Catheter Systems for Cardiac Arrhythmia Ablation
20220015827 · 2022-01-20
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B18/1492
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2018/00375
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2018/00023
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A plurality of catheter-based ablation apparatus embodiments are provided that address several areas of atrial target tissue and which feature firm and consistent ablation element to tissue contact enabling the creation of effective continuous lesions.
Claims
1-86. (canceled)
87. A device for ablating selected tissue in a body organ chamber, including heart chambers, comprising: (a) a guide body sheath having a deflectable distal end portion; (b) an electrodeless guidewire having relatively stiff and soft portions and adapted to exit and reenter said deflectable distal end portion of said guide body sheath to form a stable electrodeless guidewire loop that is controllable in the body organ chamber to create forced contact with selected tissue of the heart; (c) a catheter guide shaft having an ablating energy element adapted for creating a lesion on the selected tissue, the catheter guide shaft able to travel over and be fully supported by said electrodeless guidewire, said electrodeless guidewire being of sufficient stiffness and controllable to create forced contact between said ablating energy element and said selected tissue at a plurality of desired locations along said stable electrodeless guidewire loop; (d) a control handle at a proximal portion of said guide body sheath operatively coupled to the electrodeless guidewire and containing a loop control slide element comprising first and second guidewire locks whereby the size, shape and disposition of the loop can be adjusted and fixed.
88. The device for ablating the selected tissue as in claim 87 wherein manipulation of the control handle loop control slide element allows the ablating energy element to make contact with said selected tissue in the body organ chamber at multiple locations and thereby create continuous lesions.
89. The device for ablating the selected tissue as in claim 87 wherein said ablating energy element further comprises a plurality of thermistors and a plurality of electrodes insulated from one another for temperature monitoring and real-time electrical activity assessment of lesion maturation.
90. The device for ablating the selected tissue as in claim 87 wherein said control handle loop control slide element comprises a movable locking device connected to said catheter guide shaft for controlling a position of said ablating energy element along said electrodeless guidewire.
91. The device for ablating the selected tissue as in claim 87 wherein said ablating energy element comprises an ablation balloon device that is made to contain a cryogenic fluid that is selected from the group consisting of liquid nitrous oxide (N.sub.2O) and other cryogenic fluids.
92. A device for ablating selected tissue comprising: (a) a guide body sheath having a deflectable distal end portion with an opening therein; (b) an ablation catheter sheath extendable from said deflectable distal end portion of said guide body sheath and having a J-shaped distal end portion configured with a leading 180° guiding bend that enables guiding of the device into a pulmonary vein orifice or other conduit and which continues in a form of a trailing loop which is provided with an array of spaced recording and stimulation elements configured to extend circumferentially around an interior surface of said pulmonary vein orifice or other conduit; (c) a cryogenic ablation balloon device on said ablation catheter sheath, said cryogenic ablation balloon device being guided, supported on, stabilized and anchorable in position just proximal to said J-shaped distal end portion by said ablation catheter sheath; (d) a control handle disposed at a proximal end of the guide body sheath for controlling an extension of said ablation catheter from said guide body sheath, said control handle comprising a locking member whereby the disposition of the ablation catheter sheath can be adjusted and fixed; and (e) wherein said cryogenic ablation balloon device further comprises a distal ring electrode placed distal to the entire inflatable ablation balloon device and a proximal ring electrode placed proximal to the cryogenic ablation balloon device for measuring impedance during a cryogenic ablation procedure for determining an extent of ice formation on the distal ring electrode, indicative of circumferential ice formation on the outer balloon that extends to cover the distal ring electrode indicating pulmonary vein occlusion and lesion adequacy and maturation.
93. The device for ablating the selected tissue as in claim 92 wherein when said cryogenic ablation balloon device is adapted to be placed in a pulmonary vein orifice whereby pulmonary vein occlusion and continuous circumferential ablation can be assessed by impedance measurements between said proximal ring electrode and said distal ring electrode obtained when a low-power, high-frequency voltage is applied therebetween.
