The disclosed embodiments relate to a cryosurgical instrument for obtaining a tissue sample and to a method for cooling a probe head of a cryosurgical probe.
In cryosurgery, the taking of tissue samples (biopsy) is facilitated, inter alia, by the targeted use of cold. In this case, a cryoprobe is brought close to a specific tissue region via an endoscope. While the probe head contacts the tissue to be removed, the probe head is cooled in such a way that at least certain portions of the tissue freeze solid on the probe head. After the surrounding tissue has been severed, the sample (biopsate) can be retracted into the endoscope and made accessible for tests.
The cooling power can be provided, for example, by way of targeted use of the Joule-Thomson effect. In this case, a fluid, in particular a gas, experiences a change in temperature as a result of restriction (change in pressure). In cryosurgery, gas is expanded under high pressure into an expansion chamber in such a way that the volume thereof increases in size. In this case, the average particle spacing of the fluid increases, causing its temperature to fall.
A corresponding cryoprobe is known from U.S. Pat. No. 7,156,840 B2. Cryoprobes of this type may also be used in thin hollow organs, such as for example bile or pancreatic ducts, in order to carry out histology of the tissue.
An important criterion for the biopsy is the quality of the sample taken. Removal of the sample should not lead to any mechanical deformation of the sample.
Flexible micro-endoscopes are used to work in the bile and pancreatic duct under endoscopic view. The outer diameter of this flexible micro-endoscope is very small, for example ≦3 mm. Only instruments having a much smaller outer diameter can be introduced into the working channel of endoscopes of this type. Frequently, the outer diameter of the instruments used here may not exceed one millimeter.
Furthermore, in this field of use, the distances between the inlet opening of the endoscope and the working region are very long. The working channel of the endoscope is also correspondingly long. The instrument introduced into the endoscope, for example the cryosurgical instrument with the cryoprobe, must therefore have corresponding dimensions. For example, a length of 180 cm may be required.
A further requirement for the use of a cryoprobe in the above-described specialist field is the provision of sufficient cooling power, so that the biopsate can be fixed sufficiently securely to the tip of the probe. The cooling power is decisively determined by the pressure differential in the expansion chamber. That is to say, the higher the differential is between the pressure of the gas prior to issuing via a nozzle opening and the pressure within the expansion chamber, the higher the cooling power is too. The smaller the corresponding gas feed line is, the more difficult it is to provide a sufficiently high pressure before the nozzle opening. Furthermore, the outflowing gas must be removed from the expansion chamber in order to maintain the pressure gradient. Gas returns having a sufficiently large diameter are conventionally provided for this purpose. However, with the smaller diameter of the return lines, the flow resistance, and thus the pressure within the expansion chamber, rises.
For these reasons, it has proven extremely difficult to provide cryoprobes which have the required dimensions and at the same time provide sufficient cooling power. Conventional biopsy methods are therefore frequently used. Such methods include, for example, the obtaining of samples by means of a brush, or needle biopsy.
However, the quality of the samples thereby obtained is conventionally much lower than that obtainable by a cryobiopsy.
The disclosed embodiments provide an improved cryosurgical instrument. In particular, disclosed embodiments include a cryosurgical instrument for obtaining a tissue sample that is suitable for use in thin hollow organs. Furthermore, disclosed embodiments also include a corresponding method for cooling a probe head of a cryosurgical probe.
In the cryosurgical instrument for obtaining a tissue sample with a probe of the disclosed embodiments, the probe includes a probe head for freezing-on tissue, a probe shank for guiding the probe head up to the tissue, a supply means for supplying a fluid, in particular a gas, into an expansion chamber, and a removal means which is connected to the expansion chamber for removing the fluid, the expansion chamber being embodied in such a way that the supplied fluid expands for cooling the probe head.
The cryosurgical instrument according to the disclosed embodiment is distinguished from those previously known in that the removal means includes on the distal region of the probe at least one opening which removes the fluid into an outer region outside the probe.
