Implant with Attached Element and Method of Making Such an Implant
20170042709 ยท 2017-02-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61F2/915
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L31/18
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2002/91525
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2/91
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2002/91508
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2/89
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61F2/89
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A stent having an axial end to which is attached a ring of spoons of a material different from that of the stent. In one aspect, the ring of spoons is connected to the axial end through a plurality of complementary male-female form-fitting portions. In one aspect, the ring of spoons include parallel straight side edges. In one aspect, each of the side edges lies within a first distance from a facing side edge of an adjacent spoon in a stent delivery configuration, and each of the side edges lies within a second distance, greater than the first distance, from the facing side edge of an adjacent spoon in a stent deployed configuration.
Claims
1. A method comprising: providing an implant defining a longitudinal axis and a terminal end and comprising a plurality of marker carriers disposed at the terminal end; providing a tube comprising a ring of spoons connected to the tube through a bridge of material wherein the bridge is longitudinally narrower than the spoons and wherein the spoons comprise an internal cavity; mounting the implant and the tube; aligning the marker carriers with the internal cavities; and joining the marker carriers with the spoons.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the tube comprises a radiopaque metal.
3. The method of claim 2 wherein the radiopaque metal comprises tantalum.
4. The method of claim 3 wherein the mounting step comprises mounting the implant and the tube on a single core.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein the joining step comprises abutting a marker peripheral surface against an exterior surface of the marker carrier wherein the abutting surfaces have complementary tapers in a direction across a marker thickness.
6. The method of claim 5 wherein the joining step comprises welding the spoons to the marker carriers.
7. The method of claim 6 further comprising removing the bridges from the spoons.
8. The method of claim 2 wherein the mounting step comprises mounting the implant and the tube on separate cores.
9. The method of claim 8 wherein the joining step comprises abutting a marker peripheral surface against an exterior surface of the marker carrier wherein the abutting surfaces have complementary tapers in a direction across a marker thickness
10. The method of claim 9 wherein the joining step comprises welding the spoons to the marker carriers.
11. The method of claim 10 further comprising removing the bridges from the spoons.
12. The method of claim 8 wherein the aligning step comprises rotating the cores until the marker carriers register with the internal cavities.
13. The method of claim 12 wherein the joining step comprises abutting a marker peripheral surface against an exterior surface of the marker carrier wherein the abutting surfaces have complementary tapers in a direction across a marker thickness
14. The method of claim 13 wherein the joining step comprises welding the spoons to the marker carriers.
15. The method of claim 14 further comprising removing the bridges from the spoons.
16. The method of claim 2 wherein the joining step comprises welding the spoons to the marker carriers.
17. The method of claim 16 further comprising removing the bridges from the spoons.
18. A method comprising: providing an implant defining a longitudinal axis and a terminal end and comprising a plurality of marker carriers disposed at the terminal end; providing a tantalum tube comprising a ring of spoons connected to the tube through a bridge of material wherein the bridge is longitudinally narrower than the spoons and wherein the spoons comprise an internal cavity; mounting the implant and the tube on separate cores; aligning the marker carriers with the internal cavities by rotating the cores until the marker carriers register with the cavities; joining the marker carriers with the spoons by abutting a marker peripheral surface against an exterior surface of the marker carrier wherein the abutting surfaces have complementary tapers in a direction across a marker thickness; welding the spoons to the marker carriers; and removing the bridges from the spoons.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0040]
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[0044]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0045] Skilled readers will appreciate that the material of the stent tube and its markers lies all in a circular cross-section with a wall thickness as small as possible, so as to be consistent with the objective of maintaining a bodily lumen as open as possible. The stent cylinder can be formed from seamless tubular starting material, or from flat material rolled into a tube (which thus exhibits some sort of seam).
[0046] Skilled readers will also be well aware that there have been a very large number of proposals for strut patterns in the tubular configurations of stents. Whereas
[0047] Readers will also appreciate that self-expanding stents are delivered to stenting locations in a radially compressed form, so that the aggregate length, in the circumferential direction, of all of the markers in any particular ring around the axis of the stent tube cannot exceed the circumference of the stent tube in its compressed delivery configuration. In the embodiment shown in
[0048] As can be seen in
[0049] Referring now to
[0050] In
[0051] The present invention aims to assist the attachment of tantalum markers to Nitinol stents, for example by laser-welding, and make it even more reliable and secure. The melting point of tantalum is around 3000 C., and that of Nitinol around 1200 C., rendering it difficult to achieve a good bond purely by welding. However, the tapered close fit between the two metals, and the flow of Nitinol around the tantalum during welding, achieves a secure mechanical interlock between the stent and the marker 20.
