Temporary embolic protection device and medical procedure for delivery thereof
10512468 · 2019-12-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61F2002/018
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2/013
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/12172
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A collapsible embolic protection device prevents material from entering with blood flow into side branch vessels of the aortic arch. The device has a protection unit including a selectively permeable unit that prevents embolic material from passage with a blood flow into a plurality of aortic side branch vessels at the aortic arch.
Claims
1. A collapsible embolic protection device for transvascular delivery to an aortic arch, said protection device comprising: a protection unit comprising a selectively permeable material, a support frame provided in the form of a wire, and a connection point configured for attachment to a delivery unit; wherein: said protection unit has a collapsed delivery state and an expanded state; a perimeter of said support frame, in the expanded state of said protection unit, is shaped to releasably engage with vessel tissue of the aortic arch, such that said selectively permeable material covers said plurality of side branch vessel ostia; said selectively permeable material is attached to or is integral with said support frame such that said support frame surrounds an entire perimeter of said selectively permeable material and expands said selectively permeable material along a length and a width, said selectively permeable material allows blood to pass into a plurality of side branch vessels but prevents embolic material in the blood from entering said plurality of side branch vessels; the protection unit includes an elongated member having a distal end and a proximal end; said distal end of said elongated member being connected directly to said perimeter of said support frame at a proximal portion thereof, and said connection point is located at said proximal end of said elongated member, whereby said connection point for connecting said device to said delivery unit is arranged at a distance from said selectively permeable material; and, said elongated member is isolated from said selectively permeable material; and wherein said connection point is configured to be oriented toward the ostia of said plurality of side branch vessels when said protection unit is in said expanded state.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein said protection unit and said delivery unit are configured to be permanently connected at said connection point.
3. The device of claim 1, wherein said wire which forms the perimeter of said support frame and said elongated member comprises two branches of said wire that are joined at said connection point.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein the protection unit is configured to avoid contact with the plurality of side branch vessels and the ostia of said plurality of side branch vessels when in said expanded delivered state.
5. The device of claim 1, wherein said selectively permeable material is a rigid, non-elastic material that is which is non-conformable to ostia of aortic side branch vessels.
6. The device of claim 1, wherein said selectively permeable material comprises a mesh of strands.
7. The device of claim 6, wherein said strands are made of a metallic material.
8. The device of claim 1, wherein the selectively permeable unit allows passage of blood flow from the aortic arch to at least one side branch vessel and being adapted to prevent the embolic material from passage with said blood flow.
9. A collapsible embolic protection device for transvascular delivery to an aortic arch, said protection device comprising: a delivery unit and a protection unit comprising a selectively permeable material, a support frame provided in the form of a wire, and a connection point configured for attachment to said delivery unit; wherein: said protection unit has a collapsed delivery state and an expanded state; a perimeter of said support frame, in the expanded state of said protection unit, is shaped to releasably engage with vessel tissue of the aortic arch, such that said selectively permeable material covers a plurality of side branch vessel ostia; said selectively permeable material is attached to or is integral with said support frame such that said support frame surrounds an entire perimeter of said selectively permeable material and expands said selectively permeable material along a length and a width into a non-tubular shape, said selectively permeable material allows blood to pass into said plurality of side branch vessels but prevents embolic material in the blood from entering said plurality of side branch vessels during a medical procedure; the protection unit includes a stem connected to said support frame and extends towards said connection point for connecting said device to said delivery unit; said stem is isolated from said selectively permeable material; and said stem is connected directly to said support frame at a proximal end of the perimeter of said support frame; and, wherein said connection point is configured to be connected to said delivery unit after the collapsible embolic protection device has been arranged in said aortic arch and during said medical procedure.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) These and other aspects, features and advantages of which embodiments of the invention are capable of will be apparent and elucidated from the following description of embodiments of the present invention, reference being made to the accompanying drawings, in which
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DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(15) Specific embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings. This invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. The terminology used in the detailed description of the embodiments illustrated in the accompanying drawings is not intended to be limiting of the invention. In the drawings, like numbers refer to like elements.
