The present invention relates generally to the fields of medicine and engineering and more particularly to systems and methods for mixing and delivering fluids during eye surgery.
Glaucoma is a leading cause of blindness in the United States. The loss of vision in glaucoma patients is typically progressive and may be due, at least in part, to compression of the vasculature of the retina and optic nerve as a result of increased intraocular pressure. It is generally accepted that reducing intraocular pressure, through the use of drugs and/or surgery, can significantly reduce glaucomatous progression in patients who suffer from normal-tension glaucoma and can virtually halt glaucomatous progression in patients who suffer from primary open-angle glaucoma with elevated intraocular pressures. Furthermore, it is generally acknowledged that lowering intraocular pressure in glaucoma patients can prevent or lessen the irreversible glaucoma-associated destruction of optic nerve fibers and the resultant irreversible vision loss.
Surgical therapy for open-angle glaucoma consists of laser trabeculoplasty, trabeculotomy/goniotomy, and implantation of aqueous shunts. Trabeculotomy/goniotomy and other mechanical disruptions of the trabecular meshwork, such as trabeculopuncture, goniophotoablation, laser trabecular ablation, and goniocurretage are all major operations that are widely used. Trabeculotomy and goniotomy are simple and directed techniques of microsurgical dissection of the trabecular meshwork. These techniques are augmented with topically applied anticancer drugs, such as 5-flurouracil or mitomycin-C, to decrease scarring and increase the likelihood of surgical success.
The introduction of drugs during trabeculotomy/goniotomy operations may be problematic if they require either the removal of one of the tools being used in a given procedure or an additional incision in the eye. Either of these options results in increased surgical time and potential complications. Additionally, repeated tool insertions and removals may be necessary if additional substance is needed. More manipulation of tools increases the risk of wound tearing which can lead to an undesirable astigmatic effect, infection, and wound leak.
Furthermore, if the device only makes a single cut (like a classical goniotomy knife used for surgical management of pediatric glaucoma), all of the trabecular meshwork tissue remains behind. For adults, the outcomes for such a procedure may be prone to having the access of fluid drainage via the collector channels in Schlemm's canal become blocked over time as this remnant tissue clogs such access for fluid outflow via the collector channels. Thus, proper removal of a strip of trabecular meshwork greatly enhances the safety of such a procedure.
There remains a need in the art for the development of a microsurgical device that may be used in a multiple-port mode to allow for fluid insertion or removal without the need to introduce a separate cannula.
The need also exists for such improved device to be simple in construction, efficient in operation, and economical to manufacture.
In view of the foregoing, an object of the present invention is to address the need for multiple controlled fluid paths by providing a fluidics control for use with a microsurgical device. A still further object of the present invention is to provide a microsurgical device with a variable capacity in infusion or aspiration to allow multiple fluids to be transferred simultaneously through a small volume in micro-incisional glaucoma surgery.
The present disclosure is directed to systems and methods for transferring a substance (e.g., a fluid, tissue, drug, etc.) into or out of an eye during an operation without requiring a separate incision to be made or without requiring introduction of a separate cannula into the eye. For example, a user may perform a procedure that includes removal of trabecular meshwork (TM) from the eye using a goniotomy probe. The same goniotomy probe may also introduce a substance into the eye or remove tissue, fluid or other debris out of the eye. Accordingly, a surgeon or other users may be able to cut and remove TM and inject an amount of the substance into the anterior chamber of the eye of the patient using the same tool.
Depending on the implementation, the microsurgical device may be coupled to an aspiration pump and/or one or more substance chambers. During an aspiration process, the microsurgical probe may aspirate TM tissue, blood, fluid or other debris from the eye during or post-operation. During an irrigation process, the microsurgical probe may enable a surgeon to controllably deliver a desired amount of the substance into the surgical site without removing the microsurgical device from the site or introducing additional cannulas.
