TRANSCATHETER DEVICE AND MINIMALLY INVASIVE METHOD FOR CONSTRICTING AND ADJUSTING BLOOD FLOW THROUGH A BLOOD VESSEL
20170215885 · 2017-08-03
Inventors
- James H. Goldie (Lexington, MA, US)
- Brendan LaBrecque (Middleton, MA, US)
- Anna M Galea (Stow, MA)
- Eric Klem (Lexington, MA, US)
- Thomas Doyle (Brentwood, TN, US)
- Ian Cohen (Cambridge, MA, US)
- Tim Robinson (Sandown, NH, US)
Cpc classification
A61B2017/12054
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/12177
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2002/068
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/12172
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61B17/12
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A pulmonary artery flow restrictor system includes a funnel shaped membrane with a proximal base and a restrictive distal opening which is stretchable to larger sizes. A self-expanding frame is attached to the proximal base of the membrane for securing the membrane within the pulmonary artery.
Claims
1. A pulmonary artery flow restrictor system comprising: a funnel shaped membrane with a proximal base and a restrictive distal opening which is stretchable to larger sizes; and a self expanding frame attached to the proximal base of the membrane for securing the membrane within the pulmonary artery.
2. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 1 in which the frame includes arms extending upward over the membrane distal opening.
3. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 1 in which the funnel shaped membrane is made of a polymer.
4. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 3 in which said polymer is polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE).
5. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 1 in which the frame is made of a shape memory alloy.
6. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 5 in which said shape memory alloy is Nitinol.
7. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 1 in which the frame includes a stent like structure.
8. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 7 in which the frame includes a wire bent to form a series of spaced lower apexes and a series of spaced upper apexes.
9. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 8 in which the spaced lower apexes are secured to the proximal base of the membrane.
10. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 8 in which the frame further includes a plurality of bent anchoring arms extending upwardly over the membrane distal opening.
11. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 10 in which each arm includes members extending from adjacent frame upper apexes.
12. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 10 in which said arms cross above the membrane distal opening.
13. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 1 further including one or more flexible lines connected to the frame for collapsing the frame.
14. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 1 further including a transcatheter device for delivering the membrane and frame into the pulmonary artery.
15. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 14 in which the transcatheter device includes an inner lumen about a guide wire and a retractible lumen retractable relative to the inner lumen.
16. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 15 in which the frame is removably attached to the inner lumen.
17. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor system of claim 16 in which there are pins attached to the inner lumen and the frame includes eyelets receiving said pins therethrough.
18. A pulmonary artery flow restrictor comprising: a funnel shaped membrane with a proximal base and a restrictive distal opening which is stretchable to larger sizes; a self expanding frame including a series of spaced lower apexes and a series of spaced upper apexes which are secured to the proximal base of the membrane and a plurality of bent anchoring arms extending upwardly and over the membrane distal opening, each arm including members extending from adjacent upper frame apexes.
19. A pulmonary artery flow restrictor comprising: a membrane including a restrictive opening, the membrane made of a material which is irreversibly stretchable to larger sizes by a balloon catheter to vary the size of the restrictive opening; and a self expanding frame attached to the membrane for securing the membrane within the pulmonary artery.
20. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor of claim 19 in which the frame includes arms extending upward over the membrane restrictive opening.
21. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor of claim 19 in which the membrane is made of a polymer.
22. The pulmonary artery flow restrictor of claim 21 in which said polymer is polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE).
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013] Other objects, features and advantages will occur to those skilled in the art from the following description of a preferred embodiment and the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0019] Aside from the preferred embodiment or embodiments disclosed below, this invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or being carried out in various ways. Thus, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangements of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. If only one embodiment is described herein, the claims hereof are not to be limited to that embodiment. Moreover, the claims hereof are not to be read restrictively unless there is clear and convincing evidence manifesting a certain exclusion, restriction, or disclaimer.
[0020] One or more embodiments of the transcatheter device and minimally invasive method for constricting and adjusting blood flow through a blood vessel of this invention provides a minimally invasive surgery (MIS) device which can be implanted within the main pulmonary artery in order to elevate flow resistance to palliate the patient's CHD symptoms and move toward systemic flow. The device includes a self-expanding metal frame or skeleton which constrains the device radially and axially attached to a balloon-expandable membrane, also referred to herein as a pulmonary artery resistor, that interacts with the blood flow and provides flow constriction. The pulmonary artery resistor facilitates MIS intervention for modification of flow resistance.
[0021] The device may be deployed minimally invasively via catheter by a cardiac surgeon. As initially configured, the pulmonary artery resistor may provide the highest level of flow resistance possible. The highest level resistance would palliate patients with the most severe CHD symptoms, such as multiple and large septal tears the highest spectrum CHD cases. However, in those cases where less restriction is desired, the surgeon may use a balloon catheter of the desired size to incrementally expand the size of the resistor in situ. An adequate sized balloon is chosen and delivered over a guidewire to a location inside the resistor. The balloon is then dilated to expand the resistor. The balloon is then deflated and finally removed. This cycle ensures that the adjustment is performed quickly since a fully expanded balloon in the middle of the main pulmonary artery (Main PA) may cause an acute spike in pulmonary pressure and stress on the heart. Evaluation of the sufficiency of the resistance change provided by the pulmonary artery resistor is obtained after the dilation balloon has performed the expansion task and is fully removed from the patient, while the guidewire and femoral introducer catheter remain in place. A surgeon may incrementally alter the resistance further by stepping up the size of the balloon and repeating the dilation procedure. The expansion cycles continue until a satisfactory pulmonary arterial pressure is reached while adequate oxygenated blood flow to the aorta is also satisfactory.
