Patent classifications
A61M60/825
Blood pump including a rotor
A blood pump includes a rotor mounted in a pump housing via a bearing. The housing includes a metal rod extending from the outer wall of the housing towards the inner side of the housing. The rod allows dissipating heat and has a stabilizing action.
Heart pump with passive purge system
A heart pump assembly includes an elongate catheter with a proximal portion and a distal portion, a rotor at the distal portion of the elongate catheter, a driveshaft, and a bearing. The rotor can include an impeller blade shaped to induce fluid flow in a first axial direction. The drive shaft may be coupled to or integrally formed with a proximal end of the rotor and can include a pump element formed in a surface of the drive shaft. The bearing can include a bore into which the drive shaft extends. The pump element is shaped so as to induce fluid flow through the bore in a second axial direction which can be the same or opposite to the first axial direction.
Distal tip element for a ventricular assist device
Apparatus and methods are described including a left-ventricular assist device that includes a tube configured to traverse a subject's aortic valve, with a distal portion of the tube disposed within the subject's left ventricle. A frame is disposed within the distal portion of the tube. A pump disposed within the frame pumps blood through the tube. A distal-tip element defines a straight proximal portion that defines a longitudinal axis, and a curved distal portion that is shaped such as to curve in a first direction with respect to the longitudinal axis before passing through an inflection point and curving in a second direction with respect to the longitudinal axis, such that the curved distal portion defines a bulge on one side of the longitudinal axis. Other applications are also described.
BLOOD PUMP
The invention relates to a blood pump. The blood pump comprises a flexible drive shaft guided in a catheter, a conveying element connected to the drive shaft in a distal region of the drive shaft, and a motor, wherein the motor has a stator and a rotor mounted such that it can move in the stator. The stator comprises a winding and the rotor comprises a rotor magnet. In addition, the drive shaft is connected to the rotor at a proximal end of the drive shaft. The stator and the rotor are nondetachably connected to one another, and form a gap with a ring-shaped cross-section, which is delimited by the rotor and the stator.
TUBE WITH BLOOD-INLET OPENINGS
Apparatus and methods are described including a left-ventricular assist device that includes an impeller configured to be placed inside a subject's left ventricle and to pump blood from the left ventricle to the subject's aorta, by rotating. A frame is disposed around the impeller. A tube traverses the subject's aortic valve, such that a proximal portion of the tube is disposed within the aorta and a distal portion of the tube is disposed within the left ventricle. The distal portion of the tube extends to the distal end of the frame and defines more than 10 blood-inlet openings that are sized such as (a) to allow blood to flow from the subject's left ventricle into the tube and (b) to block structures from the subject's left ventricle from entering into the frame. Other applications are also described.
PUMP, IN PARTICULAR A BLOOD PUMP
The present invention relates to a pump, in particular a blood pump having a proximal and a distal end and a pump housing arranged therebetween, a driveshaft arranged in an interior of the pump housing along the longitudinal direction, a conveying element arranged on the driveshaft, and a cannula. Here, the pump housing, the shaft arrangement and the conveying element are coordinated with one another in such a way that these guarantee the best possible efficiency and longevity of the pump.
PUMP, IN PARTICULAR A BLOOD PUMP
The present invention relates to a pump, in particular a blood pump having a proximal and a distal end and a pump housing arranged therebetween, a driveshaft arranged in an interior of the pump housing along the longitudinal direction, a conveying element arranged on the driveshaft, and a cannula. Here, the pump housing, the shaft arrangement and the conveying element are coordinated with one another in such a way that these guarantee the best possible efficiency and longevity of the pump.