(16) In order to get a better understanding of the anatomical situation in which the present invention is carried out,
(17) The aortic arch 100 describes a large bend in the ascending aorta 112 after it leaves the heart 110 via the aortic valve. The ascending aorta 112 makes a sweeping, double twisting bend toward the dorsal surface of the body. The twisting and bending ultimately results in a generalized 180-degree bend or arch, namely the aortic arch 100 that transforms into the descending aorta 114. The side branch vessels 116, 118, 120 comprise important arteries that supply oxygenated blood to the neck and head. The side branch vessels 116, 118, 120 have their origin in branches off the aortic arch 100. The opening in the aorta towards a side branch vessel is called ostium.
(18) Normally, three branches of the aorta split off from the trunk of the aortic arch in three separate ostia 116a, 118a, 120a. The third side branch vessel 116 is called the brachiocephalic artery, the second side branch vessel 118 is called the left common carotid artery, and the first side branch vessel 120 is called the left subclavian artery, which usually split from the aortic arch as three separate arterial trunks, arising from different positions on the aortic arch 100. This is illustrated in detail in
(19) The brachiocephalic artery 116 is the largest diameter branch of the aortic arch and normally gives rise to a bifurcation from which extend the right subclavian artery 115, leading blood e.g. to the right arm, and the right common carotid artery 117 conveying arterial blood towards the neck and head. The left common carotid artery 118 usually branches directly from the aortic arch 100. The common carotid arteries 117, 118 then branch into the external and internal carotid arteries that supply blood to the neck and head regions.
(20) The left and right subclavian arteries 120, 115 ultimately provide the arterial path for blood destined for the vertebral arteries, the internal thoracic arteries, and other vessels that provide oxygenated blood to the thoracic wall, spinal cord, parts of the upper arm, neck, meninges, and the brain.
(21) The spacing of the ostia 116a, 118a, 120a relative each other may vary from patient to patient. It is also not uncommon for one or more of these major arteries to be fused for a time. For instance two of the branches may split off from a common trunk, or the number of branches may be increased to four or more if, for example, the right common carotid artery 117 branches directly from the aortic arch 100 instead of from the brachiocephalic artery 116 at a bifurcation with the right subclavian artery 115.
(22) In embodiments of the invention, a collapsible embolic protection device 200 is provided that is devised for temporary transvascular delivery to an aortic arch 100 of a patient, and temporary positioning in the aortic arch 100. Several embodiments of the device are described below. The devices have a collapsible protection unit 140 for preventing embolic material 150 from entering into at least one of the side branch vessels 116, 118, 120 of the aortic arch 100 in an expanded state thereof when suitably positioned in the aortic arch 100. Preferably at least the left and right carotid arteries 118, 117 are protected from embolic material 150 present in the aortic arch 100.
(23) The protection unit 140 comprises a selectively permeable material or unit 132 adapted to selectively prevent embolic material 150 from passage with a blood flow (symbolic arrows in
(24) The attachment point may be arranged centrally at the protection device 200, as illustrated in
(25) The embolic protection device 200 further comprises a first support member 133 for the protection unit 140 that is at least partly arranged at a periphery 180 of the selectively permeable unit 132. The selectively permeable unit 132 is permeable for blood but impermeable for embolic material. The selectively permeable unit 132 is connected or attached to the first support member 133 by in a suitable manner or by suitable means, such as gluing, welding, stretching over around the periphery, e.g. such as a sock in a double layer, or in a single layer. Alternatively, the selectively permeable unit 132 may be integral with the first support member 133, e.g. by a suitable braiding technique, laser perforation or puncturing of a flat sheet being the selectively permeable unit, etc. The first support member 133 may be provided in form of a wire. The wire may be of circular diameter or flattened for improved tissue friendly apposition. The wire may be integral with the transvascular delivery unit 130, when the latter comprises an elongate wire transiting to the protection unit 140.
(26) In an expanded state of the device 200, the attachment point 131 is enclosed by the first support member 133. Alternatively, the connection or attachment point 131 is arranged at a location being at least one point of the first support member 133. Alternatively, or in addition, the connection point is integral with the first support member 133, see e.g.