[0022] Future follow on MIS procedures to reduce resistance may be periodically necessary to maintain desired apportionment of blood flow between the lungs and the remainder of the body as the patient grows. The minimally invasive procedure to correct the flow resistance should reduce or eliminate post-surgery recovery time in an intensive care unit and hospital stay duration when compared to conventional pulmonary artery banding which requires open surgery. The pulmonary artery resistor incorporates the flow constriction geometry necessary to create the desired flow without distorting the pulmonary artery wall.
[0023] In one embodiment, the frame of the resistor may be a tubular closed or open celled lattice made out of a shape memory alloy such as nitinol. The frame may be plated in gold or other radiopaque material or alloy to improve visibility inside the vessel. The frame may include eyelets with inserted radiopaque rivets that enhance visibility for the surgeon. In one embodiment the frame preferably includes at least two crossing arms, which preferably extend beyond its tubular radius. The arms may include slots for improved adhesion to the vasculature walls. The distal ends of the arms may feature tips that have an increased surface area and a backwards bend, essentially forming feet that reduce the contact pressure against the vessel wall. The arms may be tied together in the center to prevent the frame from collapsing under high pressure.
[0024] The resistor membrane may be a 2D annular shape or an annular shape stretched along the third axis forming a conical tube or funnel. The membrane may be made of an inelastic material that retains its new shape after deformation by the balloon as described above. The material may be woven or otherwise structured in such a way that the membrane preferentially stretches in the radial direction while minimizing foreshortening. The material may be an expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) or similar type material. The membrane may be attached to the frame chemically such as an adhesive bond, mechanically such as stitching, hook and loop, thermal bonding or related technology. The membrane may be extruded, wrapped, or otherwise formed separately from the frame and then attached in a post process. The membrane may also be formed directly on the frame via sputtering, wrapping, or other means. The expandable membrane may be attached on the proximal side of the device such that in the conical configuration the narrow end of the funnel extends distally down the center of the frame.
[0025] The resistor may be deployed through a transcatheter procedure by which the device is collapsed between an inner guidewire lumen and outer sheath lumen. In one embodiment, there may include two or more proximally located eyelets on the frame which may extend axially beyond the main body of the frame to interact with pins, hooks, recesses, or some other attachment mechanism attached to the guidewire lumen. When the frame is collapsed inside the catheter, with such an attachment mechanism engaged, the mechanism constrains the axial and rotational motion of the frame such that any motion of the attachment device translates into corresponding motion by the frame. This link may be used for ejection of the device out the distal end of the deployment catheter, for axially repositioning or rotating a semi-deployed device, or for re-sheathing a semi-deployed device.
[0026]
[0027] The membrane functions to resist blood flow through the pulmonary artery 20,
[0028] Frame 14 may be made of a shape memory alloy such as Nitinol. Frame 14 may further include inwardly bent arms 22a and 22b extending upward over membrane 12 and crossing above restricted opening 16 as shown in
[0029] As shown in
[0030] Preferably, frame 14 includes circumferential lower spaced apexes 30a, 30b, 30c and the like and upper spaced apexes 32a, 32b, 32c, and the like each between adjacent lower apexes. The lower apexes may be secured to the proximal base 16 of membrane 12. Arms 22a, 22b may include members extending from select upper apexes of the frame. So, for example, arm 22b includes member 34a extending from apex 32a and member 34b extending from adjacent apex 32b. Crossing arms 22a, 22b may be include downwardly bent distal eyelet tips 36a, 36b, respectively. Furthermore, lower apexes 30a, 30b, 30c, and the like may include eyelets 38a, 38b, and 38c, and the like, respectively. Eyelet 38a and the eyelet directly across from it may be slightly enlarged and constitute deployment eyelets which fit over deployment pins associated with a deployment device. The other eyelets (e.g., 38b, 38c, and the like) may be used to secure the frame 14 to be base of member 12. The entire frame including the arms may be formed by cutting a single thin tube of Nitinol which is then expanded on a mandrel and then heat treated so that it naturally retains this expanded shape. Radiopaque stripes 15a, 15b may be included (printed on or adhered to) on membrane 12 to enable visualization of the membrane during deployment into the pulmonary artery. Frame 14 may include a radiopaque coating to enable visualization of the frame during deployment into the pulmonary artery. In some examples, the flow resistor reduces the effective diameter of the pulmonary artery to 2 mm, a diameter which can be changed by using a balloon catheter to expand the flow resistor. The flow resistor may provide a maximum pressure drop of 40-50 mm Hg in the pulmonary artery and resist the blood flow rate to a maximum of 1.5-2 L/min. If the membrane is fully expanded, the flow resistor would produce no pressure drop and no flow rate reduction. In testing, the flow restrictor shown in
[0031] The system may further include transcatheter device 60,
[0032]
[0033]
[0034] Although specific features of the invention are shown in some drawings and not in others, this is for convenience only as each feature may be combined with any or all of the other features in accordance with the invention. The words “including”, “comprising”, “having”, and “with” as used herein are to be interpreted broadly and comprehensively and are not limited to any physical interconnection. Moreover, any embodiments disclosed in the subject application are not to be taken as the only possible embodiments.
[0035] In addition, any amendment presented during the prosecution of the patent application for this patent is not a disclaimer of any claim element presented in the application as filed: those skilled in the art cannot reasonably be expected to draft a claim that would literally encompass all possible equivalents, many equivalents will be unforeseeable at the time of the amendment and are beyond a fair interpretation of what is to be surrendered (if anything), the rationale underlying the amendment may bear no more than a tangential relation to many equivalents, and/or there are many other reasons the applicant cannot be expected to describe certain insubstantial substitutes for any claim element amended.
[0036] Other embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art and are within the following claims.