1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a catheter for cardiovascular application, comprising an elongated catheter shank; a lumen inside the catheter shank; a mandrel sleeve which extends in the lumen; and a guide wire which runs in the mandrel sleeve and is extendable through a sluice gate out of the catheter at a distal end thereof.
2. Background Art
Catheters for cardiovascular application also include for example electrodes for cardiac pacemakers or defibrillators which come in the most varying designs. Special problems are posed when these electrodes are to be positioned not only in the easily accessible atria or ventricles of the heart, but in hardly accessible cardiac vessels such as the coronary sinus.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,512,957 B1 teaches a catheter which is suitable for introduction into the coronary sinus or other hardly accessible blood vessels, in particular upon use as a cardiac pacemaker electrode probe. This catheter has an elongated catheter shank with a lumen which a sleeve-type mandrel—a springy, comparatively dimensionally stable guide sleeve—passes through. This mandrel houses a guide wire which can be led through a sluice gate out of the catheter at the distal end thereof.
This guide wire is pre-bent and used as a probe which may be advanced beyond the tip of the catheter in a direction that deviates from the straight direction of the catheter, owing to the pre-bent orientation of the wire. In this way it is possible to advance the pre-bent wire into a branch of the blood vessels, and then to follow up with the catheter that is guided by the pre-bent wire.
In spite of increased flexibility and, consequently, more precise guidance, this catheter needs improvement in several aspects. For example, the catheter is only intended to be led into the heart by a mandrel sleeve and guide wire, with the guide wire being used only in critical situations by extension and guidance for instance into a cardiac vessel. When the guide wire is led in separately from outside and the catheter is subsequently pushed along the entire length of the wire according to the so-called over-the-wire technique, there is the problem that the guide wire is subject to high friction by the sluice seal at the distal wire gate, which impedes in the catheter being pushed over the guide wire.
On the other hand, the mentioned catheter is intended for use only together with a guide wire, other designs being chosen for catheters for use with a mandrel. In this regard, prior art catheters are available which are conceived either for use together with a guide wire or with a mandrel. This will double manufacturing and stockkeeping requirements for catheters of otherwise identical design. These additional requirements also affect hospital logistics and stockkeeping.
Proceeding from the described prior art problems, it is an object of the invention to develop a catheter of the type mentioned at the outset for more universal use together with a guide wire or mandrel on the one hand and for smooth over-the-wire technique when used together with a guide wire on the other hand.
This object is attained in a catheter comprising a sealing unit, which is disposed proximally in front of the sluice gate, and is provided for sealing the lumen, the sealing unit being reversibly pierced by a replaceable mandrel sleeve.
Due to the fact that the mandrel is replaceable, the catheter according to the invention, for use without guide wire, may be equipped with a corresponding mandrel. If however the catheter is intended to be employed together with a guide wire, a mandrel sleeve is used which has a lumen for the guide wire and which, as against the prior art mentioned at the outset, pierces the sealing unit. By the aid of the mandrel sleeve cooperating with the sealing unit as a sealing partner, the lumen of the catheter is blocked against any blood penetrating. Simultaneously the guide wire can be moved unimpeded inside the lumen of the mandrel sleeve.
Attention is drawn to the fact that a hose or any other tubular object may be used as a mandrel sleeve according to the invention.
Preferably, a stop for the piercing motion of the mandrel sleeve is provided between the sealing unit and the sluice gate. This stop prevents the mandrel sleeve from being inadvertently pushed out of the catheter, affecting myocardial or vessel wall tissue. On the other hand, this stop works as an abutment for the mandrel sleeve which may conventionally serve for straightening the catheter shank in the vicinity of a pre-formed deflection of the shank.
In keeping with another preferred embodiment, a second stop is disposed proximally in front of the sealing unit, cooperating with a counterpart on a mandrel that is insertable into the lumen. This stop again serves as an abutment for the mandrel, on the other hand it prevents the mandrel from piercing the sealing unit upon operation without guide wire. This ensures reliable sealing of the catheter lumen even in this case of application.
Preferred embodiments of the invention relate to the stops being designed as graduations in diameter in the form of annular shoulders and the proximal stop cooperating with a ball on the counterpart of the mandrel without guide wire.
Preferably, provision is made for the mandrel, or mandrel sleeve and guide wire, to be insulated towards the electric connecting lines for the catheter electrodes, which helps obtain a potential-free guide wire. This helps avoid malfunctions of the catheter electrodes resulting from electric connection to the guide wire that rests in the blood stream.
Further features, details and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the ensuing description of an exemplary embodiment of the invention, taken in conjunction with the drawings.
The catheter, details of the distal end of which are seen in
In the proximal direction, the head 7 includes an attached ring 8, with the distal end of the spiral connecting line 4 resting thereon, and with the central lumen 2 continuing through the interior aperture 9 thereof.
The distal front end 10 of the head 7 centrally comprises a sluice gate 11 which is accessible from the lumen 2 and the interior aperture 9 via a central passageway 12 within the head 7. Disposed proximally before the sluice gate 11 in this passageway 12 is a sealing unit 13 in the form of a flexible disk with a central expandable opening that is located in an annular chamber 14 of the passageway 12. Provided in the passageway 12 between the sealing unit 13 and the sluice gate 11 is a first distal stop 15 which results from a corresponding graduation is diameter. This is where the passageway 12, in continuation of the lumen 2, decreases to an inside diameter D1 which is less than the outside diameter A1 of a mandrel sleeve 16, the mandrel sleeve 16 extending within the lumen 2, piercing the sealing unit 13 and being blocked against further extension out of the lumen 2 by the dimensioning, mentioned above, in the vicinity of the distal stop 15.
Inside the central sleeve passage 17, a guide wire 18 is displaceable quasi freely and without any relevant friction relative to the mandrel sleeve 16 and to the catheter shank 1. Once the guide wire 18 has been led into the desired cardiac vessel, the catheter can be moved over the wire 18 without any problems. The lumen 2 is properly sealed by the sealing unit 13 towards any blood that might enter.
As further seen in
If a conventional mandrel without a guide wire 18 is employed, the mandrel sleeve 16 can be removed and a mandrel 20 (seen in
Embedding the connecting line 4 in the wall 3 of the catheter shank 2 provides for electrical insulation of the mandrel 20, or the mandrel sleeve 16 and the guide wire 18, towards the connecting line 4.
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102 17 509 | Apr 2002 | DE | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030229277 A1 | Dec 2003 | US |