(27) In some embodiments, the attachment point 131 is arranged in a plane different than that enclosed by the periphery 180 of the selectively permeable unit 132, see e.g.
(28) In this manner, delivery through one of the side branch vessels is facilitated. The device 200 may thus reliable be positioned. Leakage of blood and embolic material past the periphery 180 may advantageously be minimized or avoided. Depending on the characteristics of the selectively permeable unit 132, embolic material may be temporary trapped in the selectively permeable unit 132. The selectively permeable unit 132 may comprise a filter material. Alternatively, or in addition, the selectively permeable unit 132 may comprise or be made of a porous material, such as a sintered material, including sintered metal. Alternatively, or in addition, the selectively permeable unit 132 may have characteristics that the embolic material glides or slides along a second surface 136 thereof oriented away from the ostia 116a, 118a, 118a.
(29) In embodiments of the collapsible embolic protection device, the transvascular delivery unit is attached off-center to the selectively permeable material at the attachment point. The attachment point 131 is for instance provided on a different location than the center point of the selectively permeable unit 132 on the first surface 135 thereof, as e.g. illustrated in
(30) The first support member 133 is shaped to apposition to tissue of a vessel wall portion of the aortic arch 100. The first support member 133 may releasably engage with the tissue of the vessel wall portion. The first support member 133 is formed to encircle the plurality of ostia 116a, 118a, 120a of the aortic side branch vessels 116, 118, 120 inside the aortic arch 100, and at a distance to the ostia 116a, 118a, 120a. In this manner the selectively permeable unit 132 is arranged to separate a first fluid volume of the aortic side branch vessels 116, 118, 120 from a second fluid volume in the aortic arch 100 when the protection unit 140 is positioned in the aortic arch 100, as illustrated in
(31)
(32) Regions of accumulated plaque 316, 318, 320 at the ostia 116a, 118a, 120a are not contacted by the device 200. Thus the plaque rests at its place and it not released. The distal end of the catheter 160 of the transvascular delivery unit, from which the protection unit 200 is released, may be positioned further into the aortic arch 100 as illustrated in
(33) With reference to
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(35) In the embodied method 600, the device 200 is positioned in the aortic arch 100 by using a standard Seldinger technique and fluoroscopy with access through an introducer in the left radial artery. The protective device 200 is delivered using a catheter that is positioned in the aorta through the left subclavian artery. Once the collapsible protective device is delivered/released out of the catheter it expands and is placed to cover the left and right carotid arteries, letting through blood but not embolized particles. When the cardiovascular intervention or cardiac operation is over the device is retracted into the catheter again.
(36) In the method 600 of preventing embolic material from entering side branch vessels with a blood flow from an aortic arch of a patient, a collapsible embolic protection device 200 is percutaneously introduced in a collapsed state into a peripheral blood vessel, as illustrated by step 610. This is schematically illustrated in
(37) The collapsible embolic protection device 200 is transvascularly delivered in a collapsed state into the aortic arch 100 via the peripheral blood vessel and the first side branch vessel 120, as illustrated by step 620. For this purpose, the device 200 is collapsed into a delivery catheter 160 and introduced through the latter to the deployment site inside the aortic arch 100. The delivery path comprises the ostium 120a of the first side branch vessel 120. Contact with the ostium 120a and surrounding tissue is avoided, in order to not release any plaque or other debris therefrom. However, in case any debris should be created by unintended contact with the ostium 120a of the left subclavian artery 120, this would be washed away from the carotid arteries with the blood stream in the aorta or into the first side branch vessel, which would not have the risk of ischemic cerebral injury or major stroke as debris washed into the carotid arteries.
(38) The device 200 is attached to a transvascular delivery unit 130, such as a pusher or wire, at an attachment point thereof. As illustrated in
(39) In the illustrated embodiment, the expanding comprises asymmetrically expanding a first portion 145 of the protection unit and a second portion 146 of the protection unit from the attachment point 131. The first portion 145 is expanded in a first direction towards the descending aorta 114 of the aortic arch 100. The second portion 146 is expanded in a second direction towards the ascending aorta 112 of the aortic arch 100. The asymmetric arrangement facilitates the positioning of the device 200 from the delivery vessel 120 in relation to the other side branch vessels 116, 118 to be protected. This method stage is illustrated by step 640.
