ARTICULATED PROSTHESIS FOR A TRICUSPID OR MITRAL VALVE AND RELATED CATCHING DEVICE
20200163757 ยท 2020-05-28
Assignee
Inventors
- Michele De Bonis (Cernusco sul Naviglio, IT)
- Elisabetta Lapenna (Cernusco sul Naviglio, IT)
- Ottavio Alfieri (Brescia, IT)
- Federico PAPPALARDO (Milano, IT)
- Angelo PASSANANTE (Milano, IT)
Cpc classification
A61F2/246
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2220/0025
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2220/0091
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2220/0016
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2250/0008
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2220/0041
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2/2454
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
An articulated prosthesis, left in the patient's heart for repairing a tricuspid or mitral valve, is conceived so as to grip simultaneously all the three leaflets of the tricuspid valve, or the two of the mitral valve, so as to make them lay distended fully in the valve plane and assume a final configuration as in the common surgical procedure. It is also disclosed a related catching device and a device for repairing a tricuspid or mitral valve.
Claims
1. An articulated prosthesis for a tricuspid or a mitral valve, comprising: a distal annular portion, a central annular portion and a proximal annular portion; a first plurality of rigid arms hinged to an outer side surface of said distal annular portion; a second plurality of rigid arms hinged to an outer side surface of said proximal annular portion; a third plurality of rigid arms each of which is hinged to an outer side surface of said central annular portion, from one end, and to a corresponding end of a rigid arm of said first plurality, from an opposite end; a fourth plurality of rigid arms each of which is hinged to an outer side surface of said central annular portion, from one end, and to a corresponding end of a rigid arm of said second plurality, from an opposite end; rigid arms of said third plurality and/or of said fourth plurality having respective knurling defined on facing catching surfaces, the catching surfaces of the rigid arms of said third plurality defining also pointed projections configured for spiking leaflets of a tricuspid or mitral valve; said distal annular portion having an internal screw thread, said proximal annular portion having: a cylindrical collar on a side surface of which said second plurality of rigid arms is hinged, and a screw engaged into said collar and supported thereby so as to be free to rotate along a longitudinal axis of the screw, the screw being configured to engage with said internal screw thread, said central annular portion defining a through hole for letting said proximal annular portion pass through; the articulated prosthesis being movable from a distended configuration, in which all said rigid arms hinged in correspondence of their ends are distended, to an expanded configuration, in which said proximal annular portion is threaded throughout said central annular portion and is engaged with said distal annular portion, the rigid arms of said third plurality and fourth plurality being configured to hold therebetween leaflets of a tricuspid or mitral valve, with said pointed projections spiking the leaflets, when the articulated prosthesis is in the expanded configuration.
2. The articulated prosthesis of claim 1, wherein said rigid arms of the third plurality and of the fourth plurality are longitudinally concave to define a concavity oriented towards said proximal annular portion when the articulated prosthesis is in the expanded configuration.
3. The articulated prosthesis of claim 2, wherein the number of said rigid arms of said second plurality and third plurality is twice the number of rigid arms of said first plurality and fourth plurality, each rigid arm of said fourth plurality is hinged together with two rigid arms of said second plurality at said opposite end, each rigid arm of said third plurality is hinged together with two rigid arms of said first plurality at said opposite end.
4. The articulated prosthesis of claim 1 for a tricuspid valve, wherein each of said pluralities of rigid arms comprises three rigid arms or an integer multiple of three rigid arms.
5. The articulated prosthesis of claim 1 for a mitral valve, wherein each of said pluralities of rigid arms comprises an even number of rigid arms.
6. A catching device for leaflets of a tricuspid or a mitral valve, comprising: an articulated prosthesis for a tricuspid or mitral valve as defined in claim 1; an inflatable balloon functionally connected to an inflation tube threaded throughout said distal, central and proximal annular portions of the articulated prosthesis; screwing means, coaxially placed around said inflation tube and configured to push and to rotate said screw of the proximal annular portion of the articulated prosthesis.
