The present invention generally relates to a device and a method for retrograde guidewire retrieval during blood vessel angioplasty, such as below the knee (BTK) blood vessels and other blood vessels (e.g., femoral or iliac), which are partially or totally occluded.
A chronic total occlusion (CTO) is an arterial vessel blockage that prevents blood flow beyond the obstruction. CTO's typically occur in coronary, peripheral, pediatric, and other small arteries. In the coronary and peripheral arteries, they result from the same underlying cause—atherosclerosis.
Endovascular therapy for arteries below the knee has emerged as a promising revascularization technique for patients with critical limb ischemia (CLI). However, when employing standard angioplasty techniques, angioplasty of BTK arteries fails to achieve revascularization in up to 20% of cases. The main cause for failure is the inability to penetrate the plaque's proximal cap with the guidewire.
A new technique of approaching the plaque from below—known as the retrograde approach—is often used to pass the guidewire through the plaque from the other direction. This approach has high success rates, but is technically challenging to perform and has its own complications, especially the danger of vessel perforation.
In order to use the retrograde technique, the clinician must puncture the small target artery with a needle—usually smaller than a 21 gauge needle. The clinician relies on several angiographic images to aim the needle into the artery, and verifies proper needle tip location by observing blood flow exiting from the needle's proximal end.
Puncturing small arteries is not easy; it requires proper manipulation of the C-arm and a gentle needle stick to avoid arterial perforation. Once a small sheath or direct (sheath-less) guidewire is inserted within the needle into the artery, the needle can be removed.
If retrograde passage of the guidewire through the occlusion is successful transluminally, the guidewire must be snared and pulled through the antegrade or cross-over sheath, using “Lasso” snaring devices or a simple 5 or 6 Fr (1.7-2.0 mm) support catheter. Thereafter, relatively large balloons and stents can be delivered without damaging the small retrograde puncture hole, preventing the risk of small blood vessel perforation. For example, the tibial-peroneal vessels are small, having diameters of about 2 mm (6 Fr) to 3 mm (9 Fr). Therefore, inserting a 6 Fr or even a 5 Fr sheath needed for balloons and stent delivery, will perforate the artery.
However, although using a “Lasso” device is feasible it is not easy; it requires gentle manipulation, and the guidewire tip often becomes damaged and cannot be used.
Retrieval of the guidewire with a small support catheter can be very difficult; it takes a long time with many attempts, and has a low rate of success, due to the small catheter lumen compared to the relatively larger vessel lumen at the wire exit area.
Such guidewire capturing is also needed when treating iliac arteries, which are relative large, but guidewires are often inserted through distant arteries, like radial arteries, to avoid iliac dissection. Such guidewires must be captured near the occlusion for easy delivery of balloons and stents.
If retrograde passage of the guidewire through the occlusion is performed via a subintimal approach, the true lumen must be reentered, either spontaneously or with a reentry device. Current reentry devices are big, stiff, and require at least a 6 Fr sheath through which to pass. Therefore, they cannot be used from a retrograde approach.
The present invention is directed to a device and a method for retrograde guidewire retrieval during blood vessel angioplasty. The invention seeks to improve the physician's technique in treating blood vessel occlusions, and can be used when crossing both new, soft plaque and old, hard plaque.
In accordance with a non-limiting embodiment of the invention, the retrograde approach may be performed with the following steps:
The present invention will be understood and appreciated more fully from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the drawings in which:
Reference is now made to
The guidewire retrieval device 10 includes a tube 11, constructed from a suitable, biomedically safe material, such as, but not limited to, PEBAX (trade name for a polyether block amide), nylon, or PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene). A funnel 12 (preferably cone-shaped, but other shapes are possible) is disposed at a distal end of tube 11. Funnel 12 may be constructed from a flexible, elastomeric material, such as, but not limited to, polyurethane or silicone.
Guidewire 1 is pushed into funnel 12, which directs guidewire 1 into tube 11. Pushing guidewire 1 further allows capturing its distal tip outside of the patient's body, allowing continuation of the procedure from that side.
Reference is now made to
Reference is now made to
Balloon 14 is proximal to funnel 12. An additional coaxial tube 15 is added over tube 11 to create a balloon inflation lumen. Double-lumen tube can be used as well, as is known in the art. Balloon 14 is made from a polymer material, such as a compliant or semi-compliant material, e.g., polyurethane or silicone, but can also be made from nylon or stiffer non-compliant materials. The diameter of balloon 14 is preferably similar or slightly larger than that of the blood vessel lumen in its nominal inflation pressure. Balloon 14 blocks blood flow, preventing possible collapse of funnel 12 due to blood flow and pressure that could close or shrink funnel 12.
Balloon 14 is preferably located quite near funnel 12, so as not only to block blood flow, but also to support centering the relative soft funnel 12 in the blood vessel. (Funnel 12 is relative soft to prevent possible damage to blood vessel 2 during insertion of catheter 20.) Since blood flow might collapse the soft funnel, balloon 14 is needed to prevent such funnel collapse. In addition, since blood vessels are not always straight, centering funnel 12 in the blood vessel using inflated balloon 14 is important for proper funnel function, assuring that funnel 12 touches the entire inner circumference of the blood vessel. Such funnel centering is required even if the device is used against the blood flow direction, when blood flow might naturally open the funnel.
Balloon 14 can alternatively be a long, non-compliant balloon that can also be used for blood vessel angioplasty (PTA).
The guidewire retrieval catheter 20, or any of the other embodiments of the invention, may include one or more radio-opaque markers 16, which help the user to verify that guidewire 1 is properly inserted into tube 11. The markers 16 may be positioned on tube 11 near a neck 17 of funnel 12, and/or at the middle of balloon 14 if a short balloon is used, or at both sides of balloon 14 if a long balloon is used.
The proximal side of the retrieval catheter 20 may include a Y connector 18 with female luer connectors, as is known in the art, including a side-arm 18a for balloon inflation, and a central arm 18b for guidewire passage.
Since funnel 12 is normally open, a device and method of inserting it into the blood vessel through a standard sheath is provided in accordance with an embodiment of the invention as illustrated in
In one embodiment, a funnel inserting device 30, made of a material, such as, but not limited to, PEBAX, nylon, or PTFE, includes a tube with a distal portion 31 extending from a proximal portion 32. The distal portion 31 has a larger diameter than the proximal portion 32. Proximal portion 32, which may be made from the same tube as distal portion 31, but heat shrunk to a smaller diameter, has a diameter smaller than balloon 14 when folded. This ensures that the funnel inserting device 30 cannot be pushed distally and out by mistake before inserting funnel 12 into a standard sheath.
Distal portion 31 is used as a balloon protector for balloon 14, and for housing the folded funnel 12 before inserting into standard sheath.
The length of distal portion 31 is preferably the distance between the proximal end of balloon 14 and the distal end of funnel 12, or slightly longer.
Funnel 12 does not necessarily have to be made from an elastomeric material. Reference is now made
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2011/064302 | 12/12/2011 | WO | 00 | 2/13/2012 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61516906 | Apr 2011 | US | |
61571856 | Jul 2011 | US | |
61575160 | Aug 2011 | US | |
61573935 | Sep 2011 | US | |
61626183 | Sep 2011 | US |