(40) Alternative devices may only be expanded in the direction of the second and third branch vessels, providing a diverter for embolic material.
(41) The positioning the protection unit 200 in the aortic arch 100 comprises appositioning a first support member 133 of the selectively permeable unit 132 of the protective unit 200 to tissue of a vessel wall portion of the aortic arch 100, as illustrated by step 650. The first support member 133 of the protection unit 200 is at least partly arranged at a periphery 180 of the selectively permeable unit 132 of the protection unit. The first support member 133 is enclosing, in an expanded state of the device, the attachment point 131 by the first support member 133.
(42) The method comprises encircling a plurality of ostia 116a, 118a, 120a of the aortic side branch vessels 116, 118, 120 in the aortic arch 100 with the first support member 133, and positioning the protective unit 200 at a distance to the ostia 116a, 118a, 120a. This method stage is illustrated by step 660. Alternatively, only the ostia 116a, 118a are protected.
(43) Thus, the protection unit 200 is positioned in the aortic arch 100 in the expanded state thereof, as illustrated in
(44) The method thus provides for concurrently separating a first fluid volume of the aortic side branch vessels from a second fluid volume in the aortic arch when the protection unit 200 is positioned in the aortic arch 100.
(45) The method may comprise drawing the expanded protection unit 200 into a direction opposite a delivery direction, and thus tensioning and tightening against a vessel tissue portion of the aortic arch 100 encircling the ostia of the side branch vessels. This embodied method stage is illustrated by step 690.
(46) The tightening and sealing around the periphery 180 of the protection unit 200 is further supported by blood pressure and blood flow in the aortic arch pressing the protection unit against the vessel tissue portion.
(47) The positioning of the protection unit 200 in the aortic arch may comprise releasably engaging the protection unit 200 with tissue of a vessel wall portion of the aortic arch, see step 700. This may be accomplished by the aforementioned drawing the delivery unit 130 against the delivery direction. Thus a further improver leakage tight prevention of passage of embolic material into the side branch vessels is accomplished. The tissue of the aorta vessel is not damaged and trauma thereof is effectively prevented. The first support member 133 may for instance have a rounded diameter, and/or be of a soft exterior material or comprise a suitable coating for even further improving these characteristics. The first support member 133 may be provided in form of a peripheral collar or cuff that is atraumatically protecting the vessel tissue of the aorta wall.
(48) The method comprises arranging the permeable unit at a distance from ostia of the side branch vessels into the aortic arch. The arranging comprises for instance not contacting ostia of the side branch vessels into the aortic arch.
(49) Triggering of release of embolic material from the ostia, such as debris, is thus effectively prevented by covering all side branch vessels, and not contacting the ostia of the side branch vessels into the aortic arch.
(50) Prevention of embolic material from entering side branch vessels with a blood flow from an aortic arch of a patient may comprise directing embolic material past the ostia of the aortic side branch vessels of the aortic arch, along a surface of the selectively permeable unit devised to be oriented away from ostia of the aortic side branch vessels of the aortic arch, when the protection unit is positioned in the aortic arch, in the expanded state.
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(52) Extracting the protection device is done by means of the transvascular delivery unit after a temporary placement of the protection unit for the preventing embolic material from entering side branch vessels.
(53) As illustrated in
(54) Embolic material trapped in the protection unit 200 may be released or flushed into a corporeal blood flow towards the descending aorta 114 from the aortic arch 100, before collapsing the protection unit into the sheath.
(55) Furthermore, extraction continues with sliding the sheath of the catheter 160 over the protection unit for collapsing the protection unit into the sheath. Then the collapsible embolic protection device is withdrawn in the sheath through the first side branch vessel 120 and the peripheral blood vessel out of the patient, see step 720.
(56) The collapsible embolic protection device used in the method is in embodiments a device of embodiments as described herein.
