge from an in depth study at the Iowa State University, Ames (Hoff et. al., American Journal of Veterinary Research, 60, No.3, 292-298, 1999) which concluded that stainless steel needles and their hubs were sufficiently resilient to avoid breakage in single use. The contributory factor of breakage is that the animal moves when injected deforming the needle. The prime cause of breakage is that the deformed needle is straightened by hand and reused. The needle when straightened is much more likely to break off in the animal, and the chance increases with repeated straightening. While the manufacturers place product notices on needle packaging specifying “single use only”, this is not followed in practice. The Iowa study also recommended “single use only.”

There is increasing worry about disposable needles in the processed meat industry especially since complaints and presumably incidence are increasing. Export contracts are especially sensitive to the discovery of needles in meat. Two surveys were carried out in 1999 in Canada by the Canadian Cattlemen, a trade publication; one of veterinarians, one of processors, purveyors and retailers. The veterinarians (25% of whom had experienced broken needles) recommended use of proper animal restraints (50%, but difficult in practice), restricted reuse of the needle 5 to 20 times (41%), and discarding damaged needles (28%). Of the producers 41% had from 1 to 12 complaints about needles in the average year, 30% had metal detectors, and 31% used metal detectors (14% supplemented by visual inspection), about 14% passed all products through a metal detector, and another 14% passed some products through a metal detector. About 73% had high confidence in metal detection in trim (not whole muscle), 18% medium and 9% low. The surveys as summarized (Donkersgoed, Canadian Cattlemen, January 2000, p. 28) stated that the processors had little confidence in the ability of metal detectors to detect metal in large cuts of meal. As noted above, austenitic stainless steel is non-magnetic and one of the hardest metals to detect using a metal detector.

There are four groups involved, the needle manufacturers, veterinarians, producers, meat packers. Neither the packer nor the producer can rely on the other to detect needles in meat. In practice the packer is liable, because it is difficult if not impossible to identify the producer. Although some meat packing plants use metal detectors these are rarely successful in detecting needles.

There is therefore a need for detectable disposable needles. Current common needles come in several sizes especially 20 gauge×½ inch, 18 gauge×1 inch, 18 gauge×1½ inch, 16 gauge×1 inch, 16 gauge×1½ inch, 14 gauge×1 inch, 14 gauge×1½inch, with larger needles used for larger animals and smaller needles for smaller animals. The primary need is to detect the smallest needles when broken off (20 gauge×½ inch), and preferably smaller broken portions of such needles.

Applicant is not aware of any prior art.

It is a principal object of the invention to provide hypodermic needles detectable in meat by metal detectors currently used in meat packing plants. It is a subsidiary object of the invention to provide hypodermic needles detectable in meat as broken portions by metal detectors currently used in meat packing plants.

The invention in its broadest aspect is directed to a magnetic stainless steel hypodermic needle detectable in meat by metal detectors. The magnetic stainless steel is preferably selected from the group of ferritic and martensitic stainless steels. The stainless steel may be ferritic, preferably 430 stainless steel, or it may be martensitic, preferably 420 stainless steel. The needle is preferably of length from ½ to 1½ inches long and gauge from 14 to 20. The needle may be of length ½ inch and gauge 20, of length 1 inch and gauge 18, of length 1½ inch and gauge 18, of length 1 inch and gauge 16, of length 1½ inch and gauge 16, of length 1 inch and gauge 14, of length 1½ inch and gauge 14.

In another aspect the invention is directed to the novel use of magnetic stainless steel in disposable hypodermic needles, detectable in meat by metal detectors. The magnetic stainless steel is preferably selected from the group consisting of ferritic and martensitic stainless steel. More preferably the stainless steel is martensitic stainless steel, conveniently 420 stainless steel. Also more preferably the stainless steel is ferritic stainless steel, conveniently 430 stainless steel.

In another aspect the invention is directed to the manufacture of disposable hypodermic needles detectable in meat by metal detectors from magnetic stainless steel. The magnetic stainless steel is preferably selected from the group consisting of ferritic and martensitic stainless steel. More preferably the stainless steel is martensitic stainless steel, conveniently 420 stainless steel. Also more preferably the stainless steel is ferritic stainless steel, conveniently 430 stainless steel. The preferred method of manufacture is cold drawing of tubular stock, which typically requires several iterations.

The invention is illustrated but not restricted by reference to the preferred embodiments. It is well known that austenitic stainless steels are non-magnetic, and almost impossible to detect using metal detectors, which rely on distortion of an oscillating electromagnetic field. The reason is that non-magnetic stainless steel is a relatively poor conductor of electric current and has no magnetic properties and therefore not detectable. The stainless steel used in hypodermic needles is typically austenitic 304 stainless steel, and therefore not detectable.