94. The device for ablating the selected tissue as in claim 92 wherein said inflatable cryogenic ablation balloon device is connected to said ablation catheter sheath that is arranged to travel over a guidewire.
95. The device for ablating the selected tissue as in claim 92 wherein said control handle is also configured to adjust a position of the cryogenic ablation balloon device riding on said ablation catheter sheath.
96. The device for ablating the selected tissue as in claim 92 wherein said stable electrodeless guidewire loop includes a tip segment attached to the deflectable distal end portion of the guide body sheath.
97. A device for ablating selected tissue comprising: (a) A catheter; (b) a catheter handle; (c) a controller apparatus coupled to the catheter handle; (d) an ablation/recording device coupled to the catheter handle; (e) a guidewire extending from the catheter handle, said guidewire comprising a proximal end, a stiff body, soft distal end, and a loop; (f) an ablation delivery sheath comprising an ablation element positioned on the ablation delivery sheath, wherein the controller apparatus is adapted to lock the soft distal end of the guidewire in place, allow the proximal end of the guidewire to be extended and retracted to adjust the size of the loop, and lock the proximal end of the guidewire in place to fix the size of the loop; and wherein the ablation/recording device assess movement and position of the ablation/recording element.
98. The device for ablating selected tissue of claim 97 wherein the ablation element is a balloon.
99. The device for ablating selected tissue of claim 97 wherein the ablation delivery sheath is a deflectable transeptal sheath.
100. The device for ablating selected tissue of claim 97 wherein the ablation/recording element includes a measuring ruler placed on a sliding track.
101. The device for ablating selected tissue of claim 97 wherein the loop is formed by extending the soft distal end of the guidewire and a selected portion of the stiff body portion of the guidewire from a distal end of the ablation delivery sheath and causing the soft distal end of the guidewire to reenter the ablation delivery sheath.
102. A device for ablating selected tissue comprising: a. an ablation/recording element having a shaft and adapted to create a continuous lesion and permit recording; b. an anchoring J shaped guidewire with a soft distal end and stiff body adapted to be inserted into an anatomical location and allow the ablation element to be tracked over the guidewire; and c. a J-shaped multi-electrode lasso catheter adapted to be inserted via the shaft of the ablation/recording element.
103. The device for ablating selected tissue of claim 102 wherein the ablation/recording element comprises a cryo-balloon device including a balloon, a distal ring of a small width placed at an anterior surface of the balloon, and a proximal ring, wherein said distal ring and said proximal ring are adapted to measure impedance.
104. The device for ablating selected tissue of claim 103 wherein rising impedance is correlated with of ice formation and lesion maturation.
105. The device for ablating selected tissue of claim 102 wherein the balloon is adapted to allows electrical recording over the surface of the ablation/recording element and impedance recording.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0021] In the drawing figures:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0038] The following detailed description pertains to several embodiments that include concepts of the present development. Those embodiments are meant as examples and are not intended to limit the scope of the present invention in any manner.
[0039] It will be appreciated that the present development contemplates a less invasive yet comparably effective solution to atrial fibrillation that replaces the surgical lesions of the traditional Cox Maze with lesions created by tissue ablation using catheters which avoids the need for radical surgical procedures. The ablation devices of the invention provide firm and consistent ablation surface to tissue contact.
[0040]
[0041] The balloon 22 further includes a plurality of segmented conductive painted RF electrodes 32, each of which is provided with a centrally located recording electrode for sensing electrical activity and a combined recording and thermistor elements 34 for sensing temperature. The electrodes are highly conductive paintings on the balloon surface and can be selectively and separately energized and sensed in a well known manner. While the balloon itself may be any convenient size, a typical embodiment will be about 25-30 mm long by 15 mm in diameter when fully inflated. Such balloons may be made of any suitable benign coatable polymer material that maintains stable inflated dimensions and is constructed to include separated conductive segments for tissue ablation, thermistors placed at the center of each ablation electrode as well as a recording electrode. One such preferred material is polyethylene teraphthalate (PET), and it is believed that other suitable materials could be used.