Disclosed herein is a fluidics control for use with a handheld microsurgical device to enable bi-directional flow and fluid separation or mixing. In a preferred embodiment, the fluidics control has a housing including a separable end piece. The housing may serve as a mixing chamber that enables mixing multiple fluids or drugs or diluting a concentrated drug to provide varying drug concentration. The end piece may include one or more ports that may be connected to an aspiration pump or variable substance chambers through plastic tubing. The end piece may be rotationally or frictionally connected to the housing and partially enclosed by the housing. In other embodiments, the housing and the end piece may be made in one integrated unit.
The system may further include a fluid control element for variably controlling the flow of fluid through the handheld microsurgical device. The fluid control element is configured to regulate fluid flow into or out of the fluidics control. The fluid control element may also allow for bolus or continuous delivery and enable the measured delivery of drug at independent rates.
In accordance with one aspect of the present invention, a handheld microsurgical device with a fluidics control is provided. An exemplary handheld microsurgical device comprises a handle, a shaft, a distal member or foot on a distal end of the shaft and a fluidics control. The handle includes a body and a lumen formed in the body, and the handle is in fluid communication with the fluid source as well as the aspiration pump. The handle may further include a control element that enables selective control of fluid and adjustment of a flow rate. In one embodiment, the control element includes a switch mounted on the outside surface of the handle with on/off, variable speed, and forward/reverse controls. The shaft comprises an inner tube and an outer tube, wherein the inner tube extends out of and beyond the distal end of the outer tube. The distal member is insertable into Schlemm's canal of an eye and thereafter advanceable through Schlemm's canal such that trabecular meshwork tissue will be cut and/or removed. In some embodiments, the device may optionally include lumens, opening or ports and associated connectors for irrigating fluid and/or aspirating fluid and/or tissue or other debris from the eye.
In accordance with one embodiment, a fluidics control is disposed partially within the handle body. The housing of the fluidics control is rotationally or frictionally affixed to the handle body. The fluidics control is situated between the distal end of the handle body and the proximal end of the shaft. The inner tube of the shaft may have a fluid connection with the housing. Alternatively, the inner tube of the shaft may bypass the housing and be fluidically connected to a port that is coupled to an aspiration pump. The outer tube is fluidically connected to the housing.
The fluidics control of a microsurgical device allows multiple fluids to be transferred (e.g., delivered or removed) simultaneously through a small volume, which is specifically beneficial in micro-incisional glaucoma surgery. The fluidics control enables excision of tissue and capture of material into body of instrument as well as enables the connection of multiple fluids paths, including the potential for localized delivery of drugs.
In view of the foregoing, other aspects, features, details, utilities, and advantages of the disclosed embodiments will be apparent from the following description and claims as well as the accompanying drawings.
The following detailed description and examples are provided for the purpose of non-exhaustively describing some, but not necessarily all, examples or embodiments of the invention, and shall not limit the scope of the invention in any way.
It should be understood that this invention is not limited to the particular apparatus, methodology, protocols, and systems, etc., described herein and as such may vary. The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only and is not intended to limit the scope of the present invention, which is defined solely by the claims.
The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only and is not intended to be limiting of the invention. As used herein, the singular forms “a”, “an” and “the” are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. It will be further understood that the terms “comprises” and/or “comprising,” when used in this specification, specify the presence of stated features, integers, steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof.
The following detailed description and the accompanying drawings to which it refers are intended to describe some, but not necessarily all, examples or embodiments of the invention. The described embodiments are to be considered in all respects only as illustrative and not restrictive. The contents of this detailed description and the accompanying drawings do not limit the scope of the invention in any way.
The present disclosure is directed to systems and methods for transferring a substance (e.g., a fluid, tissue, drug, etc.) into or out of an eye during an operation without requiring a separate incision to be made and without requiring introduction of a separate cannula into the eye. To illustrate, several exemplary embodiments are described in detail herein. The systems and methods described can be utilized in other contexts.