Austenitic stainless steels are iron-chromium-nickel alloys with specified but variable carbon content, which are not hardenable by heat treatment, and are regarded as non-magnetic due to the nickel present. Martensitic stainless steels are iron-chromium alloys with no or little nickel content (less than 1%), hardenable by heat treatment, and regarded as magnetic. Ferritic stainless steels are iron-chromium alloys with no or little nickel content (less than 1%), are not hardenable by heat treatment, and regarded as magnetic. Ferritic stainless steels have a lower carbon content than martensitic stainless steels. These terms are well known to those skilled in the art. 304 stainless steel is the most common grade of austenitic stainless steel. 420 stainless steel, a martensitic stainless steel, has a higher carbon content than 410 stainless steel, the most common grade of martensitic stainless steel. 430 stainless steel is the most common grade of ferritic stainless steel.

Since stainless steel disposable needles are desirable, applicant decided to test other stainless steels to see if they could be detected. Applicant had no prior knowledge of whether magnetic stainless steel disposable needles would be detected by metal detectors in meat packing plants. A martensitic 420 stainless steel welding rod was reduced to approximately the size of a 20 gauge ½ inch needle for test purposes. It was then placed in meat and run through Loma and Safeline brand name metal detectors on meat production lines and easily detected, unexpectedly and to the surprise of applicant and to the amazement of everyone else. No one at the meat plants believed that the experimental rods of stainless steel that size could be detected. The experiment was repeated in 2 and 4 kilogram pork butts with bone, as bone is believed to affect metal detection, to convince both applicant and observer (packer). The 20 gauge ½ inch rod was detected on every trial. It was decided to manufacture a batch of needles for further testing. Unfortunately not only did 420 stainless prove impossible to obtain in the tubular form necessary for needle manufacture, but so did other martensitic stainless steels.

Ferritic stainless steel which is similar in composition, but not structure, was considered as a possible alternative. Ferritic 430 stainless steel was available in suitable tubular form. A small sample of 20 gauge 1 inch disposable cannulae (needles without hubs) were made up from this material and were similarly tested and detected. Again, applicant could not be certain before testing that the needles would be detectable, and nobody else had any inkling that they would be detectable. First 1 inch needles were tested in 2 and 4 kilogram pork butts with bone on meat production lines using Loma and Safeline brand name metal detectors and detected on every trial. Needles were then cut in half to simulate 20 gauge ½ inch needles, which were then tested in 2 and 4 kilogram pork butts with bone. Again, the needles were easily detected on every trial, to the amazement of observers.

Ferritic cannulae, 20 gauge 1 inch, were made up with chromium plated brass hubs as needles for injection testing. Generally, 430 stainless has lower tensile strength than 304 stainless so the question whether ferritic needles were as effective as austenitic needles arose. The ferritic needles were fitted onto a hypodermic syringe and tested by jabbing into a pork cadaver. Since the skin of pork cadavers toughens after death, the needles were tested about twenty-four hours after death. Forty-one punctures were made in the cadaver, using a single needle. When the 20 gauge needle deformed, it was finger straightened. The needle deformed with use, breaking at the forty first puncture. As far as applicant is aware this performance is comparable to existing 304 stainless needles. Since 430 stainless has less tensile strength than 304 stainless, the needle may deform and break with less use, but the practical difference is small.

There was no prior reason to believe that martensitic or ferritic stainless steel in the dimensions of disposable hypodermic needles would be detectable by metal detectors in meat production lines. There was thus no inkling or useful intention to combine martensitic or ferritic steel and the form of disposable hypodermic needles, which would be easily and routinely detected by metal detectors in meat processing lines. These detectors are set at high sensitivity to attempt (unsuccessfully) to detect the austenitic needles. Applicant was not faced with ignorance but active disbelief in the meat packing industry. Hearsay was not enough, demonstration was and is required to convince people.

The production batch of ferritic 430 stainless steel needles was made by cold drawing through a die from 2 inch diameter ⅜ inch wall thickness tubular stock. Some needles were fitted with brass hubs, some with plastic hubs. The hubs can be brass, aluminum, plastic (often polypropylene). Generally, several iterations of cold drawing are required. In the particular method used six were necessary.

By selecting magnetic stainless steel for disposable hypodermic needles applicant has solved a long standing problem in the meat industry.

As those skilled in the art would realize these preferred described details and materials and components can be subjected to substantial variation, modification, change, alteration, and substitution without affecting or modifying the function of the described embodiments.

Although embodiments of the invention have been described above, it is not limited thereto, and it will be apparent to persons skilled in the art that numerous modifications and variations form part of the present invention insofar as they do not depart from the spirit, nature and scope of the claimed and described invention.

Humphrey, Grant S.

