FEEDING TUBE WITH INTEGRATED STYLET
20220202653 · 2022-06-30
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61M16/0488
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61M25/0102
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61M25/01
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A feeding tube with an integrated stylet, for use in less invasive surfactant therapy (LIST) procedures with pre-term infants, has a flexible feeding tube with distal and proximal ends and an adapter at the proximal end. A stylet with distal and proximal ends is positioned within the feeding tube and has an anchor at the proximal end. The anchor is configured to seat within the adapter to prevent the anchor from entering the feeding tube and has one or more channels extending through the anchor to permit fluid to flow from the adapter through the channels and through the feeding tube with the anchor remaining seated within the adapter.
Claims
1. A feeding tube with an integrated stylet, comprising: a flexible feeding tube with distal and proximal ends having an adapter at the proximal end and a stylet with distal and proximal ends positioned within the feeding tube and having an anchor at the proximal end, wherein the anchor is configured to seat within the adapter to prevent the anchor from entering the feeding tube, and wherein the anchor has one or more channels extending through the anchor to permit fluid to flow from the adapter through the channels and through the feeding tube with the anchor remaining seated within the adapter.
2. The feeding tube with an integrated stylet of claim 1, wherein the anchor has opposing proximal and distal sides and a perimeter edge therebetween, and wherein the one or more channels extend between the proximal and distal sides.
3. The feeding tube with an integrated stylet of claim 2, wherein the one or more channels are spaced apart from the perimeter edge.
4. The feeding tube with an integrated stylet of claim 3, wherein the distal side of the anchor is attached to the proximal end of the stylet and has a recess formed thereon in fluid communication with the one or more channels.
5. The feeding tube with an integrated stylet of claim 4, wherein the feeding tube has an inner diameter and the stylet has an outer diameter smaller than the inner diameter of the feeding tube, thereby providing an annular space surrounding the stylet in the feeding tube.
6. The feeding tube with an integrated stylet of claim 5, wherein the adapter has an inlet extending from the proximal end of the feeding tube and defining a shoulder shaped complementary to the anchor to engage with the anchor and prevent it from entering the feeding tube.
7. The feeding tube with an integrated stylet of claim 6, wherein the anchor is generally disc-shaped and the shoulder is generally annular.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0008] In order that the invention may be more clearly understood, a preferred embodiment thereof will now be described in detail by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0016] The feeding tube with an integrated stylet, according to the present invention, prevents the end of the stylet from protruding from the distal end of the feeding tube and permits the stylet to remain in place during surfactant delivery in a LIST procedure.
[0017] As shown in
[0018] The stylet 5 is a semi-rigid length of wire with distal and proximal ends 5a and 5b having an anchor 6 at its proximal end 5b for seating in the adapter 2. The stylet 5 is sized to extend substantially the length of the feeding tube 1 for stiffening the feeding tube 1 during insertion into the trachea, but not to protrude from the distal end 1a of the feeding tube 1. For example, a typical stylet 5 has a length about 2 cm shorter than the corresponding feeding tube 1, preferably, about 18.5 cm, and a diameter of between 0.48 mm and 0.54 mm, preferably, 0.51 mm. As shown in
[0019] Where the anchor 6 is generally disc-shaped, the shoulder 7 is generally annular with a diameter slightly larger than the anchor 6. The anchor 6 thereby seats against the shoulder 7 within the adapter 2 and is prevented from entering the feeding tube 1. Alternatively, the anchor 6 may have a generally spherical shape, which seats against a correspondingly rounded shoulder 7. Similarly, the anchor 6 may be dome-shaped, with the rounded side being the distal side of the anchor 6, which is attached to the proximal end 5b of the stylet 5. Various other shapes are possible for the anchor 6, including a cone-shaped anchor 6 or a triangular, rectangular, pentagonal, hexagonal, etc. prism-shaped anchor 6. Regardless of the shape of the anchor 6, the shoulder 7 is shaped complementary to the anchor 6 so that the anchor 6 seats against it, within the adapter 2, and is thereby prevented from entering the feeding tube 1.
[0020] As shown in
[0021] Preferably, the anchor 6 and the stylet 5 are removable from the feeding tube 1 by unseating the anchor 6 and removing it from the proximal end 1b of the adapter 1. Alternatively, the anchor 6 may be permanently attached or formed integrally with the feeding tube 1 or the adapter 2.
[0022] In operation, a physician treating a pre-term infant suffering from NRDS grasps the proximal end 1b of the feeding tube 1 and/or the adapter 2. The stylet 5 provides stiffening to the feeding tube 1 to facilitate insertion of the distal end 1a of the feeding tube 1 by the physician into the trachea of the patient. The physician may then attach a syringe loaded with pulmonary surfactant onto the inlet 4 of the adapter 2 and begin the intratracheal instillation. The pulmonary surfactant is permitted to flow through the channels 8 in the anchor 6 and through the feeding tube 1. As a result, the present invention eliminates the step of first removing the stylet 5 from the feeding tube 1, before beginning intratracheal instillation.
[0023] Although the present invention has been described with reference to its application in LIST procedures for the treatment of pre-term infants suffering from NRDS, it may applied in other areas and in other treatments where it is desirable to use a stylet-stiffened feeding tube that permits the flow of fluids through the feeding tube, without removal of the stylet.
[0024] The present invention has been described and illustrated with reference to an exemplary embodiment, however, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention as set out in the following claims. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiments disclosed herein.