FIBRE OPTIC ASSEMBLY
20200046428 ยท 2020-02-13
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B1/07
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B5/0084
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2018/2261
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B1/00167
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2018/2253
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
An optical fibre assembly (10) disposed within a catheter (12) for ablating mammalian, such as heart tissue. The optical fibre assembly has a plurality of optical cores (16A-16C), each core defining a leading end and a trailing end and being adapted to carry an optical imaging beam. An optical lens arrangement (25) is operatively connected to the leading end of the plurality of optical cores for causing divergence of the light beams emitted therefrom. The optical fibre assembly (10) creates a field of view by directing a plurality of said optical imaging beams onto a tissue portion and capturing a reflected portion of said beams. The divergence of the beams provides a greater field of view than may otherwise be provided.
Claims
1. An optical fibre assembly adapted to be received inside a catheter for ablating a tissue portion of a mammal, the assembly comprising: (i) a plurality of optical cores, each core defining a leading end and a trailing end and being adapted to carry an optical imaging beam; and (ii) an optical lens arrangement operatively connected to the leading end of the plurality of optical cores for causing divergence of the light beams emitted therefrom; wherein the optical fibre assembly is adapted to create a field of view by directing a plurality of said optical imaging beams onto the tissue portion and capturing a reflected portion of said beams.
2. An optical fibre assembly according to claim 1 wherein the plurality of optical cores are located in a single optical fibre.
3. (canceled)
4. An optical fibre assembly according to claim 1 wherein the optical fibre assembly has a diameter of about 0.5-3 mm.
5. (canceled)
6. An optical fibre assembly according to claim 1 wherein the plurality of optical cores include at least one core located centrally relative to the other optical cores.
7. An optical fibre assembly according to claim 1 wherein the plurality of optical cores are located in separate optical fibres.
8. (canceled)
9. An optical fibre assembly according to claim 1 wherein the divergence of the beams caused by the lens is at least 20-60 degrees relative to corresponding paths of propagation of the beams through respective cores.
10. An optical fibre assembly according to claim 1 wherein the optical lens arrangements causes at least two beams to diverge by differing amounts.
11. An optical fibre assembly according claim 1 wherein the optical lens arrangement is a lens.
12. An optical fibre assembly according to claim 11 wherein the lens is a gradient index (GRIN) lens or a gradient index lens and at least one of a concave, convex or angular lens.
13. (canceled)
14. An optical fibre assembly according to claim 11 wherein the lens has a focusing distance of about 0.5-5 mm.
15. An optical fibre assembly according to claim 11 wherein the lens has a diameter of about 0.5-3 mm.
16. An optical fibre assembly according to claim 1 comprising an interface located between the plurality of optical cores and the optical lens arrangement.
17. An optical fibre assembly according to claim 16 wherein the interface is adapted to receive at least a subset of the plurality of optical cores.
18. An optical fibre assembly according to claim 16 wherein the interface has a generally circular cross-section.
19. An optical fibre assembly according to claim 1 wherein the field of view has an area of at least 0.1-1 mm.sup.2.
20. An OCT system comprising an optical fibre assembly according to claim 1 and an optical ablating beam generator capable of generating an optical ablating beam that is propagated along one of the plurality of optical cores.
21. An OCT system according to claim 20 wherein the optical ablating beam generator the one of the plurality of optical cores is a central core arranged to launch the optical ablating beam into the optical lens arrangement at a location so that the optical ablating beam travels through the lens arrangement without divergence relative to a path of propagation through the central core.
22. An OCT system according to claim 20 wherein the optical ablating beam generator is a laser.
23. An OCT system according to claim 20 further arranged to switch the optical ablating beam to propagate through any one of the optical cores that at any instant time is in contact with the tissue portion.