[0042] As indicated, the RF balloon is coated with a highly conductive compound painted on the balloon in electrode segments 32 as shown in
[0043]
[0044] In the two balloon cryogenic systems, the inner balloon receives and contains a cryogenic liquefied material which may be liquid nitrous oxide (N.sub.2O), which boils at −88.5° C., and the outer balloon is filled with an insulating gas such as CO.sub.2 or N.sub.2 at a pressure just above the left atrial pressure. In this manner, the cryogenic liquid gas is normally insulated from the inner atrial blood flow. During ablation, expansion of the guidewire loop is used to force the balloon towards the tissue at locations of interest and the force displaces the insulating gas in the area of tissue contact thereby enabling the cryogenic inner balloon to come into firm contact with the outer balloon which produces maximum heat transfer between the balloon and the tissue resulting in maximum local tissue freezing.
[0045] A control handle is provided (
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[0047] The five panels of
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[0049] As will be noted in conjunction with
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[0053] It will be appreciated that the J-type loop PV recording, stimulation and impedance measurement catheter in combination with the balloon ablation device can realize PV isolation with the use of cryogenic balloon technology; however, success is critically dependent on a firm contact between the balloon and the PV tissues and a complete occlusion of the PV such that there is no blood flow into the atria around the balloon during the ablation procedure. This can be verified, for example, by injecting dye into the PV via a central lumen in the balloon guidewire. If the dye appears to collect in the vein, it may be assumed that the vein is appropriately occluded. If the vein is not totally occluded and the resulting lesion is not a complete circumferential lesion, i.e., if there is a gap, or if the tissues are only stunned leading to temporary isolation, this results in procedure failure and the need for additional interventions.
[0054] It will be appreciated that the J-loop recording/stimulation catheter serves several purposes: (1) it serves as a guide for a balloon ablation catheter to place the balloon in a longitudinal and central position with respect to the desired PV orifice; (2) it anchors the catheter in the vein with the loop positioned in the vein antrum just beyond the orifice; (3) pacing can be applied to the phrenic nerve by the loop electrodes 186 during either RF or cryogenic ablation while the diaphragmatic movement is monitored to insure that the phrenic nerve is not ablated; (4) it allows verification of lesion maturation by monitoring the impedance during cryogenic ablation; and (5) it allows measurement of vein to atria or atria to vein conduction during RF and cryogenic ablation.
[0055] Low intensity RF energy may also be applied to the distal balloon ring electrode 188, together with the reference electrode 190 positioned on the balloon catheter shaft just proximal to the balloon (shown in
[0056] In the embodiment shown in
[0057] The J catheter is preferably a pre-shaped 3-4 F catheter that is inserted into the central channel of the ablation balloon. The J portion of the catheter is inserted into a PV with the circular portion of the catheter equipped with ring recording/stimulation electrodes and thermistors that encircle the antrum of the PV. The balloon catheter is advanced over the J catheter using the J catheter as a guidewire. The balloon is positioned to occlude the PV while the circular portion of the catheter encircles the balloon just distal to the balloon contact with the PV. Low power RF energy is applied to the preselected ring electrodes placed either on the balloon shaft or the loop portion of the J catheter for the measurements of impedance pre and post balloon inflation and during the ablation especially with the cryogenic balloon embodiment.
[0058] In operation, it should be appreciated that the delivery and tissue contact procedure for both the RF and cryogenic balloon embodiments can be the same. The highly conductive elements and thermistors are circumferentially distributed around the outer surface of both the RF and outer cryogenic balloons.
