TRANSCRANIAL LASER THERAPY FOR TREATMENT OF ACUTE ISCHEMIC STROKE
20190070431 ยท 2019-03-07
Inventors
- Justin Zivin (San Diego, CA, US)
- Luis De Taboada (Carlsbad, CA)
- Jackson Streeter (Gainesville, FL, US)
Cpc classification
H05K1/182
ELECTRICITY
H05K1/115
ELECTRICITY
F21Y2115/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V19/002
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
A42B1/242
HUMAN NECESSITIES
F21V29/70
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
H05K1/18
ELECTRICITY
F21V29/70
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H05K1/11
ELECTRICITY
A42B1/24
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
An apparatus and method of use for a comprehensive transcranial low-level light therapy for use with ischemic brain tissue using a multitude of polychromatic Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) embedded into a flexible head covering that stretches securely around the patient's cranium to bath the entire cranium cavity in a variable frequency, variable power density light spectrum, maximizing all beneficial effects to the cellular tissues whether or not they are specifically deprived of blood from the ischemic stroke event. The bulbs covering the n-p junction of the semiconductor LEDs directly contact the patient's cranial skin to maximize the depth of penetration of the wavelengths into the brain's cortex cells. By using many individual point-source LEDs emitting all around the cranium, greater therapeutic benefit can be achieved as more of the cortex tissues are irradiated.
Claims
1. An apparatus comprising: a flexible substrate with a plurality of light sources embedded therein, said plurality of light sources capable of emitting light at a wavelength of between about 700 nm and 1000 nm inclusive and a radiant intensity of light between about 200 mW/cm.sup.2 and 600 mW/cm.sup.2 inclusive; and the flexible substrate is configured to cover a user's head.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the plurality of light sources is a plurality of light emitting diodes.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a heat sink that dissipates heat generated by one or more of the plurality of light sources.
4. An apparatus of claim 1 further comprising: a multi-layer high-density interconnect printed circuit board having at least one pair of light emitting diode terminals soldered to at least one conducting strip; microvias for receiving said terminals within the interconnect printed circuit board; at least one lead wire, common ground wire and power supply; wherein at least one of the pair of terminals for the each light emitting diodes is connected to a lead wire that connects to a power supply and at least one of the pair of terminals is connected to the common ground that returns the current flow back to the power supply.
5. The apparatus of claim 4 further comprising an array of light emitting diodes that emit different frequencies within the range of about and between 700 nm and 1000 nm inclusive.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein the flexible substrate is pressed into and secured to a protective head covering unit that is placed over the user's head.
7. The apparatus of claim 6, wherein the head covering is in contact with the user's cranium and the user has ischemic brain tissue.
8. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the plurality of light sources is a fiber optic network transporting light from one or more external light sources.
9. An apparatus comprising: a head covering embedded with a plurality of light sources, the head covering having an inside that faces a user's head when worn by a user, and a plurality of light sources affixed to the inside of the head covering; said plurality of light sources emitting light at a wavelength of between about 700 nm and 1000 nm inclusive, and a radiant intensity of light between about 200 mW/cm.sup.2 and 600 mW/cm.sup.2 inclusive.
10. The apparatus of claim 9, wherein the plurality of light sources are light emitting diodes.
11. The apparatus of claim 9, further comprising a heat sink that dissipates heat generated by one or more of the plurality of light sources.
12. An apparatus of claim 11 further comprising: a multi-layer high-density interconnect printed circuit board having at least one pair of light emitting diode terminals soldered to at least one conducting strip; microvias for receiving said terminals within the interconnect printed circuit board; at least one lead wire, common ground and power supply; wherein at least one of the pair of terminals for the each light emitting diodes is connected to a lead wire that connects to a power supply and at least one of the pair of terminals is connected to the common ground that returns the current flow back to the power supply.
13. The apparatus of claim 12 further comprising an array of light emitting diodes that emit different frequencies within the range of about and between 700 nm and 1000 nm inclusive.
14. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein the head covering is in contact with the user's cranium and the user has ischemic brain tissue.
15. The apparatus of claim 12, further comprising a microprocessor for executing machine readable instructions stored in a non-transitory electronic memory, and where said machine readable instructions are configured to activate and deactivate at least some of the plurality of light sources at user selected time periods.
16. The apparatus of claim 12 in which the light emitting diodes comprise a plurality of dense matrix light emitting diodes.