Patent Priority Assignee Title
Patent Priority Assignee Title
3179107,
3723102,
3741198,
3780734,
3865644,
3882849,
4409046, Dec 10 1979 SORTIMAT CREUZ & CO GMBH, Method of and an apparatus for producing disposable syringes and the disposable syringe produced
4449973, Jun 26 1982 LUTHER MEDICAL PRODUCTS, INC , Small gauge, pre-split cannula and process for manufacture
4490139, Jan 28 1983 Eli Lilly and Company Implant needle and method
4508119, Dec 11 1976 Needle
4526177, Jun 24 1983 Electronic anatomical probe
4560880, Sep 19 1983 Varian Semiconductor Equipment Associates, Inc Apparatus for positioning a workpiece in a localized vacuum processing system
4702737, Jul 14 1986 Dual dose syringe
4747834, Sep 19 1986 NEOGEN CORPORATION Back-fill syringe
4774741, Feb 11 1987 Meat Processing Service Corporation Method for treating slaughtered animals
4788844, May 01 1987 INVENTIVE ENTERPRISES INC , WEST CHICAGO, IL Apparatus for straightening slender shafts
4968362, Oct 08 1986 Sherwood Services AG Dark metallic product
4969963, Jun 30 1988 Aichi Steel Works, Ltd. Soft magnetic stainless steel having good cold forgeability
5000912, Dec 15 1989 Ethicon, Inc. Nickel titanium martensitic steel for surgical needles
5015235, Feb 20 1987 National Carpet Equipment, Inc. Syringe needle combination
5041098, May 19 1989 GRANTADLER CORPORATION Vascular access system for extracorporeal treatment of blood
5162037, Apr 01 1988 WHITSON LABORATORIES, INC Magnetically influenced homeopathic pharmaceutical formulations, methods of their preparation and methods of their administration
5165218, Jun 20 1991 Automatic sorting, stacking and packaging apparatus and method
5306251, Mar 30 1990 Device for injecting a fluid or inserting an object beneath the skin of an animal
5336186, Feb 10 1993 HABLEY MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY COROPRATION Safety syringe with displaceable barrel hub
5372778, Dec 11 1992 Daido Tokushuko Kabushiki Kaisha Electromagnetic stainless steel
5411613, Oct 05 1993 United States Surgical Corporation Method of making heat treated stainless steel needles
5412182, Apr 09 1992 City of Hope Eddy current heating for hyperthermia cancer treatment
5433711, Aug 01 1994 Eli Lilly and Company Syringe with cannula-protecting sheath and sealing center rod
5512237, Oct 07 1991 Sandvik Intellectual Property Aktiebolag Precipitation hardenable martensitic stainless steel
5527283, Feb 28 1992 Safe medical syringe and method of manufacture
5601664, Oct 11 1994 CRS Holdings, Inc. Corrosion-resistant magnetic material
5649546, Jun 25 1991 Metal detector for the localization of a metallic foreign body penetrated or implanted into a human or animal body
5651843, Dec 09 1992 Ethicon, Inc. Means for predicting preformance of stainless steel alloy for use with surgical needles
5715822, Sep 28 1995 General Electric Company Magnetic resonance devices suitable for both tracking and imaging
5720300, Nov 10 1993 Medtronic Ave, Inc High performance wires for use in medical devices and alloys therefor
5792180, Jan 23 1996 United States Surgical Corporation High bend strength surgical needles and surgical incision members and methods of producing same by double sided photoetching
5814166, Nov 14 1996 Ethicon, Inc Process for heat treating and tempering surgical needles
5815790, Jan 19 1994 Damasteel Aktiebolag Method relating to the manufacturing of a composite metal product
5894015, Apr 07 1993 Disinfection of medical sharps
5923165, May 10 1996 YKK Corporation Method and apparatus for detecting broken sewing needles in sewn articles
6027482, Dec 12 1994 Becton Dickinson and Company Syringe tip cap
6211789, Mar 09 1998 AGINFOLINK HOLDINGS, INC Method and system for manual entry of data into integrated electronic database for livestock data collection
6238491, May 05 1999 DAVIDSON, JAMES A Niobium-titanium-zirconium-molybdenum (nbtizrmo) alloys for dental and other medical device applications
6315113, Jun 30 1998 Hetex Holdings, LLC Chemical disposal of medical syringe needles and other hazardous sharps
EP30353,
EP279583,
EP806683,
EP899589,
GB1217561,
RE28713, Oct 01 1973 Sherwood Medical Company Hypodermic needle and support structure therefor
WO9307303,
////
Executed onAssignorAssigneeConveyanceFrameReelDoc
Jun 12 2003HUMPHREY, GRANT S PROCESS DETECTABLE NEEDLES, INC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0156490427 pdf
Jul 12 2004NEOGEN CORPORATION(assignment on the face of the patent)
Jan 17 2005PROCESS DETECTABLE NEEDLES INC RIVARD INSTRUMENTS INC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0166230924 pdf
Dec 03 2007RIVARD INSTRUMENTS, INC FORMERLY KNOWN AS PROCESS DETECTABLE NEEDLES INC NEOGEN CORPORATIONASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0203530001 pdf
Date Maintenance Fee Events
Jan 07 2015M1553: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 12th Year, Large Entity.


Date Maintenance Schedule
Jun 05 20154 years fee payment window open
Dec 05 20156 months grace period start (w surcharge)
Jun 05 2016patent expiry (for year 4)
Jun 05 20182 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4)
Jun 05 20198 years fee payment window open
Dec 05 20196 months grace period start (w surcharge)
Jun 05 2020patent expiry (for year 8)
Jun 05 20222 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8)
Jun 05 202312 years fee payment window open
Dec 05 20236 months grace period start (w surcharge)
Jun 05 2024patent expiry (for year 12)
Jun 05 20262 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12)