The invention relates generally to an extrusion process for forming medical tubing. More particularly, a melt extrusion process includes a particle deposition step that occurs downstream of the extruder die but prior to cooling of the extruder tubing.
Extrusion encompasses various processes that feature low tooling and labor costs, making extrusion a desirable manufacturing process especially for tubular profiles. During a melt extrusion process, a solid thermoplastic polymer material (i.e., pellets, chips, beads, power and the like) is generally fed through a transport section into a rotating screw of an extruder via a feeder or hopper. The polymer material is slowly heated as it is pressed forward toward an extrusion die, becoming a homogeneous polymeric melt that is subsequently forced through the extrusion die to form a continuous-length having a desired shape. Once cooled, the extrudate may be would onto a reel or cut into pieces of a desired length. Subsequent thermal processing steps may be used to modify or shape the extrudate into a desired configuration.
Extrusion processes are often employed in producing tubing for medical applications, such as, tubing for various catheters, particularly angiography or guiding catheters, balloon angioplasty and stent delivery catheters, and medical balloons, especially high pressure dilatation and stent delivery balloons, as well as in tubing for implantation or insertion in the body for long periods of time and other applications where mechanical, physical, chemical, electrical or thermal properties are critical to the function to the finished medical device.
Depending on the medical application, medical tubing used for catheters should possess a combination of desirable characteristics such as axial and torsional strength, a.k.a. pushability and torqueability, bondability, biocompatibility and/or lubricity. However, such a combination of characteristics may not be readily achievable with tubing made of only a single material. For instance, medical tubing that is to be used in making angioplasty and stent delivery catheters desirably may be formed from an inherently slippery or low-friction polymer that also may be different to effectively bond to the material of conventional balloons due to the chemical incompatibility between the materials to be bonded. Alternatively, polymer materials that demonstrate good bonding characteristics with balloons typically must be coated with a lubricant on the interior surface so that the interior surface of the catheter tubing is sufficiently low-friction for passing over a guidewire or other medical device, often necessitating an additional manufacturing step.
To overcome this and other problems, it is known to provide the desired characteristics for intravascular catheters by utilizing multilayered medical tubing. In one instance, such multilayered tubing is co-extruded or overjacket extruder to have an outer layer of a bondable material, such a polyamide, polyethylene, polyurethane, or poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET), and an inner layer of a low-friction polymer such as polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), fluorinated ethylene-propylene (FEP), perfluoroalkoxy polymer resin (PFA) or high density polyethylene (HDPE). In another instance, a multi-layered tubing composed of an outer layer of a bondable material, a core layer of a low-friction material, and an intermediate tie layer are co-extruded using three extruders simultaneously feeding a single die/head.
Although multilayer tubing for use in medical devices may be co-extruded, maintaining the various polymers at optimum processing conditions to prevent degradation of the melts during the extrusion process is often difficult and, if unsuccessful, may result in delamination of the layers and/or a change in properties of the finished tubing, such as a decrease in tensile strength, increased brittleness, and/or insufficient flexibility. Thus a need exists in the art for medical tubing that exhibits the desired characteristics of strength, resistance to bending and torsional kinks, pushability, torqueability, bondability and/or lumen lubricity but that is made by a simpler process.
The invention is [to be finalized after approval of claims].
The foregoing and other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description of the invention as illustrated in the accompanying drawings. The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated herein and form a part of the specification, further serve to explain the principles of the invention and to enable a person skilled in the pertinent art to make and use the invention. The drawings are not to scale.
Inline particle deposition system 290 may consist of a chamber or spray station having one or more nozzles or spray heads, such as in a pressurized spraying process. The nozzles or spray heads may be arranged to spray solid particulate material perpendicular to or at a range of angles with respect to a longitudinal axis of tacky extruded tubing 145, to provide a continuous layer of particulate on extruded tubing 145 as it moves along extrusion line 200. In addition, various vacuum deposition processes may be useful in inline particle deposition systems according to embodiments of the present invention.
