This application claims priority to GB application no. 1205368.2, filed Mar. 27, 2012, titled “Medical Balloon with Textured or Roughened Outer Layer,” the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to a medical balloon and to a balloon catheter including such a balloon. The invention also relates to a method of making a balloon of the type taught herein.
Medical balloons are used for a variety of medical procedures including angioplasty, vessel dilatation, valvuloplasty, occlusion and for many other applications. In many such applications, it is desirable to be able to position the medical balloon at a precise location and to retain it at this location during the medical procedure. However, balloons tend to have smooth exterior surfaces, which can enable them to migrate during the procedure. This can result in an ineffective medical procedure and/or potential damage to a patient's organs.
It is thus desirable to give such medical balloons a surface characteristic which assists in anchoring the balloon within the vessel wall or valve opening. One possible solution is to form a balloon with a roughened outer surface. However, prior attempts to roughen the outer surface of a balloon have generally not been successful due to the fact that inflation of the balloon tends to stretch the balloon wall and thus flatten any roughening of the outer surface.
Medical balloons are disclosed in a number of earlier publications including, for example, in US 2010/0036314, U.S. Pat. No. 6,143,416, U.S. Pat. No. 6,786,889, US 2009/0299450, U.S. Pat. No. 5,620,649, U.S. Pat. No. 7,828,766 and US 2010/0262218.
The present invention seeks to provide an improved medical balloon, balloon catheter and method of making a medical balloon.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a medical balloon as described in claim 1.
The function of the first or inner layer is to support the second or outer layer such that inflation of the balloon does not result in flattening of the texturing of the outer layer.
The first layer of the balloon, being less compliant, will support and hold the inflation pressure imparted to the balloon, preventing or reducing the effect of that pressure on the outer layer.
In an embodiment, the second balloon layer has a surface texture or roughness of geometrically shaped surface features. The geometrically shaped surface features may include circumferential rings or ribs, grooves, protrusions and/or depressions, toothed elements, random protrusions.
The first and second balloon layers may be coextruded.
It is preferred that the first balloon layer is made of a material having a first softening or melting temperature and the second balloon layer is made of a material having a second softening or melting temperature lower than the first softening or melting temperature.
Advantageously, the first balloon layer has substantially smooth surfaces. This has the advantage that the inner layer will adopt its inflated form with no unfolding or flattening out of surface formations, as might occur, for example, with a layer having a corrugated shape when unpressurised.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of forming a medical balloon as described in claim 12.
Embodiments of the present invention are described below, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
It is to be understood that the drawings are schematic only and are not intended to be representative of dimensions or proportions of the various elements shown therein. In some instances, dimensions, sizes and proportions have been modified in order to assist in the visualization of various features of the elements shown, that is for the purpose of explanation only. The person skilled in the art will be aware of the appropriate dimensions and proportions having regard to common knowledge in the art.
Referring to
At the distal end 16 of the balloon catheter 20, there is provided a medical balloon 24. The balloon 24 may be used, for example, in an angioplasty or other vessel dilatation procedure, for valvuloplasty, for occlusion or for any other procedure. The balloon 24 is typically wrappable around the catheter 12, the latter extending through the balloon 24 to the tip 26 of the assembly 10. The balloon is also inflatable, via an inflation lumen in the catheter 12, so as to attain a deployed, inflated configuration, as shown in
Referring now to
As can be seen in
Integral with or otherwise bonded to the inner layer 44 is the second or outer layer 46. This is typically in continuous and complete contact with the inner layer 44 and thus has an inner surface which is consistent in shape and size with the outer surface 50 of the inner layer 44. In this example, the inner surface 50 of the outer layer 46 is smooth as is the outer surface of the inner layer 44. On the other hand, the outer surface 52 of the outer layer 46 is textured. In this example, the outer surface 52 of the outer layer 46 is provided with a plurality of circumferential ribs or rings 54 which extend substantially transversally to the longitudinal axis of the balloon 30. The ribs or rings 54 can clearly be seen in
The texturing could take other forms, including for example randomly oriented ribs or elongate protrusions disposed over the outer surface of the balloon in what could be termed a mottled arrangement. Similarly, the texturing could be in the form of a lattice network of ribbing, arranged parallel and perpendicular to the longitudinal dimension or axis of the balloon, arranged at angles, for example 45 degrees, thereto or at other angles. Similarly, in one embodiment, the texturing could be in the form of wave-shaped ribs extending along the balloon, longitudinally, circumferentially or at another angle. Other designs of ribbing could be used as well.
It is preferred that the texturing or roughening is between 0.2 Ra to 18 Ra at an inflation pressure from 1 atm to 25 atm. It is to be understood that the limits of these ranges may be extended within normal parameters without loss of functionality.
In an embodiment, the inner layer of the balloon has a thickness of around 0.01 millimeters to around 0.10 millimeters, while the outer layer has a thickness or around 0.005 millimeters to around 0.05 millimeters.
The inner layer 44 of the balloon 30 can be made of a variety of materials including, for example, polyamide (e.g. Nylon), polyether block amide (e.g. Pebax), polyethylene, PET, polyurethane or other suitable material. The second or outer balloon layer 46 could be made of similar materials or a different material than that of the inner layer 44, all being of a formulation having a lower softening or melting temperature than the material of the first balloon layer. Of course, either or both layers 44, 46 can be made from a plurality of compounds.
