LOCATION, TIME, AND/OR PRESSURE DETERMINING DEVICES, SYSTEMS, AND METHODS FOR DEPLOYMENT OF LESION-EXCLUDING HEART IMPLANTS FOR TREATMENT OF CARDIAC HEART FAILURE AND OTHER DISEASE STATES
20200214842 ยท 2020-07-09
Assignee
Inventors
- Lon S. Annest (New York, NY, US)
- Arthur A. Bertolero (Danville, CA, US)
- David K. SWANSON (Campbell, CA, US)
Cpc classification
A61B2017/048
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2/2481
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2017/0445
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2017/0412
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/0401
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61F2/24
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
Devices, systems, and methods for treating a heart of a patient may make use of structures which limit a size of a chamber of the heart, such as by deploying one or more tensile member to bring a wall of the heart and a septum of the heart into contact. A plurality of tension members may help exclude scar tissue and provide a more effective remaining ventricle chamber. The implant may be deployed during beating of the heart, often in a minimally invasive or less-invasive manner. Trauma to the tissues of the heart may be inhibited by selectively approximating tissues while a pressure within the heart is temporarily reduced. Three-dimensional implant locating devices and systems facilitate beneficial heart chamber volumetric shape remodeling.
Claims
1. (canceled)
2. A system for treating a heart, the heart having a chamber bordered by a first wall and a second wall, the system comprising: a perforation device having a distal tip that is configured to penetrate the first wall and to penetrate the second wall; an inflatable balloon that is insertable through the first wall and that is engageable with the first wall, the inflatable balloon being insertable through the penetration in the first wall in a deflated state and being inflatable so that an axially oriented outer surface of the inflatable balloon engages with the first wall as the inflatable balloon is retracted proximally relative to the first wall; an anchor that is engageable with the second wall; and a tension member that is coupleable with the inflatable balloon and the anchor so as to extend from the inflatable balloon, through the penetration in the first wall, across the chamber, through the penetration in the second wall, and to the anchor; wherein the inflatable balloon and the anchor are tensionable, via the tension member, by an amount sufficient to engage the inflatable balloon with the first wall and to engage the anchor with the second wall and urge the first wall toward the second wall.
3. The system of claim 2, wherein the anchor is a second anchor and wherein the inflatable balloon is a first anchor, wherein the first anchor and the second anchor are tensionable, via the tension member, to bring the first wall and the second wall into engagement and thereby effectively exclude a region of the first wall and the second wall from the chamber with scar tissue extending along the excluded region.
4. The system of claim 3, wherein the second anchor is an inflatable balloon that engages with the second wall such that the system includes two inflatable balloons that bring the first wall and the second wall into engagement.
5. The system of claim 2, wherein the inflatable balloon is engageable with the first wall to seal the first wall and control blood loss through the penetration in the first wall.
6. The system of claim 5, wherein the anchor is a second anchor and wherein the system further comprises a first anchor that is operable with the inflatable balloon and that is configured to engage the first wall, wherein the first anchor and the second anchor are tensionable, via the tension member, to bring the first wall and the second wall into engagement.
7. The system of claim 2, wherein the inflatable balloon is inflatable via a liquid that is injectable within a bladder of the inflatable balloon.
8. The system of claim 7, wherein the liquid is configured to reversibly or irreversibly solidify within the bladder of the inflatable balloon.
9. The system of claim 7, wherein the liquid comprises silicone rubber.
10. The system of claim 2, wherein the inflatable balloon has a porous surface that is capable of eluting a substance into contact with the first wall.
11. The system of claim 2, wherein an outer surface of the inflatable balloon comprises a biodegradable material.
12. The system of claim 2, further comprising an expandable annular structure that is coupled with the tension member proximally of the inflatable balloon.
13. The system of claim 12, wherein the expandable annular structure is insertable within the penetration in the first wall and is configured to expand within a myocardium.
14. A method of treating a heart comprising: penetrating a second wall of the heart with a perforation device; advancing the perforation device across a chamber of the heart to a first wall of the heart; penetrating the first wall with the perforation device; inserting an inflatable balloon through the second wall and the first wall of the heart with the inflatable balloon in a deflated state, the inflatable balloon being inserted through the first wall so that the inflatable balloon is positioned distally of the first wall; inflating the inflatable balloon; engaging an anchor with the second wall of the heart; and tensioning a tension member that is coupled with the inflatable balloon and with the anchor so as to retract the inflatable balloon proximally relative to the first wall and thereby engage an axially oriented outer surface of the inflatable balloon with the first wall; wherein the inflatable balloon and the anchor are tensioned, via the tension member, by an amount sufficient to urge the first wall toward the second wall.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein the second wall is a septum of the heart and the first wall is an external wall of the heart such that the perforation device is inserted from inside the heart, through the septum and external wall, to a position external to the heart, and wherein the inflatable balloon is inserted from within the heart to the position external to the heart.