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A medical tubing made with embedded magnetizable particles, such as ferrous particles, according to embodiments of the present invention may be beneficial for viewing such tubing by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) during use in medical procedures.
Although a horizontal extruder 120 is shown in the embodiment of
A process according to an embodiment of the present invention may be used to produce medical tubing having a low-friction inner surface. In such an embodiment, the selection of a solid particulate material for deposition on tacky extruded tubing 145 may be made to promote adhesion between the polymeric material of extruded low-friction tubing 145 and a second polymer, which is subsequently attached as an outer sleeve or a second extruded layer, e.g., an over-jacket extrusion, over extruded tubing 145. Extruded tubing 145 may be made of a polyamide, such as Nylon 12, Nylon 6/6 or other nylon copolymers, as well as polyether block amides such as those commercially available under the trademark PEBAX®, a registered trademark of the Arkema Corporation. Extruded tubing 145 may then have a solid particulate material of carbon, titanium dioxide or a zeolite deposited on an outer surface thereof to form extruded tubing product 255. Subsequently, an outer sleeve or layer of a low-friction polymer, such as high density polyethylene (HDPE), fluorinated ethylene-propylene (FEP), perfluoroalkoxy polymer resin (PFA) or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), may be readily adhered to extruded tubing product 255 due to interaction between the solid particulate material and the polymeric material of the outer layer.
A process according to another embodiment of the present invention may be used to produce medical tubing having a low-friction inner surface, wherein the selection of the deposited particulate material may be made to promote adhesion between the low-friction polymeric material of extruded tubing 145 and a second polymer used to form an outer sleeve or layer on extruded tubing 145. In such an embodiment, extruded tubing 145 may be made of a low-friction polymeric material, such as FEP, HDPE, PFA or polyethylene. A solid particulate material of a thermoplastic material having a lower melt temperature than the low-friction polymeric material of extruded tubing 145, which is also attractive for bonding to the material of the outer layer, may then be deposited on an outer surface of tubing 145 to form extruded tubing product 255. Subsequently, an outer sleeve or layer of a second polymeric material, such as, a polyamide, Nylon 12, Nylon 6/6 or other nylon copolymer, polyether block amide or polyurethane, may be readily adhered to extruded tubing product 255 due to interaction between the deposited solid particulate material, which in this embodiment may be carbon, titanium dioxide or a zeolite or a blend of polyether block amide and low density polyethylene (LDPE), and the polymeric material of the outer layer.
In an embodiment, the selection of a solid particulate material for deposition on tacky extruded tubing 145 may be made to provide radiopacity to extruded tubing 145, as an outer layer thereof or as a radiopaque layer between extruded tubing 145 and an outer layer that may be subsequently attached. In an embodiment, a solid particulate material of bismuth subcarbonate, barium sulfate or a biocompatible metal having a high coefficient of x-ray absorption, such as precious metals or refractory metals, e.g. tungsten, tantalum, rhenium or alloys thereof may be deposited on extruded tubing 145 to form extruded tubing product 255 having enhanced radiopacity.
In another embodiment, the selection of a solid particulate material for deposition on tacky extruded tubing 145 may result in improved tensile strength, elongation and stiffness properties of a final tubing product by improving adhesion of an outer jacket of a different material to extruded tubing 145.
The medical tubing produced by embodiments of the present invention may be used, for example, in medical devices suitable for percutaneous transluminal use, such as guide catheters, diagnostic catheters, stent delivery catheters or balloon angioplasty catheters.
While various embodiments according to the present invention have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of illustration and example only, and not limitation. It will be apparent to persons skilled in the relevant art that various changes in form and detail can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Thus, the breadth and scope of the present invention should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with the appended claims and their equivalents. It will also be understood that each feature of each embodiment discussed herein, and of each reference cited herein, can be used in combination with the features of any other embodiment. All patents and publications discussed herein are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.