The present invention is directed to the analysis of internal tissue of a patient. More particularly the present invention regards the use of a vacuum within a patient's body to secure tissue near a diagnostic sensor.
Diagnostic procedures to analyze and diagnose a patient are a common component of modern medical care. There are numerous diagnostic procedures that can be performed on a patient. Some of these diagnostic procedures, such as x-ray and Magnetic Resonance Imaging, are performed completely outside of the body while others, such as tissue biopsies and in situ analysis, require entry into the body and more direct contact with the suspect body part. Those procedures that require more direct tissue contact may be performed through the esophagus and other existing orifices in the patient or through incisions, both small and large, made in the body of the patient.
Whether the diagnostic procedure is performed through an existing orifice or through an incision in the body of the patient, the tissue to be analyzed may often be out of the direct reach of the practitioner. In these situations, in order to reach and analyze the tissue, the practitioner will often employ an instrument having sensors at its distal end. When an instrument is employed the practitioner must manipulate and guide the instrument from outside the body in order to position the sensors, located at its distal end, next to the suspect tissue. This manipulation and steering of the instrument is often a time-consuming and cumbersome process.
For example, when tissue is analyzed during an endoluminal procedure, the practitioner must manipulate the medical instrument containing the sensor within the tight quarters of the endoscope. Once the sensor is properly positioned by the practitioner, it must then be maintained adjacent to the tissue in order to receive satisfactory results. In some circumstances the practitioner may not be able to satisfactorily manipulate the sensor in order to position it near the tissue to be analyzed. Similarly they may not be able to satisfactorily maintain the contact between the tissue and the instrument during the analysis. To resolve both of these problems, a second instrument, having a hook at its distal end, has been employed. This second instrument is inserted down into the endoscope in order to hook the tissue, move it next to the sensor, and hold the tissue in place during the testing. The application of this second instrument, although frequently used, is disfavored as its use is time consuming and can injure and permanently damage the tissue being tested.
In another example, when diagnostic testing is performed without an endoscope, directly through an incision into the patient's body, the practitioner must also position the sensor adjacent to the suspect tissue and may also be required to hold the tissue in direct contact with the catheter in order to perform the analysis. Here, too, positioning the catheter and maintaining its direct contact with the tissue is an arduous and tedious process. A second instrument, such as the hook described above, is often used to grab the tissue, tug it to the sensor and anchor the tissue in direct contact with the catheter. As in the endoluminal procedure, the use of this second instrument, the hook, prolongs the procedure and increases the risk of injury to the tissue.
As is evident, what is needed is a method and an apparatus that provides for the diagnosis of suspect and diseased tissue within the body of a patient without the cumbersome, time-consuming, and risky procedures that have been employed in the past.
In accordance with the present invention a diagnostic catheter using a vacuum for tissue positioning is provided. A method for analyzing tissue in accordance with one embodiment of the present invention includes inserting a catheter having a sensor at its distal end into the body of a patient, applying suction through the catheter to secure the tissue to the catheter and then analyzing the tissue with the sensor.
An apparatus for analyzing tissue within the body of a patient in accordance with an alternative embodiment of the present invention is also provided. This alternative embodiment includes a catheter having a first end and a second end, the first end having an orifice and a sensor, the catheter also having a lumen.
As can be seen, a vacuum hose 160 is also connected to the coupler 180. In addition to being connected to the coupler 180 on one end, the vacuum hose 160 is also connected to a vacuum pump, which is not shown, at the other end. This vacuum pump, although not illustrated, may be a 1180 Gomco suction unit, capable of creating a vacuum between 0 and 22 in. Hg and having a bottle coupled to it to prevent solids and liquids from entering the pump. This vacuum pump is used to create an inward suction force through the orifices 100 located at the distal tip 120 of the catheter 10. This inward vacuum force generated by the vacuum travels from the vacuum pump through the vacuum hose 160, through the first vacuum channel 165 located in the coupler 180 and the tube 185, through the suction adjustment valve 175, back through the tube 185, this time in the second vacuum channel 155, which is located within the tube 185, through the coupler 180, the catheter body 190, and the distal tip 120, such that the vacuum force is in fluid communication with the orifices 100.