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(59) The attachment point of embodiments of the protection device is in some embodiments provided on a surface of the selectively permeable unit 132 devised to be oriented towards the aortic side branch vessels 116, 118, 120 from inside the aortic arch 100 and at a distance from the ostia 116a, 118a, 120a, when the protection unit is positioned in the aortic arch. This is for instance illustrated in
(60) A tissue protective unit may be comprised in embodiments of the protection device, such as shown in
(61) Thanks to the tissue protective unit the protection device is advantageously leak tight, without damaging the aorta wall, during delivery thereof or when in position in the aortic arch 100.
(62) The selectively permeable unit 132, and thus the protective unit 200 is non-tubular, extending substantially planar in the expanded state. The substantially planar shape includes a flat cupped, inverted umbrella, mushroom, or parachute shapes, as shown in the Figures.
(63) Flat in this context means that the thickness of the device 200 is substantially smaller than the longitudinal extension thereof. Moreover, flat means such dimensions perpendicular to the longitudinal extension of the protective material, that blood flow through the aortic arch is not hindered by the protective device 200.
(64) The perimeter of the device 200 is configured for tissue apposition in the aortic arch. The shape of the perimeter may be circular, oval, elongate, or even patient-configured adapted to the specific anatomical situation of the patient to be protected by the protective device. Patient-configured devices may be based on data derived from image modalities like CT, MR or Ultrasound.
(65) The device may thus be provided in various longitudinal and transversal extensions, and symmetries. The device may be adapted to the shape of the side branch vessel ostia, see e.g.
(66) Wing sections of the protective device may be shaped to extend a certain distance down into the ascendant and/or descendant aorta in order to further improve stability and/or sealing efficiency at the periphery 180 of the protection device 200. Wing sections are e.g. illustrated in
(67) A plurality of sub-sections of the protection device may be arranged as multi-layers inside each other. In this manner a plurality of peripheral support units and/or sealing units may be provided in series, in order to further improve stability and/or sealing efficiency at the periphery 180 of the protection device 200.
(68) In an embodiment the selectively permeable unit is non-tubular, extending substantially planar, which peripheral edge is formed by the first support member 133. The first side of the device 200 is devised to be oriented towards the aortic side branch vessels from inside the aortic arch when the protection unit is positioned in the aortic arch, in the expanded state.
(69) The selectively permeable unit 132 is devised to be arranged at a distance from ostia of the aortic side branch vessels of the aortic arch, when the protection unit 200 is positioned in the aortic arch 100, in the expanded state.
(70) The selectively permeable unit 132 is in some embodiments a rigid, non-elastic material, substantially non-flexible, material, which is non-conformable to ostia of the side branch vessels. Alternatively, or in addition, the support frame of the periphery of the device 200 may provide this rigidity to the device. The selectively permeable unit 132 may be stretched by the support frame in the expanded state of the device 200.
(71) Thus, a mechanical protective function of certain tissue or certain organs in the vicinity of the device, is provided, when the device is at its position in the body. A protection of the aorta side branch vessels' ostia, i.e. the tissue islands of the side branch vessels in the aortic arch is provided. The tissue islands are protected from mechanical compression by means of the protection device. Mechanical compression may for instance arise from other devices that are manipulated in the aortic arch when the protection device is positioned therein. Other devices comprise transvascular medical instruments, such as surgical instruments, guidewires, catheters, balloons, filters, ablation instruments, intracardiac electrodes, etc.
(72) As the protection device lies like a cover or lid (planar or in an inverted flat umbrella/mushroom/parachute shape) over the ostia, at a distance there from, a certain movement towards the ostia due to mechanical pressure from inside the aorta arch is permitted by the protective device.
(73) The protective device may comprise struts across which the selectively permeable material of the unit 132 is arranged. The struts are configured to provide a counter force, such that the selectively permeable unit resiliently returns to an initial position upon a mechanical compression. A plurality of struts may be arranged like struts supporting fabric of an umbrella. The struts may be of a resilient material.
(74) In case of the protection device being made of a heat set braiding, the struts may be implemented in from of thicker wires in the braiding. The remaining braiding may be made of thinner wires and thus provide the selectively permeability of the selectively permeable unit.
(75) The struts keep up and support the selectively permeable material of unit 132.
