The present disclosure relates in general to catheters and more in particular to a device for inserting a guidewire into a blood vessel, wherein the device is self-centering and may be inserted into an artery for directing a guidewire through a heart valve.
Percutaneous valve replacement (Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement or more briefly TAVR) is a technique performed by inserting a catheter containing a guidewire, which is used as a guide for the implantation of a cardiac valve prosthesis. The catheter is threaded through the femoral artery and pushed up to the proximity of the defective heart valve or through the chest, for exiting the guidewire contained in the catheter near the cardiac valve so that it passes throughout it. Once the guidewire has passed throughout the heart valve, it is used to guide a valve prosthesis to the heart, where it must be positioned.
A difficulty related to this type of technique consists in the fact that the operator must be particularly skilled in order to quickly insert the guidewire through the faulty valve.
The imaging equipment currently used in operating rooms only allow a two-dimensional view and not a three-dimensional view of the guidewire approaching the defective heart valve. As a consequence, from the two-dimensional image the operator may have the wrong impression of correctly directing the guidewire to the center of the heart valve, which is also narrow and degenerated, crooked, when instead the apical end of the guidewire is going to abut against the walls of the aorta.
In any case, even if a second apparatus for images arranged so as to provide a different view were available, there would be the problem of positioning and properly orienting a catheter while pushing forward the guidewire. Moreover, the guidewire is made of yielding material so as not to damage the tissues with which it comes into contact, so it bends easily even when it should remain straight to pass through the defective valve.
This problem is even more pronounced in the so-called Valve-In-Valve technique (or more briefly VIV), in which a defective valve prosthesis is not completely removed, but is used as a frame in which a new percutaneous heart valve prosthesis is anchored. This new technique prevents the patient from the trauma of removing the old prosthetic valve, which remains attached to the heart tissue while the new valve prosthesis is attached to the old. Nevertheless this is critical because the guidewire, if pushed against the damaged portions of the old heart valve prosthesis, may cause the detachment of a part of it.
The document US2014/0207179 discloses a device, shown in
The document WO2019138334 discloses a device, shown in
A drawback of this type of device is that, when inserted into a blood vessel and opened, the thread-like elements 186, 5 tend to flex along the circumferential direction as soon as they touch the blood vessel walls and move along the circumferential direction. This unexpected effect occurs in particular in large blood vessels such as the aorta. Consequently, often the catheter 190, 6, over which the distal element 188, 4 slides, is not immediately positioned in the desired way, for example in correspondence with the heart valves, so that the surgeon can only retract the thread-like elements 186, 5 into the external catheter 180, 1, and let them come out again until they are positioned in the desired way.
An object of the present disclosure is to provide a device for inserting a guide wire suitable for heart valve prostheses into a blood vessel, defined in the attached claim 1, which solves at least partially the aforementioned drawbacks.
Tests carried out by the applicant with different prototypes have shown that it is easier to counteract unwanted displacements of the thread-like elements if the distal portion, to which the thread-like elements are connected, is fixed—for example by welding or gluing or other valid joining method—to the internal catheter and the internal catheter has a handle portion which allows the surgeon, by pulling it, to modulate the folding of the thread-like elements, around the longitudinal axis of the catheter. Furthermore, thanks to the fact that it is possible to shorten the distal portion of the external catheter with respect to the longitudinal axis, by withdrawing the internal catheter, it has been noted that it is particularly convenient to make the thread-like elements by means of a first plurality of notches and a second plurality of staggered notches between them along the longitudinal direction, carried out on a median portion of the external catheter, in order to quickly and firmly position the thread-like elements against irregular walls of a blood vessel.
Preferred embodiments are defined in the dependent claims.
Characteristic features of the device of the present disclosure will be illustrated for simplicity with reference to the embodiment illustrated in
Generally, a device according to the present disclosure for inserting a guidewire suitable, for example, for heart valve prostheses in a blood vessel, comprising an external catheter 1 having a wall defining a longitudinal axis and a circumferential direction, and an internal catheter 2 inserted into the external catheter 1, having a handle portion M, shown in
The threadlike elements 5 allow a self-centering/spacing of the device to the internal walls of a blood vessel because they are configured to:
A characteristic of the device of the present disclosure is therefore the fact that it allows the thread-like elements 5 to be folded/stretched through the internal catheter 2 with respect to the external catheter 1 by dragging with it the distal annular portion 4 of the external catheter 1, allowing them to abut/space themselves as desired against the inner walls of the blood vessel.
In the device of the present disclosure the notches of the first plurality of notches have respective ends 6a misaligned along the circumferential direction to respective ends 6b of the notches of the second plurality of notches, so that the notches of the first plurality of notches are offset along the circumferential direction with respect to the notches of the second plurality of notches.
This feature, combined with the possibility of gradually flexing the thread-like elements 5 (due to the fact that the distal annular portion 4 is fixed to the internal catheter 2), allows to realize devices for inserting a surgical guide wire which guarantees a good positioning of the internal catheter 2 even if the blood vessel has an irregular shape, and also other functions not allowed in prior devices.
According to one aspect, the notches of the first plurality have the same length as the notches of the second plurality.
According to an optional aspect, to give greater resistance to the thread-like elements 5 to resist unwanted displacements in the circumferential direction, the notches of the first plurality of notches are orderly alternated with the notches of the second plurality of notches along the circumferential direction of the median portion of the wall of the external catheter 1, as shown in figures from 3 to 7d so that each threadlike element of the threadlike elements 5 is defined by a notch of the first plurality of notches and by a notch of the second plurality of notches.
According to an optional aspect, as shown in
According to one optional aspect, as shown in
According to one aspect, the device of the present disclosure may comprise also a guiding catheter (not shown), preferably preformed, slidably inserted in said internal catheter 2, so as to further direct the guide wire into a blood vessel in proximity of a heart valve.
According to one aspect, the threadlike elements 5 are made of a biocompatible material suitable to be put into contact with human tissues.
According to an aspect of the present disclosure, the thread-like elements 5 can very simply be made by making the first plurality of notches and the second plurality of notches on a common catheter for surgical operations. For example, these notches can be made by machine using suitable blades, or they can be defined by laser cutting.
According to an aspect of the present disclosure, the distal portion 4, to which the thread-like elements 5 are connected, can be fixed to the internal catheter 2 by welding or gluing or other valid method of mechanical joining.
The present invention has been described so far with reference to preferred embodiments. It is understood that there could be other embodiments which refer to the same inventive concept defined by the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102021000024047 | Sep 2021 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2022/058699 | 9/15/2022 | WO |