16. The method of claim 14, wherein the anchor is a second anchor and the inflatable balloon is a first anchor, and wherein the method further comprises tensioning the first anchor and the second anchor, via the tension member, to bring the first wall and the second wall into engagement and thereby effectively exclude a region of the first wall and the second wall from the chamber with scar tissue extending along the excluded region.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the second anchor is an inflatable balloon that engages with the second wall such that the method includes tensioning two inflatable balloons to bring the first wall and the second wall into engagement.
18. The method of claim 14, wherein the anchor is a second anchor and wherein the method further comprises engaging the first wall with a first anchor and tensioning the first anchor and the second anchor, via the tension member, to bring the first wall and the second wall into engagement.
19. The method of claim 14, wherein inflating the inflatable balloon comprises injecting a liquid within a bladder of the inflatable balloon, wherein the liquid is configured to reversibly or irreversibly solidify within the bladder of the inflatable balloon.
20. The method of claim 14, wherein the inflatable balloon has a porous surface that is capable of eluting a substance into contact with the first wall, or wherein an outer surface of the inflatable balloon comprises a biodegradable material.
21. The method of claim 14, further comprising expanding an expandable annular structure that is coupled with the tension member proximally of the inflatable balloon.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0045] The present invention generally provides improved devices, systems, and methods for treatment of a heart. Embodiments of the invention may be particularly beneficial for treatment of congestive heart failure and other disease conditions of the heart. The invention may find uses as a prophylactic treatment, and/or may be included as at least a portion of a therapeutic intervention.
[0046] Myocardial infarction and the resultant scar formation is often the index event in the genesis of congestive heart failure. The presence of the scar may, if left untreated, lead to a compensatory neuro-hormonal response by the remaining, non-infarcted myocardium. The systems, methods, and devices described herein may be applied to inhibit, reverse, or avoid this response altogether, often halting a destructive sequence of events which could otherwise cause the eventual failure of the remaining functional heart muscle.
[0047] Embodiments of the present invention may build on known techniques for exclusion of the scar and volume reduction of the ventricle. Unlike known techniques that are often accomplished through open surgery, including left ventricular reconstruction, ventricular restoration, the Dor procedure, and the like, the treatments described herein will often (though not necessarily always) be implemented in a minimally invasive manner. Embodiments of the invention can provide advantages similar to those (for example) of surgical reconstruction of the ventricle, resulting in improved function due to improved dynamics, and by normalizing the downward cycle initiated by the original injury and mediated by the neuro-hormonal disease progression response.
[0048] Advantageously, the methods, devices, and systems described herein may allow percutaneous left ventricular scar exclusion and ventricle volume reduction to be applied at any appropriate time during the course of the disease. Rather than merely awaiting foreseeable disease progression and attempting to alleviate existing cardiac dysfunction, the techniques described herein may be applied proactively to prevent some or all of the heart failure symptoms, as well as to reverse at least a portion of any existing congestive heart failure effects, to limit or halt the progression of congestive heart failure, and/or to retard or prevent congestive heart failure disease progression in the future. Some embodiments may, for appropriate patients, limit the impact of myocardial infarction scar formation before heart failure every develops.
[0049] Referring now to the schematic illustration of
[0050] Referring now to
[0051] Referring now to
[0052] Referring now to
[0053] Referring now to
[0054]
[0055] Deployment of the structures described herein may also benefit from sensors that can be used to monitor the procedure, such sensors ideally providing a real-time assessment of the progress of the treatment and performance of the heart during deployment and/or as deployment is completed. The goal of deployment will often be to achieve a desired reduction in size of a chamber (typically the left ventricle), while avoiding overcorrection (which might otherwise induce acute diastolic dysfunction). Such functional assessment sensors may comprise pressure sensors, hemodynamic sensing systems, strain sensors, oxygen saturation sensors, biological marker detectors, and/or other sensors measuring heart function to permit a quantitative assessment of efficacy of the procedure as it is implemented.