(76) The struts may be implemented as a plurality of arms 171, 172. The struts are provided as a protective framework for the selectively permeable unit of the protection device.
(77) In an embodiment the selectively permeable unit 132 is a mesh material comprising a mesh of strands. The strands may be of a metallic material, such as stainless steel or Nitinol. Alternatively, or in addition, at least some of the strands may be made of a polymeric material, such as a shape memory polymer.
(78) The mesh of strands forming the protection device may be made of a heat set braiding. Here, the expanded configuration of the device is set. The collapsed device returns to the heat set shape upon delivery. This may be based on an elastic return or a shape memory effect. A manufacturing method that may be modified for protection devices according to the invention, is disclosed in WO9742878A1 and WO9912478A1 of AGA Medical Corporation, which are incorporated by reference in their entirety herein for all purposes. A fabric of resilient metal fabric material is brought to a desired expanded configuration by a mould in a heat setting process. The mould has a shape corresponding to the shape of the protection device in its expanded shape, e.g. the planar shape, or the flat parachute, mushroom, or umbrella shape described herein.
(79) The metal fabric is formed from a plurality of metal strands and is heat treated within the mold in order to substantially set the desired shape of the device. The medical device may include a fastener for attaching to the end of a guide wire or delivery catheter. The shape of the medical device may be formed such that the fastener is attached to the metal fabric within a recess formed in the shape of the medical device.
(80) The device is capable of assuming both an expanded configuration and a collapsed configuration. Once expelled out of a delivery catheter the device returns to its expanded configuration, e.g. in either a planar shape, or a generally flat umbrella-shaped configuration, a generally flat mushroom-shaped configuration, or a generally flat parachute-shaped configuration.
(81) The protective device may be made of plural layers of fabric, such as disclosed in WO07149107A1 of AGA Medical Corporation, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein for all purposes. The collapsible medical protection device is shaped from plural layers of a heat-treatable metal fabric. Each of the fabric layers is formed from a plurality of metal strands and the assembly is heat-treated within a mold in order to substantially set a desired shape of the device. By incorporating plural layers in the thus-formed medical device, the ability of the device to securely be selectively permeable and mechanically protective is significantly improved.
(82) The strands of the braiding of the protective device is for instance made of NiTinol. NiTinol is a superelastic material ensuring that the compressed device reliable returns to its heats set shape when released from the delivery catheter.
(83) A protective framework may be implemented in from of thicker wires provided within the braiding. The protective framework may be implemented in from of a separate layer of a multi-layer braided structure.
(84) The braiding may has rounded edges at the periphery 180, similar to that shown in
(85) The selectively permeable unit 132 can comprise a hydrophobic material, or comprises a hydrophobic agent, or be made of such a material. This is particularly advantageous to prevent trapping of embolic material in the selectively permeable unit 132.
(86) The selectively permeable unit 132 may be devised to substantially not trap the embolic material in the selectively permeable unit.
(87) Alternatively, or in addition, the selectively permeable unit 132 is devised to releasably trap at least a part of the embolic material 150 from the blood flow in the aortic arch 100. The embolic material may e.g. be trapped in pores or a filter structure of the permeable unit 132.
(88) Alternatively, or in addition, the selectively permeable unit 132 is devised to be repellant to embolic material. Thus, embolic material glides of the selectively permeable unit 132 when the protection device 200 is positioned inside the aortic arch. Such a material is e.g. polytetrafluoroethylene PTFE, commercially available as Goretex.
(89) The selectively permeable unit 132 comprises a first portion devised to extend in a first direction towards a descending aorta of the aortic arch from the attachment point, and a second portion devised to extend in a second direction, opposite to the first direction, towards the ascending aorta of the aortic arch from the attachment point, when the protection unit is positioned in the aortic arch, in the expanded state. The first and second portions may have different longitudinal extensions.
(90) In embodiments, the selectively permeable unit is arranged to asymmetrically extend from the attachment point in a first direction towards a descending aorta of the aortic arch and in a second direction towards an ascending aorta of the aortic arch, when the protection unit is positioned in the aortic arch, in the expanded state.