PURGELESS MECHANICAL CIRCULATORY SUPPORT SYSTEM WITH MAGNETIC DRIVE
- Marvin Mitze ,
- Hans Christof ,
- Vladimir Popov ,
- Martin Schwarz ,
- Leon Wenning ,
- Johannes Bette ,
- Attila Fabiunke ,
- Sina Gerlach ,
- Johannes Stigloher ,
- Julian Görries ,
- Jan Schöfer ,
- Valentin Rex ,
- Johannes Berner ,
- Bernhard Ehni ,
- Johannes Ferch ,
- Hans-Baldung Luley ,
- Tom Döhring ,
- Jens Burghaus ,
- Inga Schellenberg ,
- Hardy Baumbach ,
- Annika Bach ,
- Ingo Stotz ,
- Julian Kassel ,
- Armin Schuelke ,
- Stefan Henneck ,
- David Minzenmay ,
- Thomas Alexander Schlebusch ,
- Tobias Schmid ,
- Tjalf Pirk ,
- Martina Budde ,
- Ricardo Ehrenpfordt ,
- Marc Schmid ,
- Ahmad Mansour ,
- Niko Baeuerle ,
- Ralf Strasswiemer ,
- Uwe Vollmer ,
- Manuel Gaertner ,
- Fabian Eiberger ,
- Tobias Baechle ,
- Karin Schneider ,
- Peter Wassermann
Disclosed is a minimally invasive miniaturized percutaneous mechanical circulatory support system. The system may be placed across the aortic valve via a single femoral arterial access point. The system includes a low profile axial rotary blood pump carried by the distal end of a catheter. The system can be percutaneously inserted through the femoral artery and positioned across the aortic valve into the left ventricle. The device actively unloads the left ventricle by pumping blood from the left ventricle into the ascending aorta and systemic circulation. A magnetic drive and encased motor housing allows for purgeless operation for extended periods of time to treat various ailments, for example more than six hours as acute therapy for cardiogenic shock.
MECHANICAL CIRCULATORY SUPPORT SYSTEM WITH GUIDEWIRE AID
- Marvin Mitze ,
- Hans Christof ,
- Vladimir Popov ,
- Martin Schwarz ,
- Leon Wenning ,
- Johannes Bette ,
- Attila Fabiunke ,
- Julian Görries ,
- Jan Schöfer ,
- Valentin Rex ,
- Johannes Berner ,
- Johannes Ferch ,
- Hans-Baldung Luley ,
- Tom Döhring ,
- Jens Burghaus ,
- Inga Schellenberg ,
- Hardy Baumbach ,
- Annika Bach ,
- Ingo Stotz ,
- Julian Kassel ,
- Armin Schuelke ,
- Stefan Henneck ,
- David Minzenmay ,
- Thomas Alexander Schlebusch ,
- Tobias Schmid ,
- Tjalf Pirk ,
- Martina Budde ,
- Ricardo Ehrenpfordt ,
- Marc Schmid ,
- Ahmad Mansour ,
- Niko Baeuerle ,
- Peter Wassermann ,
- Fabian Eiberger ,
- Kenneth M. Martin
Disclosed is a mechanical circulatory support system for transcatheter delivery to the heart, having a removable guidewire aid to assist with inserting the guidewire along a path that avoids a rotating impeller. The system may comprise a catheter shaft and a circulatory support device carried by the shaft. The device may comprise a tubular housing, an impeller and the guidewire aid. The guidewire aid may include a removable guidewire guide tube. The guide tube may enter a first guidewire port of the tubular housing, exit the tubular housing via a second guidewire port on a side wall of the tubular housing on a distal side of the impeller, enter a third guidewire port on a proximal side of the impeller, and extend proximally through the catheter shaft.
MECHANICAL CIRCULATORY SUPPORT SYSTEM WITH INSERTION TOOL
- Marvin Mitze ,
- Hans Christof ,
- Vladimir Popov ,
- Martin Schwarz ,
- Leon Wenning ,
- Johannes Bette ,
- Attila Fabiunke ,
- Julian Görries ,
- Jan Schöfer ,
- Valentin Rex ,
- Johannes Berner ,
- Johannes Ferch ,
- Hans-Baldung Luley ,
- Tom Döhring ,
- Jens Burghaus ,
- Inga Schellenberg ,
- Hardy Baumbach ,
- Annika Bach ,
- Ingo Stotz ,
- Julian Kassel ,
- Armin Schuelke ,
- Stefan Henneck ,
- David Minzenmay ,
- Thomas Alexander Schlebusch ,
- Tobias Schmid ,
- Tjalf Pirk ,
- Martina Budde ,
- Ricardo Ehrenpfordt ,
- Marc Schmid ,
- Ahmad Mansour ,
- Niko Baeuerle ,
- Peter Wassermann ,
- Fabian Eiberger ,
- Kenneth M. Martin ,
- Thomas Friedrich ,
- Mario Heintze
A minimally invasive miniaturized percutaneous mechanical circulatory support system for transcatheter delivery of a pump to the heart that actively unloads the left ventricle by pumping blood from the left ventricle into the ascending aorta and systemic circulation. The pump may include a tubular housing, a motor, an impeller configured to be rotated by the motor. The impeller may be rotated by the motor, via a shaft with an annular polymeric seal around the shaft, or via a magnetic drive. The system may have an insertion tool having a tubular body and configured to axially movably receive the circulatory support device, and an introducer sheath configured to axially movably receive the insertion tool.