[0056] Referring now to
[0057] In more detail, referring now to
[0058] Perforation device 74 may characterize or verify that the candidate location is appropriate, for example, by determining a pacing threshold at the candidate site. Scar tissue ST may have a pacing threshold which differs sufficiently from a viable tissue VT to allow the physician to verify that the candidate site comprises scar tissue and/or is otherwise suitable. If the candidate site is not suitable, the perforation device 74 may be withdrawn proximally to disengage the perforation device from the septum S, and the catheter may be repositioned as described above to a new candidate site.
[0059] Catheter 72 may comprise a commercially available steerable sheath or introducer. Deflection of catheter 72 may be effected using one or more pull wires extending axially within the catheter body. Suitable introducers include devices that can be introduced transcutaneously into a vein or artery. Suitable steerable sheaths may generally comprise a tubular catheter body with an open working lumen. The open lumen can be used as a conduit for passing another catheter into the patient body, or for introducing another device (such as a pacing lead) into the patient body. Exemplary steerable sheaths for use in system 70 may include those commercially available from the Diag division of the St. Jude Corporation, from Medtronic, from Bard, and/or from others. Preferably, the working lumen of catheter 72 will be in a range from about 5 F-11 F. Alternative systems may employ a flexible sheath removably receiving a steerable catheter or other device therein, the steerable catheter optionally comprising a steerable electrophysiology catheter or a device derived therefrom. Still further embodiments may employ pre-bent cardiac access catheters.
[0060] Regarding perforating device 74, one embodiment would comprise a deflectable or steerable catheter body (ideally comprising a 2 F-3 F catheter) with a metallic rounded and/or bullet-shaped electrode at its distal end. The distal electrode is connected to a signal wire that terminates in a connector outside the body. Electrogram amplitudes recorded from the distal electrode can be used to help determine if the distal tip is located over scar tissue or over viable tissue. Efficacy in characterization of engaged heart tissues (between scar tissue and viable heart tissue) may be enhanced by recording the differential signal between the tip electrode and a band electrode located less than 1 cm from the distal electrode.
[0061] Pacing from the distal tip can be employed to help avoid perforation through viable myocardium. For most patients, such a perforation site would be counter-indicated. If the heart can be paced from the tip using a 10V amplitude pacing pulse, then viable myocardium will generally be disposed within about 5 mm of the tip. When the proper penetration site has been identified, then the distal tip is electrically coupled to an electrosurgical power source unit, and penetration is enabled by applying power to the tip in cut mode. At proper power settings, this perforation method can allow a clean perforation channel to be created without the tearing that can otherwise occur with physical perforation of the septum or free wall.
[0062] Once an appropriate site has been identified and verified, the system is held in alignment with the candidate site, and may optionally be affixed temporarily at the verified site. Perforation device 74 is advanced distally into and through septum S as illustrated in
[0063] As can be understood with reference to
[0064] The access and deployment system 70 described above with reference to
[0065] Still further alternative structures may be employed, perforation device 74 may have any of a variety of sensors, including pressure sensors and the like. System 70 will often comprise high contrast structures to enhance imaging, such as by including materials having high radio-opacity, echo-density, or the like. As noted above, perforation device 74 may have or be used with a cutting, drilling, or other mechanism to help in tissue penetration. Still further alternative structures may be used for steering and positioning of the deployment system and perforation device. For example, rather than manually manipulating or steering catheter 72 to position and orient the implant, the deployment system may employ robotic surgical techniques such as those now being developed and/or commercialized for manipulation of catheters. Magnetic steering of the catheter end may also be employed, and any of a wide variety of mechanical steerable or pre-formed catheter structures could be employed. Some or all of the components may access the left and/or right ventricular chambers using an epicardial approach, rather than the endovascular approach described above. A combination of an extra-cardiac and intracardiac approach may also be employed, with the components of the implant being introduced in any of a wide variety of techniques. In some embodiments, implant 42 and/or other components of the system may be deployed in an open surgical procedure. Directly accessing at least the epicardial surface of the heart may significantly facilitate positioning and deployment of implant 42, particularly for development of implant system components and techniques, including those which may later be deployed in a minimally invasive manner.