(91) Further, the selectively permeable unit is devised for percutaneous transvascular delivery through one of the aortic side branch vessels to the aortic arch, in a collapsed state.
(92) The protective device may comprise an additional safety connection in order to prevent loosening of the device into the descending aorta 114. The safety connection may comprise a safety wire, thread, tether, string, strand, or similar. The safety connection may be attached to the delivery unit or extend all the way through the sheath of the catheter.
(93) In practical implementations, the device has a substantially oval form, approximately 6-10 cm in the longitudinal direction and approximately 3-6 cm in the transversal direction. Wings, or multi-layer structures, as described above, may be provided in addition.
(94) A mesh size or pore size of a material of the selectively permeable unit 132 may be in the range of 20 m to 100 m, such as 30-90 m or 60-80 m. In this manner embolic material is effectively hindered from passing into the side branch vessels, whereas a passage of blood is not substantially hindered. However, as explained above, trapping of embolic particles, i.e. a collection and accumulation thereof, is primarily not provided by the selectively permeable unit 132.
(95) The selectively material may be manufactured from a flat sheet of material, such as PTFE, which is perforated with holes of suitable diameter to provide the permeability for blood. The holes are provided in a sufficient number to not hinder blood flow across the material, while providing the embolic protection. A schematic illustration is given in
(96)
(97)
(98) The device illustrated in
(99) At the distal end of the device, a tongue 199 is arranged. The tongue 199 is made by suitably bending the wire of the support member 133. The tongue has a width B. The tongue 199 facilitates introduction of the device into the delivery catheter by bending the two branches 197, 198 towards each other while pushing the distal end into a proximal catheter lumen opening. The width B is preferably as large as, or smaller as, the inner diameter of the lumen of the catheter. Thus, the tongue 199 is easily introduced into the catheter and the remaining device is pushed into the catheter in an advantageous manner.
(100) The tongue 199 further is arranged at an angle deviating longitudinally from the protection plane of the permeable unit 132 extending between the expanded lateral branches 197, 198, see
(101) In alternative embodiments such a tongue may be attached to the distal end as a separate element.
(102)
(103) A typical duration of use of the device is approximately one hour.
(104) A kit comprises such a collapsible embolic protection device and a transvascular delivery unit adapted for delivery of the collapsible embolic protection device through a side branch vessel of the aortic arch into the aortic arch.
(105) In order to prevent debris from the ostium (120a in the exemplary Figures) that perhaps, despite all caution, is released during the placement of device 200, to reach the brain, a particle trap or filter may be arranged proximally on the delivery unit, in combination to the latter. Such a trap or filter may be provided in a separate lumen of the catheter for release in the delivery vessel upstream the ostium of delivery to the aortic arch 100. The trap or filter may for instance be a vascular filter for positioning in a lumen of the type as disclosed in WO 2007/035885, US 2006/0025806, which are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety for all purposes. Suitable commercially available vascular filters, traps or embolic protection devices are e.g. the SpiderFX or Fibernet EP system. Any embolic material that by accident ends up in the delivery vessel is thus securely trapped and removed when withdrawing the combined device 200 and vascular trap.
(106) The kit may comprise such a vascular particle trap or filter.
(107)
(108) As used herein, the singular forms a, an and the are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless expressly stated otherwise. It will be further understood that the terms includes, comprises, including and/or comprising, when used in this specification, specify the presence of stated features, integers, steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof. It will be understood that when an element is referred to as being connected or coupled to another element, it can be directly connected or coupled to the other element or intervening elements may be present. As used herein, the term and/or includes any and all combinations of one or more of the associated listed items.
(109) Unless otherwise defined, all terms (including technical and scientific terms) used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs. It will be further understood that terms, such as those defined in commonly used dictionaries, should be interpreted as having a meaning that is consistent with their meaning in the context of the relevant art and will not be interpreted in an idealized or overly formal sense unless expressly so defined herein.
(110) The present invention has been described above with reference to specific embodiments. However, other embodiments than the above described are equally possible within the scope of the invention. Different method steps than those described above may be provided within the scope of the invention. The different features and steps of the invention may be combined in other combinations than those described. The scope of the invention is only limited by the appended patent claims.