A suction adjustment knob 170 is rotationally connected to the suction adjustment valve 175. This suction adjustment valve 175 regulates the amount of suction from the vacuum pump (not shown) that will be transferred from the first vacuum channel 165 to the second vacuum channel 155 and eventually to the orifices 100 located in the distal tip 120 of the catheter 10. By turning the suction adjustment knob 170 the suction adjustment valve 175 is opened or closed and the amount of suction drawn through the orifices 100 at the distal tip 120 of the catheter 10 is either concomitantly increased or decreased.
In practice a practitioner utilizing the catheter 10 of
Once the requisite analysis and diagnosis has been completed the vacuum may be reduced by turning the suction adjustment knob 170 or by turning the vacuum off, and the tissue will be free to revert back to its original resting position within the body. Once the tissue is released from the orifices 100 the catheter 10 can be removed from the patient or the procedure can be repeated again, as many times as required, for different sections of tissue.
In practice, and as discussed above, as the amount of vacuum is increased the tissue 330 is drawn down to the orifices 100 until the tissue 330 meets the sensors 110. The sensors 110, now touching the tissue, analyze the tissue and output their results to sensor electronics, including the cathode ray tube discussed above. Once the requisite data is obtained the vacuum is reduced, the tissue 330 is released, and the catheter may be removed or the procedure can be repeated again on a different area of tissue.
As is evident, the catheter 565 is located within the internal working channel 570 of the endoscope 510. The distal tip 560 of the catheter 565 extends from the distal end 595 of the endoscope 510 in this illustration. As in the previous embodiments, the distal tip 560 contains several orifices 540, three in this embodiment, as compared to the four orifices utilized in the embodiment described above. The distal tip 560 also contains two sensors 550 as compared to the three employed in the first embodiment.
A practitioner using this second embodiment would first insert the catheter 565 into the internal working channel 570 at the proximate end (not shown) of the endoscope 510. The catheter 565 would only partially be inserted into the internal working channel of the endoscope 510 such that the distal tip 560 of the catheter 565 would not emerge from the distal end of the endoscope 510 at the beginning of the procedure. Next, the endoscope 510 may be inserted into the body of the patient through an opening, such as the mouth, or through an incision made in the body specifically to accommodate the diagnostic procedure. The endoscope 510 would then be guided into position from outside the body of the patient by the practitioner. If necessary the practitioner may turn the light tip 520 on and use the optical sensor 530 to assist in guiding the distal end 595 of the endoscope 510 down into its desired resting location. Then, once the distal end 595 of the endoscope 510 was positioned near the tissue to be analyzed the practitioner would extend the catheter's 565 distal tip 560 out from inside the internal working channel 570. The practitioner would then position the distal tip 560 to be adjacent to the tissue to be analyzed, the orifices 540, located on the distal tip 560, facing the tissue to be tested. Similar to the positioning of the endoscope, the practitioner may also illuminate the light tip 520 and utilize the optical sensor 530 to aid in properly positioning the distal tip 560 of the catheter 565. Once the distal tip 560 of the catheter 565 is properly positioned, the practitioner would turn on the vacuum source in order to draw the tissue towards the orifices 540. Once the sensors 550 began to adequately sense the tissue, the practitioner could then adjust the vacuum being drawn through the orifices, either at the source of the vacuum or at the catheter 565 through an adjustment valve (illustrated above), so that only the requisite amount of force was utilized to maintain contact between the sensors 550 and the tissue being analyzed.
Now coupled to the distal tip 560 of the catheter, the tissue, in addition to being analyzed by the sensors 550, may also be manipulated by the practitioner by moving the catheter at its proximate end (not shown). As required, the tissue may be manipulated within the view of the optical sensor 530. Once the required data was obtained by the sensors 550, the vacuum would be reduced until the tissue would be released from the orifices 540. If additional tissue testing was required, the procedure would be repeated. Once the requisite testing was completed the distal tip 560 of the catheter 565 would be withdrawn back into the endoscope 510 so that it no longer extended outside of the endoscope 510. The endoscope 510 would then be removed from the body.
While a light 520 and an optical sensor 530 are shown at the end of the endoscope 510 other diagnostic components can also be placed at the end of the endoscope 510 to assist the practitioner. For example, the same electrical and ultrasonic sensors placed on the surface of the distal tip 560 of the catheter may also be placed on the distal end 595 of the endoscope 510 to provide additional sources of data to the practitioner during the diagnosis.
Alternatively, as illustrated in
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/513,076, which was filed on Feb. 25, 2000 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,728,565, and which is herein incorporated, in its entirety, by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040162485 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09513076 | Feb 2000 | US |
Child | 10771345 | US |