[0066] Referring now to
[0067] In general, anchors 48, 50 will be deployable through, over, or adjacent to the myocardium tissue penetrating components of deployment system 70. The anchors will attach to or otherwise engage the wall, usually by expanding or inflating into a cross section larger than that of the penetration through the heart tissue. A wide variety of anchor structures may be employed, including structures that form a disk-shaped surface or lateral extensions from an axis 90 of implant 42. As can be understood with reference to
[0068] The septal and left ventricular wall anchors 48, 50 may be identical or similar in structure, or may differ to reflect the differences between the epicardial and endocardial surfaces they engage. Fixation to the wall and septum will generally be sufficient to support the tension of tensile member 52, which will generally be capable of approximating the wall and septum, typically maintaining proximity or engagement between these structures during beating of the heart. Anchors 48, 50 and tensile member 52 will often comprise high-contrast materials to facilitate imaging, such as by including materials of sufficient radio-opacity, echo density, and the like.
[0069] In some embodiments, implant 42 may be used alone or with similar implants to effect volume reduction over a length, width, or volume of the ventricular wall. When at least a portion of the implant 42 is deployed using an epicardial approach, left ventricular anchor 50 will often be included in the components attached from outside the heart, with tensile member 52 and/or anchor 48 being attached to this epicardial component during deployment. Robotic structures may be used to position the intracardiac or extra-cardiac components, and/or to attach the two of them together.
[0070] Referring again to
[0071] Member 96 may remain within the deployed anchor, axially affixing tensile member 52 relative to the end of the anchor after deployment of the implant. This can help inhibit collapse of the arms 98. In some embodiments, arms 98 may be biased to the large cross section deployed configuration, such as by appropriate treatments to a shape memory alloy or the like. In such embodiments, member 98 or some other actuation structure may restrain the anchor in a small cross section configuration, it may not remain within the deployed implant after it is expanded.
[0072] As can be understood with reference to
[0073] While anchor 50 of
[0074] Anchors 48 and/or 50 may optionally be drug eluting. For example, bladder or balloon 92 may have a porous surface capable of eluting a substance from the film material. Alternatively, an outer surface of the balloon or the anchor structure itself may comprise a permanent or biodegradable polymer or the like, such as those that have been developed for drug eluting stents and available from a number of commercial suppliers. Drugs eluted from the implants may include any of the compositions eluted from drug-eluting stents.
[0075] Referring now to
[0076] Optionally, a ratchet mechanism may couple the septal anchor 48 to the tensile member 52, with the ratchet mechanism allowing the separation distance between the anchors to gradually decrease. While exemplary ratchet mechanisms are described below with reference to
[0077] Referring now to
[0078] A temporary or permanent anchor is here provided by a balloon 106. An axially-oriented portion of the outer surface of balloon 106 engages the adjacent epicardial surface of wall W to pull the wall towards engagement with the septum, as described above. Balloon anchor 106 may comprise a structure similar to a balloon of a balloon catheter, with an expandable and biocompatible bladder material defining the balloon wall. Along with the exemplary fill materials described above, the fill material may generally comprise a reversibly or irreversibly hardenable polymer, and the bladder material may have pores to allow eluting of drugs from the fill material or fluid.
[0079] An annular expandable structure such as annular balloon 108 on an associated catheter 110 may expand within the myocardium from the perforation or penetration through the left ventricular wall W or septum S. Balloon 108 may help to temporarily hold the deployment system in position relative to the perforation and tissue structures, or may in some embodiments be used as a permanent anchor (with or without additional anchoring structures). Temporary deployment of balloon 108 against the myocardial tissues may be particularly advantageous during or after perforation of the free left ventricular wall W during deployment of the wall anchor, as it may help to limit the release of blood into the extra-cardiac space. Balloon 108 may comprise a relatively standard balloon catheter material, such as nylon, PET, or the like.
[0080] Yet another aspect schematically illustrated in
[0081] When a probe 112 or surface of the implant or delivery catheter is used to promote formations of adhesions, or when the implant provides sufficient compressive force between the left ventricular wall and septum so as to promote adhesions without separately imposing a trauma on the tissue surface, some or all of the implant may comprise biodegradable material. After the adhesions are fully formed and the biodegradable material of the implant degrades, the natural adhesions may alone maintain the reduced size of the left ventricle, exclude scar tissue from the effective left ventricle, and limit the effects of congestive heart failure. Suitable biodegradable materials for use in the structural components of the implants described herein may include materials developed for and/or used in biodegradable stent structures.
