The present invention relates to the field of medical devices and more particularly to introducer sheaths.
Introducer sheaths are well-known for percutaneous vascular access and typically comprise polytetrafluoroethylene or fluorinated ethylene propylene. These sheaths are of a thin-walled construction, but tend to kink, which is unacceptable since upon kinking the sheath is unusable and cannot be straightened while positioned in the body of a patient and must therefore be removed leaving an enlarged, bleeding opening which typically cannot be reused for the necessary percutaneous entry. Increasing the thickness of the sheath wall only minimally improves the level of kink resistance while enlarging the entry hole which generally is undesirable.
One introducer sheath with improved kink resistance is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,380,304 to Parker. The introducer sheath comprises a coil having a plurality of turns positioned and compression-fitted around an inner tube. An outer tube is connected to the inner tube through the uniform spacing of the coil turns. As a result, the compression-fitted coil reinforces the wall to provide an extremely kink-resistant and thin-walled introducer sheath. Preferably, the coil comprises flat wire for minimizing the wall thickness of the sheath.
The distal ends of the inner and outer tubes extend beyond the distal end of the coil, and the distal end of the outer tube is tapered and extends beyond the distal end of the inner tube to advantageously prevent the inner tube from presenting a rough edge or surface, which may cause injury to the vessel wall. The outer tube is said to comprise a heat-formable polyamide material such as nylon for connecting with the rough outer surface of the inner tube, between the coil turns. A distal tip member of nylon is then bonded onto the distal tip of the outer tube, and is of the same durometer, or is harder to further facilitate entry into the percutaneous access site.
It is desired to provide a kink-resistant introducer sheath that has a more flexible distal tip, enabling introducer sheaths to be utilized in applications involving more tortuous paths or more sensitive treatment sites.
The foregoing problems are solved and a technical advance is achieved in an illustrative flexible, kink-resistant, introducer sheath having a flexible distal tip portion. The sheath of the present invention includes an inner tube such as of polytetrafluoroethylene, and a flat wire coil wound there around. A first length of outer tubing of a conventional relatively hard material such as of nylon, extends along most of the length of the coil-wound inner tube. A second, short length of outer tubing is selected to have a softer durometer than the first length of outer tubing, and is placed over the exposed coil-wound length of the inner tube and abutted against the end of the first length of outer tubing. Both first and second lengths of outer tubing are melted to flow between the spacings of the coil wire to bond to the roughened outer surface of the inner tube and to thermally bond to each other at the abutment location. After appropriate tapering of the distal end of the second outer tubing length, a sheath is fabricated having a flexible distal tip portion.
Thus, the present invention provides an introducer sheath for use in applications such as renal and other arterial applications involving tortuous vascular paths and that has an atraumatic flexible kink-resistant distal tip portion.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Depicted in
In the present invention illustrated in
Regarding the durometer of the second length of outer tubing 22, in applications such as superselective tracking catheters where the leading end must negotiate small, tortuous vessels, the durometer may be selected to be as low as about 10 D for being optimally atraumatic. In other applications such as introducer catheters for placement of stents and various interventional devices where torque transfer and pushability are desired, the durometer of the second tubing length may be selected to be, for example, only about 5 D lower than that of the first length of outer tubing 20, such as about 45 D where the first length 20 is about 50 D.
A length of heat shrinkable sleeve 24 is placed over the entire arrangement, and ends thereof are preheated to shrink at ends of the assembly to hold the first and second lengths against each other. Preferably the first and second lengths of outer tubing 20,22 are distinctly different in color or at least shade, such that abutment can be assured by visual inspection through transparent heat shrinkable sleeve 24.
Upon heating to melt the outer tubing lengths 20,22 to flow between the turns of the coils to bond to inner tube 12 while being compressed by the shrinking of heat shrinkable sleeve 24, a distal tip portion 26 results that is flexible due to the softer durometer of second outer tubing length 22, and that is kink-resistant due to coil 14. After fabrication the heat shrunk sleeve 24 is removed. A taper is then formed adjacent the distal tip of the sheath for a length of about 6 mm, such as by conventional grinding. Optionally, a hydrophilic coating is applied to the outer surface of the sheath.
As seen in
The second outer tubing length can have a length of from about 1 cm to about 7 cm and preferably is hydrophilic coated. Preferably a radiopaque marker band, such as of platinum alloy or tungsten or gold, is positioned about the distal end of the coil prior to placement of the outer tubing lengths thereover and thermal bonding, whereafter the marker band becomes embedded within the outer tubing. Additionally, for certain applications it is preferred that the second outer tubing length have a content of radiopaque filler, such as between about 20% and 85%, and preferably about 80%, by weight of tungsten or barium sulphate particles or the like, while the first outer tubing length substantially does not have a radiopaque filler content.
Additionally, it may be desired to provide at least one intermediate outer tubing length between the first and second outer tubing lengths, with a respective durometer between that of the first and second tubing lengths.
The inner tube preferably comprises one continuous tube, but it can be an arrangement formed from two or more tubes fixed in an end-to-end relationship. The use of two or more inner tubes enables the durometer to be reduced in a distal direction in a manner similar to that of the outer tube arrangement which can have two or more outer tubes. The junctions in the inner arrangement would clearly need to be offset from those in the outer arrangement, if there were at least two parts in both the inner and outer tube arrangements.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/009,454 filed Jan. 19, 2011, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/815,567 filed Mar. 23, 2001, which claims the benefit of the filing date under 35 U.S.C. §119(c) of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/191,709 filed Mar. 23, 2000, which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140194856 A1 | Jul 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60191709 | Mar 2000 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13009454 | Jan 2011 | US |
Child | 14208746 | US | |
Parent | 09815567 | Mar 2001 | US |
Child | 13009454 | US |