17. A method of treatment for ischemic brain tissue comprising the steps of: placing a head covering over the head of the individual, said head covering comprising: a flexible substrate with a plurality of light sources embedded therein, said plurality of light sources emitting light at a wavelength of between about 700 nm and 1000 nm inclusive and a radiant intensity of light between about 200 mW/cm.sup.2 and 600 mW/cm.sup.2 inclusive; a heat sink, and the flexible substrate is configured to cover a user's head; and activating the plurality of light sources to irradiate the head of the individual having ischemic brain tissue.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein at least some of the plurality of light sources are power cycled or pulsed at intervals of time.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein the light sources are activated for a period between at least six minutes and two hours.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein the plurality of light sources are activated within twenty-four hours of the individual having a stroke.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0024] In reference to
[0025] Alternatively,
[0026] In reference to
[0027] In reference to the embodiment of
[0028] In reference to the embodiment of
[0029] In one embodiment of the current invention, the overall radiant intensity of the device is controlled by regulating the current flow to the individual LED elements comprising the array. In another embodiment, the number of emitting LEDs over the total coverage area is varied to control the effective radiant intensity. Generally, the higher the radiant intensity emitted from an LED, the higher level of waste heat that must be removed from the LED so that the LEDs temperature remains within the design operating range. Overheating the LEDs will cause the frequency emitted to deviate from the desired range, cause premature failure of the LED, and may become uncomfortable to the patient being treated. The multi-layer PCB can incorporate special layers that operate as heat sinks that remove the waste heat from the bulb itself and dissipate that heat externally. Commercially available dense matrix LEDs have built-in, localized heat sinks that dissipate heat away from the LEDs emitting bulb. Alternatively, for some LED designs, the duty-cycle is limited to very short durations to allow waste heat to dissipate without causing the LED to exceed temperature limits. For LEDs with a maximum duty cycle (non-continuous LEDs) heat management within the LED array can be controlled by grouping LEDs in rapid on/off cycles around the patient's cranium to simulate near continuous irradiation during the treatment protocol. In another embodiment, some or all of the LEDs are pulsed on/off at high frequencies per their design duty cycle.
[0030] In continued reference to
[0031] An objective of certain embodiments of the current disclosure is to irradiate maximum possible area of the patient's cranium as soon as symptoms occur rather instead of first locating the tissues affected and just focusing light to the tissues in that area. Generally, the most therapeutic benefit for ischemic patients can be achieved by the combination of exposure duration and light intensity. In one embodiment, the invention incorporates a basic power supply with low-cost LEDs that can be used by first responders, ambulances and emergency rooms who initially receive ischemic patients. In another embodiment, a low-cost irradiation device with a disposable cap (i.e., a head covering) can be stored on airplanes or workplaces, similar to defibrillators, which can be quickly applied to patients immediately once symptoms appear. In a further embodiment, more sophisticated LEDs with a variable output power supply can be used in ischemia treatment centers and physician's offices to provide more advanced TLLLT protocols.
[0032] In one study, a single TLLLT treatment within 24 hours after the ischemic event occurred showed measurable patient benefit. Subsequent analysis of TLLLT studies seem to indicate that multiple light treatment can effectively photomodulate at different stages of the ischemic cascade. In another study, exposure of animals starting 2 hours after an ischemic event lasting 6 minutes showed measurable positive benefit with a radiant intensity as low as 7.5 mW/cm2 using an 808 nm light frequency. Still in another study, cycles of exposure of lasting 2 minutes at 2 hours, 3 hours, and 4 hours after the ischemic event showed measurable benefits with a radiant intensity of 111 mW/cm2 and 1,000 nm laser. Generally, these studies show that early exposure of the cortex tissues with infrared light provides benefit to patients, but that benefit decreases over time after the ischemic event. However, other studies at lower radiant intensities have been inconclusive as to beneficial results. Higher radiant intensities, above 200 mW/cm2 were thought to be avoided as the risks to damaging the cells from thermal effects increased. However, this danger was found largely to be due to exceeding the duty cycle of the laser and distortion of the emitted frequency from the intended design into longer infrared wavelengths that are better carriers of heat energy into the tissues. By incorporating a multitude of emitting point sources across a broader surface area of tissue, more tissue can be irradiated without requiring higher and higher powered lasers operating beyond their design duty cycles. By incorporating a variable output power supply and a broader range of emitted frequencies, more sophisticated TLLLT protocols can be developed and customized to the type and magnitude of ischemia and the overall age and health of the patient. By exposing ischemic patients with a higher radiant intensity of light and earlier after the onset of symptoms, greater benefits can be delivered to the patient by the medical community.