[0082] While an myocardial engagement balloon 108, balloon anchor 106, and trauma inducing probe 112, are shown schematically together in
[0083] Referring now to
[0084] In some embodiments, double balloon catheter 120 may be positioned so that one balloon is in the superior vena cava and one balloon is in the inferior vena cava, thus blocking most or even essentially all blood flow from the body back to the heart. It may be easier to insert the balloon catheter either into the jugular vein or the femoral vein than it is to place using a cardiac insertion site. An alternative (and in at least some cases faster) way of off-loading the left heart is to inflate a suitably large compliant balloon in the pulmonary artery just above the pulmonic valve (proximal to the branching into the left and right pulmonary arteries). A partially inflated balloon will tend to float into the pulmonary artery from the right atrium, since blood flow carries it into that position. Hence, this may provide another method of decreasing preload on the ventricle.
[0085] With reference to
[0086] An exemplary ratcheting interface between tension member 124 and second anchor 128 may make use of a series of radial protrusions and/or detents disposed along an axis of the tension member. For example, the tension member may have slide surfaces which taper radially outwardly distally along the tension member to allow the anchor interface to slide sequentially over the slide surfaces in a distal direction, and detent surfaces which are oriented distally to engage corresponding proximally oriented surfaces of the anchor interface so as to inhibit proximal movement of the anchor relative to the tension member. Second anchor 128 may have a ratchet interface structure including (or derived from) the sealing components of a Touhy-Borst valve structure. Such an interface may resiliently deflect to pass the slide surfaces of the tension member and may grab or engage the detent surface when the tension member is pulled distally. Such a valve structure may also be increased in diameter to release the tension member if desired and/or tightened towards its smallest diameter to immovably (and optionally permanently) affix the anchor relative to the tension member. Exemplary embodiments of ratcheting tension member 122 may comprise polymers or metals, optionally comprising a polyester such as Mylar, a thermoplastic such as Nylon, a stainless steel, a shape memory allow such as Nitinol, or the like.
[0087] As shown in
[0088] Referring now to
[0089]
[0090] It should be noted that the systems and methods described herein for excluding scar tissue and reducing a size of a chamber of the heart may make use of a plurality of different implants of different types and even different surgical approaches. For example, while systems may include a plurality of implants deployed from a site outside the heart (such as the embodiments shown in
[0091] Referring now to
[0092] As illustrated in
[0093] As described above, the distal anchor may optionally expand laterally by articulation of arms or the like. Alternatively, as seen in
[0094] Once the anchors are positioned, tension may be applied between the members by pulling proximally on a proximal extension of tension member 158, and/or by pushing distally against an anchor stop 168 using an inner tubular body 166 of deployment system 150. Anchor stop 168 may comprise a one-way ratchet mechanism, a latchable or lockable structure configured for being affixed to tension member 158, or the like. Tension member 158 may be trimmed flush to the anchor and/or anchor stop once the left ventricular wall W and septum S have been brought together with the desired tension.
[0095] Optionally, the tension force applied to tension member 158 may be predetermined or preset using a spring or other biasing structure, weights, or the like. The tensioning force may be selected to be greater than the tension experienced by the tension member 158 during systole, but less than the tension applied by the heart structures during diastole. As a result, the tension member 158 would move the anchors 154, 156 towards each other selectively between pressure peaks in the left ventricle. This will result in incremental ratcheting of the anchor locations into engagement, avoiding excessive forces being applied against the heart tissue. In other embodiments, surgical personnel may manually or otherwise apply gradually increasing forces until the tissues begin to move towards each other, approximation forces may be enhanced during systole (manually or automatically) in response to an output signal from a blood pressure sensor, or a mechanism may inhibit the application of tension forces in response to blood pressure peaks or the like. Some further alternatives can be employed to selectively approximate the tissues while pressures in the heart chamber are temporarily reduced, including rapid pacing of the heart, occluding blood flow into the heart or heart chamber, and the like.
[0096] Optionally, distal end 162 of sheath 160 or some other distal structure of delivery system 150 may be configured to orient one or both of anchors 154, 156 as they are deployed. The anchors may have through holes that are positioned or oriented to preferentially orient the anchors in a desired alignment. Anchor geometry may be determined to distribute contact forces between the anchor and the tissue in a desirable distribution. If tension member 158 is not tensioned sufficiently to give tissue-to-tissue contact and/or sealing, and/or if it is otherwise desirable, the anchor may include a sealing member to inhibit blood or other fluid leakage from the heart chamber.