In other words, the fluid is returned only partially (or not at all) within the probe. The gas supplied via the supply means spreads out in the expansion chamber and is removed from there into an outer region outside the probe. Thus, the provision of a return line within the probe may be partly or wholly dispensed with. The supply means can be made accordingly larger in order to provide sufficient pressure in the expansion chamber. Frequently, the issuing amounts of fluid are so small that they do not cause any damage within the organs. Nor does the fluid used present any risk to the patient. If the fluid is nevertheless to be removed, a separate mechanism may be provided for this purpose. The working channel of the endoscope used may be used, for example, for removing the fluid.
In the probe according to the disclosed embodiments, the probe body defines an outer region and an inner region. Obviously, the fluid is removed out of the inner region into the outer region in conventional probes too. However, the corresponding means are located not on the distal region of the probe, but in the proximal region thereof.
The cryosurgical instrument can include at least one opening at the distal end of the probe shank and/or in the probe head. That is to say, the distal region is defined in such a way as to include the probe head and the distal end of the probe shank.
The cryosurgical instrument can include an adapter for removing the fluid in the proximal direction. An adapter of this type can for example introduce the fluid issuing from the probe into the working channel of an endoscope. Furthermore, the adapter can be configured so as to provide a removal means for the fluid. This removal means guides, like conventional cryosurgical instruments, the fluid to the proximal end of the probe.
The adapter can include a protective tube with a seal, the probe being movably mounted in the protective tube and the seal sealing from the probe an interior or inner region of the protective tube for receiving the fluid. The fluid is therefore introduced via the supply means into the expansion chamber, passes from there into the outer region of the probe via at least one opening, the probe being surrounded by the protective tube in such a way that an intermediate space is produced between the probe and protective tube. The fluid can be guided into this intermediate space in the proximal direction. The seal at the distal end of the protective tube ensures that the fluid cannot escape in the distal direction.
The protective tube can include a region for receiving the tissue sample. According to the disclosed embodiments, the tissue sample, which is fastened to the probe head, can therefore be retracted in such a way that it comes to lie within the protective tube. This allows the tissue sample to be protected from external influences, in particular mechanical loads.
Generally, the protective tube can serve to convert the probe according to the disclosed embodiments so as to allow it to be used also in regions in which it is undesirable for fluid to issue close to the region of the operation.
As previously described, the adapter can be adapted for introducing the fluid into a working channel of an endoscope.
The at least one opening on the distal region of the probe can be arranged laterally of the probe shank or form the probe head in the form of a particle filter. The particle filter can for example have openings having a diameter of approx. 4 μm.
Disclosed embodiments also include a method for cooling a probe head on the cryosurgical probe. The method includes the steps of supplying a fluid, in particular a gas, expanding the fluid in such a way that heat energy is withdrawn from the probe head, and removing the expanded fluid. The step of removing the expanded fluid includes diverting the fluid from the interior of the probe in the distal region of the probe.
In this case too, a basic idea of the disclosed embodiments is that, in the cooling method, the fluid is removed in the distal region and, as a result, separate returning of the fluid is not necessary. In the method, the fluid can be supplied over a period of time which is ≦5 seconds. As a result, only very small amounts of gas are released that enter the outer region of the probe.
The disclosed embodiments will be described in greater detail, pointing out further features and advantages, by reference to the example embodiments illustrated in the drawings.
The same reference numerals will be used in the following description for identical and equivalent parts.
The probes according to the disclosed embodiments are able to have a much thinner diameter than those of the prior art, since all or a large percentage of the interior of the cryoprobes 10 can be filled by the gas supply line 21. As a result of the use of the protective tube 90, it is possible to use the probes according to the disclosed embodiments also in applications in which it is not desirable for the gas to escape directly into an organ or tissue.
However, there are numerous fields of application in which it is harmless for small amounts of gas to escape. For example,
The sample chamber 93 serves to receive a tissue sample 5. The cryoprobe 10 may be withdrawn into the interior of the protective tube 90 in such a way that the tissue sample 5 also comes to lie within the protective tube 90, namely in the sample chamber 93. This prevents the sample 5 from becoming stripped off when the cryoprobe 10 is extracted from the working channel of the endoscope 80.
In the example embodiments of
It should be noted at this point that all the aforementioned parts are claimed as essential to the invention both alone and in any combination, particularly the details shown in the drawings. Amendments thereof are the common practice of persons skilled in the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2008 024 946.7 | May 2008 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2009/002971 | 4/23/2009 | WO | 00 | 12/3/2010 |