24. A method of visualizing a tissue portion of a body of a mammal in real time comprising the steps of: (i) inserting an optical fibre assembly according to claim 1 into a catheter inserted in the body; and (ii) operating the optical fibre assembly to visualize the tissue portion in real time.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0049] Notwithstanding any other forms which may fall within the scope of the assembly, system and method as set forth in the Summary, specific embodiments will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DESCRIPTION OF SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS
[0059] Described herein are embodiments of the disclosed optical fibre assemblies that may allow for improved tissue imaging, tissue ablation, and temperature and/or pressure sensing using a single catheter in a human or animal body. The system may allow one or more of following modalities (or processes) to be provided using a single catheter: determination of vessel or heart wall proximity, thickness and character (e.g., normal pre burn, oedema post burn), determination of vessel wall contact pressure, sensing a temperature of wall tissue, burning using a focussed laser beam and intra cardiac pacing when in the heart.
[0060] The optical fibre assemblies described herein are relatively small and hence can be used in a catheter with other components, as required.
[0061]
[0062] Optical fibres 20A-20D are operatively connected to cores 16A-16D in the multi-core fibre 14 via an interface in the form of a circular shaped silicon platform 22 that includes four apertures to receive the leading ends of optical fibres 20A-20D and is affixed to the multi-core fibre 14, using a suitable adhesive such as epoxy resin.
[0063] Attached to the leading end 24, again by a suitable adhesive such as epoxy resin, is an optical lens arrangement 25 arranged to change the path of light passing there through. In the case of light being transmitted through the lens arrangement, which is incident on the tissue, the change in path causes a divergence of the incident light exiting the lens arrangement 25. In this way the incident light is able to illuminate an area greater than an area of the lens structure 25 transverse to the direction of propagation of light through the optical lens structure 25. In
[0064] In this embodiment the propagation path of a central light beam launched or emanating from core 20D that is aligned with the geometric center of the optical lens structure is not altered by passage through the lens arrangement 25.
[0065] In one form, the optical lens arrangement 25 may be a graded index (GRIN) lens 26. The GRIN lens 26 has flat opposed surfaces.
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[0069] The lens arrangement 25 comprises a GRIN lens 326 and a convex lens 327 coupled to a flat surface of the GRIN lens 326 opposite the optical fibres 320A-320D. The platform 322 is affixed using resin or some other adherent to the flat surface GRIN lens 326 adjacent the fibres 320A-320D. The convex lens 327 causes increased divergence of the optical imaging beams exiting the fibres 320A-320C in comparison to passing solely through a GRIN lens 326. The resulting diverged beams 328A-328C, that correspond to the beams exiting fibres 320A-320C, respectively, together form field of view 330.
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[0072] Applications
[0073] Embodiments of the assembly, system and method may provide effective results when used for procedures, e.g., cardiac ablation. For example in cardiac ablation, this may allow for the combination of the functions of burning, pace making, monitoring, and tissue imaging into a single catheter, thus reducing the number of catheter insertions. In this regard, an embodiment of the disclosed optical fibre assembly has a relatively small form factor that allows it to be used concurrently with other components in a single catheter. Embodiments may allow for more accurate and quicker ablation performance, and may reduce requirements for repeat ablations on the same patient. Embodiments may reduce the total cost of catheters required for an example procedure.
[0074] When the optical fibre assembly includes an optical beam as the ablating beam, it may be more accurate and less damaging than using radio frequency (RF) ablation provided by currently existing medical ablation systems, due to more accurate control of width, depth, position and intensity of the burn.
[0075] The data captured using the optical fibre assembly can be used to determine ablation intensity and ablation duration e.g., based on the observed tissue depth of the facing tissue portion.
[0076] The foregoing is illustrative of the disclosed assembly, system and method and is not to be construed as limiting thereof. Although a number of exemplary embodiments have been described, it should be appreciated that the assembly, system and method may be embodied in many other forms.
[0077] In the claims which follow, and in the preceding description, except where the context requires otherwise due to express language or necessary implication, the word comprise and variations such as comprises or comprising are used in an inclusive sense, i.e. to specify the presence of the stated features but not to preclude the presence or addition of further features in various embodiments of the assembly, system and method as disclosed herein.