SELF-EXPANDABLE SCAFFOLDING DEVICE FOR THE TREATMENT OF ANEURYSMS
20170348119 · 2017-12-07
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61F2220/0075
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2/92
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2002/823
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2230/0013
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2210/0014
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61F2/91
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61F2/92
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A stent includes a first longitudinally extended cylinder having a C-shaped cross-section and a second longitudinally extended cylinder having a C-shaped cross-section. The first cylinder includes a plurality of first longitudinal struts and an array of first radial struts extending between the first longitudinal struts. The second cylinder includes a plurality of second longitudinal struts and an array of second radial struts extending between the second longitudinal struts. The first cylinder and the second cylinder are configured to form a dense mesh structure when assembled. When assembled, the second cylinder may be disposed in the first cylinder. The first cylinder may overlap with the second cylinder to form the dense mesh structure.
Claims
1. A stent comprising: a first longitudinally extended cylinder having a C-shaped cross-section, the first cylinder comprising a plurality of first longitudinal struts and an array of first radial struts extending between the first longitudinal struts; and a second longitudinally extended cylinder having a C-shaped cross-section, the second cylinder comprising a plurality of second longitudinal struts and an array of second radial struts extending between the second longitudinal struts; wherein the first cylinder and the second cylinder are configured to form a dense mesh when assembled.
2. The stent of claim 1, wherein the first cylinder and the second cylinder are assembled, and wherein a part of the first cylinder and a part of the second cylinder overlap to form the dense mesh.
3. The stent of claim 2, wherein more than half of the first cylinder and more than half of the second cylinder overlap to form the dense mesh.
4. The stent of claim 2, wherein the second cylinder is disposed within the first cylinder.
5. The stent of claim 2, wherein the first cylinder and the second cylinder are aligned such that an opening of the first cylinder and an opening of the second cylinder are on opposing sides of the stent radially.
6. The stent of claim 2, wherein the first cylinder and the second cylinder are attached at a joining location comprising a part of the first longitudinal struts and a part of the second longitudinal struts.
7. The stent of claim 6, wherein the first cylinder and the second cylinder are attached at the joining location by winding a tube or a coil around the part of the first longitudinal struts and the part of the second longitudinal struts.
8. The stent of claim 7, wherein the first cylinder and the second cylinder are attached at the joining location further by a solder disposed within the wounded tube or coil.
9. The stent of claim 7, wherein the tube or coil comprises a radiopaque marker.
10. The stent of claim 1, wherein the first and second radial struts comprise straight struts, sinusoidal-shaped struts, or both.
11. The stent of claim 1, wherein the first and second longitudinal struts each comprise a central strut and two edge struts.
12. The stent of claim 1, wherein the first and second longitudinal struts comprise S-shaped struts that connect to and extend from a corresponding central strut towards a corresponding edge strut, curve around to extend towards the corresponding central strut, and curve around to extend to and connect to the corresponding edge strut.
13. The stent of claim 12, wherein a take-off angle of the first radial struts from a corresponding one of the first longitudinal struts is between 15° to 90°, and wherein a take-off angle of the second radial struts from a corresponding one of the second longitudinal struts is between 15° to 90°.
14. The stent of claim 1, wherein the first cylinder and the second cylinder are same in shape.
15. A stent comprising: a first longitudinally extended cylindrical-shaped member, the first member comprising a plurality of first longitudinal struts and an array of first radial struts extending between the first longitudinal struts; wherein the stent comprises an overlapping region to form a dense mesh.
16. The stent of claim 15, wherein the overlapping region comprises a part of the first member overlapping around another part of the first member.
17. The stent of claim 15, wherein the overlapping region comprises more than half of an outer surface of the stent.
18. The stent of claim 15, wherein the first member has a C-shaped cross-section, wherein the stent further comprises: a second longitudinally extended cylindrical-shaped member having a C-shaped cross-section, the second member comprising a plurality of second longitudinal struts and an array of second radial struts extending between the second longitudinal struts; wherein the overlapping region is formed by overlapping at least a part of the first member and at least a part of the second member when assembled.
19. The stent of claim 18, wherein the first member and the second member are assembled, and wherein the second member is disposed within the first member.
20. The stent of claim 18, wherein the first member and the second member are aligned such that an opening of the first member and an opening of the second member are on opposing sides of the stent radially.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0036] Embodiments of the present disclosure and their advantages are best understood by referring to the detailed description that follows. It should be appreciated that like reference numerals are used to identify like elements illustrated in one or more of the figures, in which the showings therein are for purposes of illustrating the embodiments and not for purposes of limiting them.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0037] By design, a stent is a cylindrical shape device that should be compactable so it can be delivered via a small delivery catheter and should be flexible so it can be tracked through tortuous blood vessels in the brain. A self-expandable stent is a type of stent that expands to the diameter of the blood vessel after it has been deployed from the delivery catheter. A self-expandable stent is made from a superelastic alloy such as an alloy of Nickel and Titanium, also called nitinol.