[0097] Referring now to
[0098] The amount of infarcted tissue to be excluded may be determined using techniques similar to those that have been developed for more conventional congestive heart failure surgical therapies. For example, the determination of the desired remaining heart chamber volume and shape may employ aspects of that method used in determining the size of the Blue Egg heart treatment sizing tool, which is commercially available from Estech of San Ramon, Calif.
[0099] Calculation of a desired change in volumetric shape of a heart chamber can be understood with reference to
[0100] In an exemplary embodiment, the desired volumetric shape and/or pre-treatment volumetric shape may be based on a geometrical model of a portion of the heart. More specifically, the targeted ventricular shape of the reconstructed volume is based on a model of a portion of the left ventricle (LV). That portion is modeled as a truncated prolate spheroid with the long axis extending from the mitral valve to the LV apex and the short axis measured perpendicular to that axis, also sometimes referred to as the LV diameter. The truncated cap corresponds to 45% of the volume of the non-truncated version. The long axis of the truncated model is 60% as long as the long axis of the non-truncated prolate spheroid. The maximum diameter is assumed to be 80% of the long axis (full distance from mitral valve to LV apex). The original shape of the prolate spheroid is quite elongated; the short axis is only 48% as long as the long axis. This model of the target LV shape is used to determine anchor positions, as described herein. The modeled LV portion may comprise that which extends from adjacent the mitral valve to the apex, so that (for example) the outflow track of the left ventricle may not be included in the model.
[0101] In general, the reduction of diameter and volume may be inferior to the base of the papillary muscles so as to avoid interfering with the function of the papillary muscles or chordae. The short axis measurement to the apex may also be restored via this approach. Anchor locations and implant deployment may be patterned so that the distance between anchor pairs of an implant is equivalent to the desired circumference reduction for a given cross section. Suitable size reduction calculations and approaches will often be based on patient body surface area, and will often take into account the diameter of the left ventricle prior to treatment for each distance from the mitral annulus. The location and size of scar to be excluded will also be identified and considered. A desired volumetric shape for the treated chamber of the heart can be defined by a desired diameter at each cross section along the longitudinal axis so as to promote good heart function for the remaining contractile myocardium. These size reduction considerations can be used to generate appropriate radius reduction targets, and can also be used to identify an appropriate reduction in the effective length of the left ventricle or other heart chamber. Suitable final target shapes will maintain the appropriate proportions between the volume and radius, thereby creating proper wall tension without overstressing the diseased or healthy tissue. Exemplary overall shapes may include circular cross sections with a longitudinal cross section that is substantially elliptical or parabolic, as illustrated in
[0102] Identifying appropriate anchor locations may be facilitated using a template as illustrated in
C=d
[0103]
[0104] The length of body within the chamber may be identified using measurement indicia at the distal or proximal ends of catheter body 196, with distal indicia typically being radiopaque, echogenic, or otherwise highly visible under remote imaging. Proximal measurement indicia may be read from the proximal end of the catheter body using an appropriate length element of the delivery system, as can be understood with reference to
[0105] As noted above, a variety of alternative structures and methods may be used to temporarily reduce pressure within the heart so as to allow volume reduction without imposing excessive trauma on the heart tissues. Along with occlusion of blood flow using a balloon catheter (as illustrated in
[0106] An additional structure and method for identifying appropriate anchor location for deploying one or more implants for excluding scar tissue and/or reshaping a chamber of the heart can be understood with reference to
[0107] Template 208 includes indicia or targets that are visible under the desired imaging modality to be used during treatment. For example, the targets may be radiopaque, echogenic, easily visible under direct imaging, or the like. Suitable targets may comprise contrast filled bladders, discrete radiopaque markers, or the like. The surgeon may then direct the anchor delivery device through the septum as described above, using the targets to determine an appropriate anchor placement for the distal anchor. Once anchors 212 are positioned and tension members 214 are ready to reduce the chamber volume, template 208 can again be rolled up to a small profile configuration and removed from the chamber.
[0108] Once all anchors are placed, the tension members may be tensioned to bring the epicardial tissues together. Some or all of the tension members may be tensioned simultaneously. In some embodiments, some or all of the tension members may be tensioned sequentially. In the event that one or more anchor placement is determined to be inappropriate, the tension member may be cut at the septal wall of the right ventricle, on the outside of the free wall of the left ventricle, or the like.
[0109] While exemplary embodiments have been described in some detail for clarity of understanding and by way of example, a variety of modifications, adaptations, and changes will be obvious to those of skill in the art. Hence, the scope of the invention is limited solely by the appended claims.