In some examples, a substance may be delivered into or out of an eye through a lumen of an elongate portion of a microsurgical device, such as a goniotomy probe.
Referring to
Referring to
In the non-limiting example shown, the upper surface of the distal member is generally trough-shaped (e.g., U-shaped), with the first and second inclined side walls 22 onto which are formed tissue-severing edges or blades 20. These edges 20 are spaced apart, as shown.
The fluidics control 40 may be disposed partially within the handle body. The housing of the fluidics control is rotationally or frictionally affixed to the handle body. The fluidics control is situated between the distal end of the handle body and the proximal end of the shaft. The inner tube of the shaft may have a fluid connection with the housing. Alternatively, the inner tube of the shaft may bypass the housing and is fluidically connected to a port that is coupled to an aspiration pump. The outer tube is fluidically connected to the housing.
In some embodiments wherein the housing 42 and the end piece 44 are separable, the end piece 44 provides a watertight seal to the mixing chamber 41 by rotationally or frictionally coupling to the housing 42. It may be advantageous for the end piece to be separable from the housing so that various models of the end piece with different numbers of ports may be selectively coupled to the same housing according to varying surgical needs. In other embodiments, the housing 42 and the end piece 44 are integrated into a one-piece unite.
In some embodiments, the microsurgical device may be used together with a wound sealing sleeve to restrict fluid ingress or egress at the incision wound of the operating site while allowing for proper infusion and/or aspiration. The wound sealing sleeve has a hollow body comprising a conical receiving area, a tubular passage and a tapering section. The conical receiving area has an open end by which the sleeve is attachable to a microsurgical device and the tapering section has an open tip through which a shaft of the device is passed. One or more optional ports or pathways are formed in the sleeve to provide additional source of fluidics transfer in or out of the eye. The wound sealing sleeve could be affixed to the device through threads, a friction fit, glue, or mechanically fastened.
In some embodiments, a port 50 disposed in the end piece 44 may be fluidically connected to the wound sealing sleeve 60 through an opening 52 in the housing. In such embodiments, the irrigation fluid flows from a substance chamber through the port 50, the opening 52, and the space between the outer surface of the outer tube 26 and the interior wall of the wound sealing sleeve 60, and then out of the port 78 of the wound sealing sleeve 60. It is further contemplated that the fluidics control 40 may include more than one ports that are fluidically connected to the would sealing sleeve 60.
The handheld microsurgical device may further include a fluid control element configured to regulate the fluid flow into or out of the device, or a combination thereof.
In one embodiment, the valve is constructed to provide an occluding means. As shown in
Preferably, the fluid control element is configured such that the flow of the fluid into or out of the device is controllably variable to a selected rate. For example, the fluid control element may be configured to allow a degree of fluid flow variable between any position in a range of from a fully open position to a fully closed position. In another example, the fluid control element may be configured to provide a variable degree and variable function of fluid flow. A preferred configuration of a fluid control element may provide a fully open position, a fully closed position, and one or more intermediate positions in between, for enabling variable control over a fluid flow.
It is contemplated that the fluid control element may control one or more fluid flow paths simultaneously through a valve assembly. For example, the aspiration port or irrigation port of the fluidics control may be both in fluid communication with respective tubular connectors in no time when the valve assembly is in either the open or closed position. This arrangement is highly beneficial in that each fluid path is operatively switched between open and close, or aspiration and irrigation, thereby enabling simultaneous or multiple aspiration and irrigation operations. This arrangement also enables mixing two or more fluids to produce various concentrations of a drug and/or a mixture of the two or more substances.
It is intended that all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative only and not limiting. Changes in detail or structure may be made without departing from the spirit of the disclosure as defined in the appended claims.
This application claims priority benefit to U.S. Provisional Application No. 63/080,777, filed Sep. 20, 2020, which is fully incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2021/050789 | 9/17/2021 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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63080776 | Sep 2020 | US |