[0052] It is conventional to form the lattice patterns of Nitinol stents by laser-cutting. The line of action of a laser for cutting the tapered mating surfaces 30 of the carrier portion 18 in the stent are achieved by aligning the laser in the normal radial direction of intersecting the long axis of the stent tube
[0053] As to the number of markers in one circumference of the stent, optimum radiopacity is accomplished when the markers at each end of the stent make up a virtually unbroken solid ring of marker material around the full circumference. In the case shown there is a marker on every third end vertex of the stent, with 4 markers at each end of the stent, and 12 zigzag vertices around the circumference of the stent. This, however, is not to exclude the possibility of fewer markers at each end of the stent, including the extreme case, seen in wo 95/03010, mentioned at the beginning of this specification, that there is only one marker at each end of the stent cylinder.
[0054] Turning now to the second aspect of the invention, and to the assembly of the markers 20 onto the stent 10, one can see from
[0055]
[0056] A support cylinder 54 which includes the four markers 20, 56 attached at their tips 40 is offered up to the stent cylinder 10, the two cylinders being co-linear and coaxial. There is then a snap fit of the marker portions 18 of the stent 10 into the receiving recess of each marker 20. Once the marker portions 18 are secure within the recesses of the respective markers 20, a laser can be deployed to produce a laser weld between the marker portion 18 and the marker 20. During welding; the Nitinol adjacent the tantalum marker melts locally and to a limited extent flows around the tantalum, thereby effectively form-locking the marker to the stent. With this laser welding accomplished, a laser can then be brought into play, to part at marker tip 40 each individual marker 20 from the carrier tube 54 which has supported it up to that point. With this parting away of the markers 20 from their carrier tube, the stent can then be separated from the carrier tube, with the markers 20 securely welded to the stent 10.
[0057] Readers will immediately appreciate from the above description, taken in conjunction with the drawings, that the markers 20 have the general form of a spoon. That is to say, the markers have two major dimensions and one minor dimension, namely, the thickness in the radial direction of the stent. The two major surfaces have a length direction in the length direction of the stent and are more or less flat in that direction. However, in the transverse direction, circumferential with respect to the stent cylinder, the markers are curved so that they exhibit a luminal surface which is concave and an abluminal surface which is convex. This curvature is also exhibited in the transverse direction of a cutlery spoon.
[0058] Further, each marker 20 has a near end surface in which is something akin to the shaft of a cutlery spoon, namely, the marker portion 18 of the stent. Opposite this end surface is another end surface, relatively remote from the stent, which is not attached to the stent and is arcuate on its periphery. This is reminiscent of the arcuate (in the sense of presenting an outwardly convex shape) peripheral end surface of a cutlery spoon, remote from the shaft of the spoon.
[0059] In
[0060] Step 1 is to cut with a laser a tube of Nitinol material in order to produce a stent precursor 50 having at each ends a ring of four marker carrier portions 52 each having a shape which has some slight resemblance to an arrowhead shape. In the example shown here, the Nitinol tube has a wall thickness of 0.24 mm and a nominal diameter of 1.6 mm.
[0061]
[0062] In
[0063] In
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[0065]
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[0067] Clearly, if it desired to place a ring of spoons at the other end of the stent tube 50 then the process can be repeated at this other end. Indeed, in
[0068] Once the spoons have been placed as desired on the precursor tube 50 of the stent, then this precursor tube can be subjected to the normal successor manufacturing steps, including the step of expanding the stent precursor to a desired larger diameter and then annealing it at that diameter in order to set a stent shape in the austenitic phase of the Nitinol material, which is the shape that it is desired the stent should revert to, in the body, upon deployment from a stent delivery system. Such a set shape might include a central cylindrical portion of the stent, and flared portions at each end, with the ring of carrier portions 52 and spoons 56 themselves forming part of the flared portion of the end of the stent. As tantalum has a melting point so much higher than that of Nitinol, there is no likelihood that the Nitinol annealing step will in any way adversely affect the spoons and welding beads at each end of the stent cylinder.
[0069] The scope of protection of the claims which follow is not to be limited to the embodiments described in detail above. Readers will appreciate that the detailed description is to assist in realizing embodiments within the scope of the claim rather than to set a limit on the scope of protection.