The present invention relates to an implantable medical tube arrangement comprising a tube wall which is resistant to bending loads, tensile loads and radial compressive loads without being damaged.
Such tube arrangements are primarily known and used in the field of electrode catheters; however, other fields of use are (partially) implantable tubes without electrical functionality, such as, for example, infusion tubes for external or implantable infusion pumps.
In the following, the problems underlying the present invention shall be illustrated by means of the example of an electrode catheter. Such electrode catheters have a coiled feed line formed as a metallic wire- or rope-like insertion strand which is stabilized by an electrode body made of an insulation material. This electrode body absorbs radial point or line loads and distributes the loads over a larger region of the coil. Thus, the line load is substantially converted into an area load. The stiffness of the insulation material of the electrode body reduces the bending stress of the coil when a bending load occurs. Furthermore, the electrode body insulates the coil with two different objectives. Thus, the electrode body prevents, on the one hand, a contact between the coil and penetrating body fluids which would cause corrosion on the coil. On the other hand, the coil is of course also shielded toward the body in order to prevent an electrical action on the body along the tube arrangement at places which are not intended for this. Moreover, different poles within the electrode body are electrically insulated from each other. Thus, for example, the ropes or filaments of the coil can be insulated individually or can be slid into each other through an axial tube.
For achieving the above-outlined objects, the insulation body surrounding the coil needs a tube wall having a wall thickness as great as possible. However, this results in tube arrangements with undesirable large diameters. Furthermore, a tube arrangement which is strong enough to keep the radial point and line loads away from the electrical feed line has to be very thick or stiff, which is counterproductive with regard to important product properties, such as, for example, bending properties and a small diameter.
Conventional insulation bodies have tube arrangements which are able to absorb tensile stresses only to a limited extent. For example, it has been observed that coil elongation occurs repeatedly during the extraction of an electrode catheter because the electrode construction around the electrode body is not able to absorb the required tensile stresses. Also, with regard to the occurring bending stresses in the coil, a conventional electrode body must have an adequately stiff tube arrangement in order to prevent fractures due to bending stresses.
Based on the described problems of the prior art, it is an object of the present invention to provide an implantable medical tube arrangement which, while having compact dimensions of the tube wall, has an improved load absorption behavior with regard to radial loads, bending stresses and tensile loads.
The present invention is directed toward overcoming one or more of the above-identified problems.
At least this object is achieved according to the present invention in that the tube wall is formed from at least one profiled part wound in a coil-shaped manner, wherein the profiled part's side edge running in the direction of rotation of the coil is connected to the side edge of the adjacent section of the profiled part by means of an engaging mechanism. Furthermore, the profiled part has an electric conductor or is equipped in an electrically conductive manner.
The solution according to the present invention has different advantages. For example, the bending radius of the tube arrangement is constructionally limited through the configuration of the engaging mechanism. The insertion strand which, for example, is formed by feed lines during the formation of the tube arrangement as an electrode catheter, is optimally protected against harmful bending stresses such as, for example, buckling. In addition, protection against torsion, which in the case of a coil results from a tensile load, and against squeezing is provided. The latter happens, for example, if the electrode is fixed with a ligature. Usually, a suture sleeve is used for this. If the ligature is over tightened, the conventional coil formation can be destroyed. Furthermore, the tube arrangement can absorb a high tensile force without elongating. The insertion strand itself does not absorb any forces at all. The latter is therefore optimally protected against tensile loads.
The tube arrangement is also very resistant against damages with respect to radial forces, such as, for example, radial compression which occurs in the case of a so-called subclavian crash or when applying a ligature. Also, an additional insulation of the metallic insertion strand is not required because the insertion strand is sufficiently insulated through its arrangement on or in the profiled part.
In summary, it is possible with the tube arrangement according to the present invention to use other materials and smaller dimensions for the at least one insertion strand in the tube wall because the insertion strand no longer has to absorb mechanical forces. Thus, in the case of a so-called composite wire as the feed line forming the insertion strand of a tube arrangement formed as an electrode catheter, the stabilizing MP35N layer, which in the case of conventional MP35N/silver coils absorbs any stresses, can be greatly reduced or can even be eliminated.
Advantageous refinements of the tube arrangements according to the present invention are specified in the dependent claims. In terms of the generation of the electrically conductive structure of the tube arrangement, at least one metallic wire- or rope-like insertion strand can be connected to the profiled part. Alternatively thereto, it is possible to equip the profiled part itself in an electrically conductive manner, thus to provide it with a conductive conducting layer which is applied galvanically or, for example, by using a screen printing method, or to configure it as an electrically conductive profiled part, in particular as a profiled part made of metal or as a profiled part consisting of electrically conductive plastic. In this case, this profiled part is to be electrically shielded in an advantageous manner by means of a customized insulation.
With regard to the configuration of the profiled part or parts, in particular with regard to the engaging mechanism, likewise, a multiplicity of advantageous variants is possible. For example, the profiled part can have a substantially strip-shaped cross-sectional contour, wherein on the side edges running in the longitudinal direction of the profile, in each case one engaging mechanism is arranged. In this manner, a relatively thin tube wall can be implemented.
Further preferred refinements relate to the configuration of the engaging mechanism which forms a kind of positive connection. In particular, grooves can be provided which are mutually open in the radial direction of the tube arrangement and which comprise web projections radially engaging therein with axial play. The positive-locking engagement can be intensified in that the mentioned grooves are undercut in the axial direction of the tube arrangement, and the web projections can have protrusions which, accordingly, point in the axial direction. In this configuration, the loadability of the tube arrangement in the direction of the tensile force is further improved without impairing the bendability.