7. A device for repairing a tricuspid or a mitral valve, comprising: an interventional catheter configured to pass from vasculature or from an incision in the chest of a patient to a position within a tricuspid or mitral valve; and a catching device for leaflets of a tricuspid or a mitral valve according to claim 6.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS
[0026] Innovative devices of this disclosure for repairing a tricuspid or mitral valve are schematically depicted in
[0027] In the ensuing description reference will be made to the repair of a tricuspid valve, though the same observations hold mutatis mutandis for the repair of a mitral valve. For this reason, the catching device 2 shown in the figures has three rows of rigid arms regularly disposed around circular side surfaces of the catching device in order to grip the three leaflets of a tricuspid valve. Nevertheless, the depicted catching device 2 could be made with only two rows of rigid arms for gripping the two leaflets of a mitral valve, or even with four or more rows of rigid arms for better catching the leaflets of any heart valve.
[0028] The catching device 2 shown in
[0029] The articulated prosthesis 5 in a distended configuration is illustrated in
[0037] The distal portion 6 has an internal screw thread 14 configured to engage with the screw 9 when the articulated prosthesis 5 passes from the distended configuration of
[0038] In order to provide a good gripping of the leaflets, at least one of the facing arms 12 and 13 has a knurling 15 and a pointed projection 16 configured to spike the tissue of the corresponding leaflet. In the depicted embodiment only the rigid arms 13 are provided with the knurling 15 and the projection 16, though they may be realized also on some or all of the rigid arms 12 for catching even better the leaflets of the heart valve.
[0039] The arms shall be made of rigid material in order to catch firmly the leaflets and preventing them from slipping out.
[0040] The relative position of the pointed projection 16 on the rigid arm 13 may be established to spike a heart valve leaflet as close as possible to the tip, as shown in
[0041] The catheter 1 is adapted to be inserted into the heart of a patient passing throughout a vein, as shown in
[0042] In a distended configuration, the catching device is conveyed to the hearth valve to be repaired and the catheter is pulled back and/or the tube 4 is pushed forward so as to place the distal portion 6 and the arms 10, 12 below a valve plane to raise the leaflets, and the arms 13 and 11 and the proximal part, comprising the collar 8 and the screw 9, above the valve plane. The balloon 3 is inflated through the inflation tube 4 and is dragged backwards so as to pull the distal portion 6 towards the screw 9. The rigid arms 10, 11, 12 and 13 protrude radially (
[0043] According to a preferred embodiment, the facing rigid arms 12 are concave as shown in
[0044] By dragging back further the balloon 3, the screw 9 comes into contact with the internal screw thread 14 of the distal portion 6. It is thus possible to regulate the squeezing force on the valve leaflets between the rigid arms 12 and 13 depending on the thickness of the valve leaflets, by tightening more or less deeply the screw 9 into the distal portion 14. When the articulated prosthesis 5 is in the extended configuration, the valve leaflets (not shown) are trapped between the facing rigid arms 12 and 13. According to the embodiment shown in
[0045] Thanks to the grip of the knurling 15 and to the pointed projections 16, the leaflets are firmly held by the rigid arms 12, 13 and cannot slip out.
[0046] There will be a sufficient light between the leaflets as in the common surgical clover technique, thus the risk of causing stenosis is reduced.
[0047] When the screw 9 is firmly engaging the distal portion 6, the balloon 3 is deflated and is dragged back into the interventional catheter 1 passing throughout the articulated prosthesis 5, which is left in the patient's heart.
[0048] According to an alternative embodiment shown in figures from 8 to 11B, each leaflet of a tricuspid valve is pinched between a single rigid arm 12 and a facing rigid arm 13. The functioning of the shown device is substantially the same as for the embodiment illustrated in figures from 4 to 7B.
[0049] Preferably, as in the embodiment of figures from 4 to 7B, the rigid arms 12 and 13 are not hinged together around a same axis on the central portion 7 for preventing them from functioning as scissors and avoiding the risk of cutting the valve leaflet instead of squeezing/pinching it.
[0050] Another advantage of the catching mechanism of this disclosure is the fact that it is possible to substitute the articulated prosthesis installed in a patient's heart, if required, by executing the above operations in the reverse order. More in detail, the articulated prosthesis may be unmounted from the patient's heart through the following operations: [0051] inserting a deflated balloon 3 through the proximal portion up to exit from the distal portion 6; [0052] inflating the balloon 3 and abutting it against the distal portion 6; [0053] unscrewing the screw 9 from the distal portion 6 using the screwing means 17 and allowing the articulated prosthesis 5 to assume a distended configuration; and [0054] finally inserting the distended articulated prosthesis into a catheter by pulling the inflation tube 4.
[0055] The articulated prosthesis 5 will be made of bio-compatible materials adapted for heart prosthesis to be implanted into a patient's heart.