[0033] Clinical benefits to ischemic stroke patients can generally be organized into two mechanisms: 1) stabilizing the oxygen-deprived cells from further damage and 2) enhancing the natural revascularization processes to return blood flow to the affected tissues. In one TLLLT study, a mechanism for this first benefit was theorized to involve inhibiting the formation of Cytochrome c Oxidase, an enzyme believed to increase the rate of cellular morbidity. This study concluded that certain wavelengths of IR light stimulate mitochondrial photoreceptors that stabilize the cell until the flow of oxygen and nutrients returns. However, the only current FDA-approved therapy for ischemic stroke involve injecting clot-breaking medicines into the patient's bloodstream to try and speed up the second benefit. An objective of the current invention is to irradiate both the ischemic cells to stabilize their biofunction while at the same time irradiating frequencies to healthy tissues to accelerate the natural revascularization processes. The complexities of the interactions between various light frequencies and thousands of cellular chemicals and structures is extremely difficult to determine with any degree of confidence. Therefore, exposing the patient's healthy and damaged brain cells to as many potentially therapeutic frequencies as soon as symptoms are detected approaches healing from all potential TLLLT directions. Furthermore, because TLLLT has no discernable side effects to the patient, this all-of-the-above approach to treatment using embodiments of the current disclosure, all maximum benefits to the patient can be realized.
[0034] In continued reference to
[0035] In reference to
[0036] While light emitting diodes and lasers have been described herein as the light sources utilized in the head cover, other light sources are contemplated without departing from the scope of the current disclosure. For example, fiber optic cables (or a fiber optic network) may be used to transport light from an external light source to the inside of the head cover. The external light source may itself be a laser, light emitting diode, or other appropriate light source that has therapeutic value to the individual being treated. An important aspect of the light source is that it emit light at the appropriate wavelength and intensity at or near the surface of the head of the individual to provide the most efficient and effective treatment.
[0037] Particular embodiments of the current disclosure provide for light wavelengths of 730-770 nm, 760-860 nm, 808 nm, 850-890 nm, 880-920 nm, or 930-970 nm, each inclusive. Exemplary light emitting diodes include Si, GaAs and CdSe. Current range-finding LEDs (pulse operation) are capable of producing 905 nm light at peak power rates of up to 100 Watts (see Excelitas Technologies PGEW Series of multi-epi semiconductor lasers). Other LEDs include Everlight HIR323C, 850 nm+/45 nm, Excelitas PGEW1SXXH, 905 nm+/15 nm, Kingbright WP7113SF7C, 850 nm+/50 nm, Mouser 15400385A3590, 850 nm+/40 nm.
[0038] The current disclosure also provides for beneficial methods of treating individuals. A single treatment within 24 hours has a positive benefit; multiple treatments to photomodulate at different stages of the ischemic cascade also has positive benefits. Starting 2 hours after an ischemic event, 6 minutes of exposure provides for positive benefits at 7.5 mW/cm2 and 808 nm. In another embodiment, triple exposure of 2 minutes at 2 hours, 3 hours, and 4 hours at 111 mW/cm2 and 100 Hz results in a benefit to the individual. Early exposure gives more benefit, but may over time after the ischemic event.
[0039] In one example of the method of using the device, the following steps occur: removing hair from the head of an individual; placing a head covering device of the present disclosure on the individual's head, the device comprising an inside facing the head of the individual, the inside comprising a plurality of light sources; and activating the plurality of light sources to irradiate the head of the individual with light emanating from the plurality of light sources. In one example, the individual's head does not need to be shaved. In one example, the light emanating from the plurality of light sources has a wavelength of between 700 nm and 1000 nm inclusive. In one example, the power density of the light emanating from the plurality of light sources is between 200 mW/cm2 and 600 mW/cm2. In one example of the method, there is an additional step comprising administering tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) to the individual either before, during, or after irradiating the head of the individual. tPA is a protein that is well-known for breaking down blood clots by acting as an enzyme that catalyzes conversion of plasminogen to plasmin, plasmin being an enzyme that catalyzes breakdown of blood clots. When this additional step is added to the method of using the device disclosed herein, each of the effects of tPA and the device are augmented because the device is able to provide energy to the brain while the tPA is breaking down the blood clot. The additional energy provided by the device to the individual's cells allows them to survive while the tPA activates a long term solution by breaking up the clot.
[0040] In another example of the method, there is an additional step comprising inserting a catheter into a blood vessel of the individual to physically remove a blood clot. When this additional step is added to the method of using the device disclosed herein, each of the effects of the catheter and the device are augmented because the device is able to provide energy to the brain while the catheter is able to physically remove the blood clot. The additional energy provided by the device to the individual's cells allows them to survive while the catheter provides a long term solution by physically removing the clot. In one embodiment, the catheter is fiber optic and simultaneously irradiates the blood vessel and physically removes the clot. One example of a fiber optic catheter is a fiber optic tube, having an outside facing wall that transmits light between 700 nm and 1000 nm inclusive.
[0041] In another example of the method, both additional steps comprising administering tPA and inserting a catheter are employed before, during, or after using the device for the reasons described above.