In the preferred embodiment, the balloon layers have softening temperatures between around 60 and 160 degrees centigrade with a difference in the softening temperatures of the inner and outer layers of a few tens of degrees centigrade, in one embodiment of around 60 degrees centigrade.
The inner layer 44 is made of a material having a higher softening or melting temperature than the material forming the outer layer 46. It is also preferred that the outer layer 46 has a compliance which is no less than the compliance of the inner layer 44 and most preferably has a greater compliance than that of the inner layer 44. In particular, it is preferred that the outer layer has a softer/lower durometer that the inner layer.
The structure of layers 44, 46 is such that when the balloon 30 is inflated, by means of inflation fluid fed through the lumen 38 of the catheter 12, the balloon 30 will unwrap from the catheter 12 and expand to its inflated condition shown in
The relative compliances of the inner and outer layers 44, 46 can be determined by a number of factors, including the material used for these layers, the nature of that material, the thicknesses of the layers and so on. These are all parameters which a person skilled in the art will be able to ascertain on the basis of common general knowledge.
The ribs 54 of the embodiment of
It is to be appreciated that the circumferential ribs or rings 54 are just one example of texturing of a medical balloon. The teachings herein, particularly in connection with the method of manufacture of the balloon described below, allow for a large variety of different surface features to be produced in a medical balloon. Some examples are given in
In
In
These texturing features could be used individually or in combination with one another and may also extend down the end cones of the balloon, and in some embodiments also along the neck portions.
The balloon could be non-compliant, semi-compliant or compliant in dependence upon the medical application.
The structure of the balloon and its method of manufacture, described below, allows for the provision of medical balloons having a large variety of surface textures or roughness, the specific characteristics of which can be designed to be suited or otherwise optimized for a particular medical application.
There follows a description of a preferred embodiment of manufacturing a balloon having characteristics of the type disclosed herein.
Referring now to
The assembly 100 includes a mold 102, a pumping unit 104 for pumping inflation fluid through a conduit 106 into the mold 102 and specifically into a raw tubing from which the medical balloon is formed as described in further detail below. The pumping unit 104 may be provided with a heater 108 for heating the pumping fluid. There may be provided a separate heating unit 110 for heating the mold 102 during the process of fabrication of a medical balloon.
With reference to
Formed within the substantially cylindrical portion 116 of the mold are annular grooves 120 which extend transversally around the inside surface of the cylindrical portion 116.
In the example of
Referring now to
In practice, the raw tubing 140 is fed into the mold 102, typically in the direction of the arrow 122 shown in
The tubing 140, which is typically a very long or continuous length of tubing, is cut to an appropriate length and then coupled to the conduit 106, in known manner. In practice, the conduit 106 may form a balloon catheter 12, in which case the raw tubing 140 would be fixed over the catheter after having been cut to size with its two ends sealed to the catheter 12 at locations which would form the necks 36 of the balloon.
The mold 102 is heated and fluid pressure, typically also heated, fed by means of the pump 104 into the raw tubing 140. The heat applied to the raw tubing causes this to soften, while the pressure of the inflation fluid causes the raw tubing to expand within the chamber of the mold 102. As the raw tubing 140 expands towards the internal wall 114 of the mold 112, the raw tubing 140 will eventually be pressed against these walls by continuing inflation pressure. The outer layer 144 of the raw tubing, being of a softer material, will take the shape of any texturing or roughening on the internal walls 114 of the raw tubing, in this case of the circumferential grooves 120 within the cylindrical portion 116 of the mold 112. On the other hand, the inner layer 142, being preferably of a less conformable material, will remain substantially flat, that is will not deform to take any of the shape of the texturing or roughening on the internal walls of the mold 112. As a result, the raw tubing 140 takes shapes similar to those shown in
Once fully inflated, the mold 112 is cooled or allow to cool and the balloon then removed from the mold. Typically, this can be achieved by deflating the balloon so as to facilitate its retraction form the mold surfaces.
The provision of two layers to the balloon integral with one another enables the inner layer to be substantially flat (that is not having any texturing or roughening) and the second layer to exhibit surface texturing or roughening. The smooth inner layer will then act to support the outer layer upon an inflation of the balloon and to reduce or prevent flattening of the texturing or roughening on the outer surface of the second layer. This can be particularly ensured by use of an outer layer which has a lower melting or softening point on the inner layer and thus in which the inner layer will act to provide support to the outer layer, both during the manufacture of the balloon and also during subsequent deployment of the balloon in a medical procedure.
The preferred embodiments have only two balloon layers, which are preferably co-extruded or otherwise bonded to one another so as to be integral. Other embodiments contemplate more than two layers, for example, three or more, with the proviso that the outer layer of the balloon remains supported by an internal layer which prevents or minimizes stretching of the outer layer which would lead to flattening of any texturing or roughening on its outer surface.
The roughened or textured outer surface of the balloon can also be used advantageously for holding an implantable medical device securely on the balloon for delivery of the device. More particularly, the roughening or texturing will act to minimize or prevent slippage of a medical device supported on the balloon while this is being deployed. Smooth balloons can sometimes allow the medical device to slip thereon, resulting in incorrect deployment of the device. For this purpose, the outer layer of the balloon may be relatively soft to allow for partial embedding of the medical device into the layer, which will enhance the grip on the device. This feature can be particularly advantageous for the deployment of balloon expandable stents, stent grafts, and so on.
Although the claims are set in single dependent form, it is to be understood that the features of the dependent claims can be combined with one another in accordance with the teachings above, as if the claims were in multiple dependent form.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1205368.2 | Mar 2012 | GB | national |