[0038] A self-expandable stent is made from a hypotube made with superelastic alloy material. The stent design is first drawn as a flat pattern (how a stent would look like if sliced longitudinally and pressed flat) on a Computer-Aided-Design (CAD) software. The same design pattern of the stent is then created on the hypotube by cutting it on to the hypotube using a powerful laser beam. After performing a series of post-processing work (which removes much of material from the laser-cut stent to soften) on the laser-cut part, a final stent device with its final specifications is produced. In order to deliver the stent device to its target location in the blood vessel, the stent must have a delivery system.
[0039] A stent delivery system can be a long wire with variable flexibility profile having some mechanism for attaching and detaching the stent. There are several mechanisms of detachment used in the market such as electrolytic detachment, twist-type detachment or mechanical detachment.
[0040] A typical self-expandable stent is a one piece cylindrical device cut from a cylindrical hypotube of a superelastic alloy. In one or more embodiments, a stent 100 is constructed with two parts 102, 104, each part representing one half of the stent and the design of one part 102 being the mirror image of the other 104 as shown in
[0041] After aligning the two parts 102, 104 together in the manner shown in
[0042] In one embodiment, the strut design of the first half 102 and the second half 104 may be as shown in
[0043] Due to the complexity associated with the 3-dimensional drawing of the stent 100 constructed of two halves 102, 104, the resulting strut structures of the final assembled stent 100 is illustrated by overlapping the two flat patterns (as if the stent has been flattened) of both parts 102, 104 on top of each other as shown in
[0044] In other embodiments, the stent 100 can be constructed with struts of various geometries. Examples of few such variations are shown in
[0045] In another embodiment, the stent 100 can be constructed using only one half (instead of two halves 102, 104 as above). An example of such stent 500 using only one half is shown in
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[0047] To construct this stent 100, first the flat patterns of each halves 102, 1074 of the stent 100 are drawn using a CAD software, for example AutoCAD. The strut width in the flat pattern can be anywhere between 0.0030″ to 0.0050″. The specification of the strut width depends upon the wall thickness of the nickel-titanium hypotube that the stent 100 is cut from. The electronic flat patterns are then programmed into a computerized laser-cutting equipment. After the equipment has been programmed, it drives a powerful laser beam along the edges of the design pattern and thereby cuts the exact same pattern from the nickel-titanium hypotube. The laser-cut stent 100 goes through a sequence of subsequent processes. Some of those include: stress-relief heat treatment at 500° C. to remove stresses from the laser-cut parts, microblasting to remove the outside oxide layer, expansion to a larger diameter by shape setting at 500° C., chemical etching and electro-polishing to remove much of material to obtain the final strut width.
[0048] The overlapping of nitinol stents 100 to get a dense mesh has been demonstrated before but only by deploying two finished stents separately, second stent inside the first one. The process of stenting an aneurysm in two separate deployments not only increases the clinical risks associated with the deployment but also requires the catheter access through the first deployed stent.
[0049] One or more embodiments of the present disclosure facilitate the features of two overlapped-stents in one stent. Advantageous features of one or more embodiments of the present disclosure are the process of assembling the stent 100 using two parts 102, 104 and the process of joining the two parts together at a location such as location 112 as described herein. The stent 100 described in one or more embodiments of the present disclosure facilitate a dense mesh across the neck of an aneurysm using only a single deployment hence reducing the clinical risk. Since there is no second deployment involved with this stent 100, it eliminates the requirement of catheter access through the deployed stent.
[0050] In one embodiment of a process of joining the two parts 102, 104, the longitudinal struts of the respective parts are aligned and wrapped (e.g., using a radiopaque marker) that could be in the form of a tube such as a platinum marker band as shown in
[0051] In the final set of processes, additional radiopaque markers (platinum or gold material) may be added at desired locations of the stent 100 using the method of crimping or soldering. In the final assembly the stent is then mounted on a delivery system and loaded inside an introducer sheath.
[0052] Advantageously, since the two parts 102, 104 of an assembled stent 100 are free to slide inside one another, the stent 100 exhibits excellent resistance to kinking when deployed inside a tight curve. Another advantageous feature of one or more embodiments of the present disclosure is the ease of manufacturability of the stent 100.
[0053] Embodiments described herein illustrate but do not limit the disclosure. It should also be understood that numerous modifications and variations are possible in accordance with the principles of the present disclosure. Accordingly, the scope of the disclosure is best defined only by the following claims.