The connection of the insertion strand to the profiled part can likewise be carried out in different preferred manners. For example, the insertion strand can be embedded directly into the profiled part, which preferably can be achieved by coextruding the insertion strand together with the profiled part. Alternatively thereto, the insertion strand can be inserted in each case in a receiving channel which is formed in the profiled part and is preferably open in the axial direction of the tube arrangement, and in which the insertion strand can be adhesively bonded or mechanically retained. The latter can be carried out by clipping-on or clamping. In both variants, sufficient insulation of the insertion strand is ensured. The receiving channel itself can run approximately centered with regard to the width of the profiled part or can run at one of the two side edges thereof.
According to another preferred embodiment, the profiled part can be multi-pieced consisting of an inner and an outer profiled strand which are strung together in the axial direction of the tube arrangement and are alternately engaged with each other. In this manner it is possible, for example, to stabilize an outer part guiding the insertion strand with a clamp-like inner part.
In a preferred embodiment of the tube arrangement as an electrode line, the insertion strand functions as an electrically conductive, coiled feed line to an electrical pole, sensor or actuator at a distal end of said electrode line.
The material for the profiled part can be selected from one or a plurality of the following materials: PEEK, polyurethane, polyamide, polyimide, PTFE, ETFE, silicone, polysulfone, copolymers from the aforementioned materials, high-density polyethylene, polyethylene, perfluoroethylenepropylene-copolymer (FEP), or from ceramic materials such as Al2O3, ZrO2, TiO2, MgO, ZnO, aluminum titanate (Al2O3+TiO2), barium titanate (BaO+TiO2), silicon carbide (SiC), beryllium oxide (BeO), aluminum nitride (AlN), Hafnium carbide (HfC), tantalum carbide (TaC), titanium nitride (TiN), boron nitride (BN), boron carbide (B4C), tungsten carbide (WC), silicon nitride (Si3N4), metal, electrically conductive plastic, glass, and the like.
When using one of the mentioned ceramic materials, which usually can be sintered, it is of advantage for production-related reasons to wind the profiled part prior to sintering into a coil and to subsequently carry out the sintering process. In the case of an embedded insertion strand, the latter is coextruded together with the ceramic material and subsequently firmly embedded through the sintering process. In the case of, for example, a clipped-in insertion strand, this joining step can be carried out after sintering the profiled part.
For the material of the insertion strand, preferably, a normal rope made of a medical, conductive stranded wire, or a coiled wire or a profile made of a conductive plastic is conceivable.
The structure of the engaging mechanism, thus, for example, the kind of positive connection of the engaging components of the profiled parts can be varied over the length of the tube arrangement so that said tube arrangement has variable bending properties at different axial positions. In this manner, different bending radii can be implemented at different longitudinal positions of the tube arrangement.
Further features, aspects, objects, advantages, and possible applications of the present invention will become apparent from a study of the exemplary embodiments and examples described below, in combination with the figures, and the appended claims.
Further features, details and advantages of the present invention arise from the following description in which different exemplary embodiments are illustrated in more detail by means of the attached drawings. In the figures:
All exemplary embodiments of the shown tube arrangements are based on a consistent construction principle which shall be explained with reference to
Connected to the profiled part 2.1 is a metallic insertion strand in the form of a coiled wire 6 which can be provided for electrically contacting, for example, an electrode of a cardiological electrode catheter which is not illustrated herein.
In the embodiment of the profiled part 2.1 shown in
The coiled wire 6 of the profiled part 2.1 is clipped, glued, mechanically clamped, or otherwise secured in a centrally running receiving channel 11 which is open toward the side.
In terms of the production process, the profiled part 2.1 which consists, for example, of PEEK material, is first extruded and, then, the coiled wire 6 is inserted into the receiving channel 11. Subsequently, the four profiled parts 2.1 in the shown example are put together and wound so that a quadruple strand of wired coils 6 is fed along the tube wall 1.
The embodiment shown in
As is clearly shown in
The manner of preparation takes place analogous to the exemplary embodiment according to
The exemplary embodiment of a tube arrangement shown in
Deviating therefrom is the accommodation of the coiled wire 6.3 which is accommodated in
In the embodiment shown in the
The embodiment shown in
The embodiment according to
In the embodiment shown in
In terms of the production process, the coiled wires are first wound with a pitch that is greater than the windings of the profiled part 2.8 and are then slid underneath the outer profiled strand 15.2 and over the inner profiled strand 16.2. Subsequently, the profiled strands 15.2, 16.2 are connected to each other so that the configuration shown in
In the embodiment shown in the
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that numerous modifications and variations of the described examples and embodiments are possible in light of the above teachings of the disclosure. The disclosed examples and embodiments are presented for purposes of illustration only and are not meant to be limiting. Other alternate embodiments may include some or all of the features disclosed herein. Therefore, it is the intent to cover all such modifications and alternate embodiments as may come within the true scope of this invention, which is to be given the full breadth thereof. Additionally, the disclosure of a range of values is a disclosure of every numerical value within that range.
This patent application claims the benefit of co-pending U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/666,934, filed on Jul. 2, 2012, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61666934 | Jul 2012 | US |