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[0060] The placement of the guide sheaths 304 and 306 in pairs of pulmonary veins is illustrated by the schematic drawings of
[0061] In this manner,
[0062] Thus, the flexible multi electrode ablation catheter 300 is placed in a pair of stiffer guide sheaths 304 and 306 which, in turn, are placed in a deflectable guide sheath 308, which is a transeptal device. In operation, once the main sheath is advanced into the desired chamber, the ablation catheter 300 and the two support guide sheaths 304 and 306 are advanced out of the main sheath into the chamber. Each of the supporting guide sheaths 304 and 306 are pre-shaped to allow them to be maneuvered into a pulmonary vein. The supporting sheaths 304 and 306 can be advanced individually by pushing and/or rotating the proximal portion in and out of the main deflectable sheath 308. The position of the supporting sheaths can be locked in place by releasing or securing the locking mechanism 314 on the deflection control handle 316. Good ablation catheter contact with the desired tissues is ensured once the support sheaths are forced into the desired pulmonary veins while keeping the ablation catheter taut across the tissues, as illustrated in the figures. Another embodiment is seen schematically in
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[0064] An RF energy power generator system including input and output data processing and an electrogram RF filter is shown at 520 with connection to RF control system 522. The RF generator is connected to a visual output or screen display device as shown in block 524 and a recording system is shown connected at 526.
[0065] The RF power generator is programmed to control and modulate RF power to each ablation electrode in any of the multi-electrode RF catheter systems as each electrode is separately connected and separately controllable. The delivery of power is controlled so that only the electrodes that are in firm contact with the targeted tissue are energized and the desired power is carefully controlled to avoid overheating blood or ablated tissue. Overheating of ablated tissue may cause char formation and can lead to stroke. Thus, each independent power source is modulated based on sensed temperature and the first derivative of the temperature change (dT/dt) which describes the rate of temperature rise. Real time local electrical activity is closely monitored. This includes recording of electrogram amplitude, changes in maximal frequency of the local electrogram and impedance changes.
[0066] Once RF power is turned on, the power generator system modulates the RF power in accordance with a pre-programmed procedure, which may be as follows: [0067] 1. After contact and tissue viability is defined within acceptable parameters, e.g., [0068] a. Local electrogram >1 mV, [0069] b. Maximum electrogram frequency >8 Hz, [0070] c. Impedance <180 ohms. [0071] Starting with a low power setting, power is increased to control electrode temperature rate of change at a preset level such as 5° C./second=dT/dt; [0072] 2. Achieve maximum preset temperature such as 65° C.; [0073] 3. Terminate power input if impedance increases above a preset level (150-180 ohms, for example) or if the local electrogram decreases by 50% or more from baseline levels, and/or in conjunction with the electrogram amplitude, if the local electrogram frequency decreases by, for example, 30% from the baseline value. [0074] 4. Certain values in items 3 can be overridden if advisable during the procedure. [0075] 5. Reduce power to minimum when successful ablation is indicated by electrogram data and impedance measurements.
[0076] The RF power generator system is designed to receive data related to all of the necessary parameters from the ablation electrodes and thermistors, including local electrogram amplitude and percent change, maximum electrogram frequency temperature, rate of change of temperature (dT/dt) impedance, output power and application time.
[0077] After data received indicates that local tissue has been successfully ablated and power has been terminated, the catheter can be repositioned for the next local tissue ablation.
[0078] From the above description and drawings, it will be apparent that there is a unique nature associated with the present invention that resides in the functionality of the embodiments to accomplish precise and excellent ablation, particularly with regard to the control of atrial fibrillation in the human heart. It will be appreciated, however, that the devices and techniques can be applied in any area of the heart. Thus, it can be applied to the right and left ventricle as well as for mapping and ablation of ventricular tachycardia. With respect to atrial fibrillation, it has been found that the catheter systems in accordance with the present invention have vastly improved the contact and catheter tractability leading to more predictable lesions while minimizing the amount of tissue that is ablated.
[0079] This invention has been described herein in considerable detail in order to comply with the patent statutes and to provide those skilled in the art with the information needed to apply the novel principles and to construct and use such specialized components as are required. However, it is to be understood that the invention can be carried out by specifically different equipment and devices, and that various modifications, both as to the equipment and operating procedures, can be accomplished without departing from the scope of the invention itself.