The present invention relates to a novel pulsating medical device.
Conceptually, the cardiovascular system is a pressurised closed hydraulic circuit, lined internally with epithelial cells. The function of these epithelial cells is regulated by cardiac pulsation inducing pressure variations in vessels and thus shearing of these cells, stimulating same. These tangential shear stress forces are essential for maintaining the endothelial function including vascular tonicity by means of nitric oxide synthesis (NOS), blood clotting, the inflammatory response, immunity, atherosclerosis, angiogenesis and apoptosis. The endothelial function is very important since it controls embryogenesis, morphogenesis, organogenesis and health body maintenance.
Any intervention on this circuit, such as, for example, a disease or a surgical operation, induces endothelial dysfunction with potentially dramatic consequences.
In the field of circulatory assistance, numerous pulsating devices are currently used. Of these pulsating devices, the most used due to the easy use thereof and the inexpensiveness thereof is the intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP).
Patent application US 2001/0031907 discloses a pulsating blood circulation assistance device comprising:
At the present time, when it is required to insert an inflatable component catheter or balloon of the abovementioned type into a patient's blood vessel, an insertion device, consisting of a guide type and an anti-reflux haemostatic valve is used. The insertion of the guide tube creates an opening having a sufficient diameter to subsequently insert the balloon catheter inside said guide tube whereas the valve, positioned at the insertion point, makes it possible to reduce and stop the blood flow via the insertion device.
The drawback involved with the balloon catheters according to the prior art is that, if it is required to insert said balloon catheter not through an insertion device but directly into the blood vessel, as is the case, for example, when it is required to leave a balloon catheter in position for a certain time or for small-diameter catheters (i.e. in the region of a few millimeters or less), the blood flow risks are not negligible. Indeed, during the direct insertion of the balloon catheter, the diameter of the insertion point, which is initially equal to the diameter of the catheter, is enlarged following the passage of the portion of the catheter surrounded by the balloon. Subsequently, when the catheter is inserted more deeply so as to position the balloon in the region to be treated, the diameter of the catheter is less than the diameter of the insertion point, hence blood flow risks.
Therefore, the invention addresses this problem by means of a pulsating medical device comprising:
characterised in that the diameter of part B of the catheter is less than the diameters of parts A and C of the catheter and in that the diameters of parts A and C of said catheter are substantially equal.
This reduction in the diameter of part B of the catheter enables the diameter of the whole of part B of the catheter plus the inflatable component to be reduced with respect to that of catheters according to the prior art. Following the insertion of the catheter into a patient's blood vessel, excessive widening of said insertion point due to a markedly greater diameter of part of the catheter will not occur.
In one particular embodiment of the invention, the diameter of part B of the catheter plus the deflated inflatable component is less than or equal to the diameters of parts A and C of the catheter. In this embodiment, the insertion of the catheter does not cause any widening of the insertion point, which is more advantageous.
In one particular embodiment, the inflatable component is a balloon.
Preferably, the inflatable component is formed from a biocompatible radio-opaque material. The insertion of said inflatable component into a blood vessel thus does not cause any infection or other damage and can be viewed readily by means of radiography.
In one particular embodiment, said material is polyurethane; this material is one example, among others, of advantageous organic material.
In one particular embodiment of the invention, the diameter of the catheter is a few millimeters or less. These dimensions correspond to small catheters used in paediatrics and also in adults to reach some small blood vessels. However, the problem addressed by the invention, that of varying the diameter of a balloon catheter when the use thereof without a guide tube is required, is increased significantly in the case of small-diameter catheters. Indeed, for these small catheters, the thickness of the balloon represents a proportionally markedly greater increase in the diameter thereof, in relation to larger diameter catheters.
In one particular embodiment of the invention, the dimensions of the inflatable component are a length between 0.1 and 2 cm and a volume between 0.1 and 2 cm3.
The invention also relates to a pulsating medical assembly comprising a pulsating device, as described above, and inflation means comprising:
This pulsating medical assembly is simple to use and inexpensive. Furthermore, due to the compact size thereof, it is portable. The bag compression means may be manual and be embodied by plates compressing the bag by means of translation or rotation of the plates, or translation of one of the plates towards the other which remains stationary, or be embodied by a compartment wherein the bag is housed.
In one particular embodiment of the pulsating medical assembly, the bag compression means are controlled electromechanically.
In one particular embodiment of the pulsating medical assembly, the pulsating device and the inflation means are integral.
One embodiment of the invention will now be described with reference to the appended figures, wherein:
The pulsating device according to the invention, represented in
In
In
The insertion of the pulsating device according to the invention will now be described. One of the patient's blood vessels is pricked with a needle, creating an opening, or insertion point. The metal guide 7 is then fitted. The catheter 1 is then inserted via said opening using the guide 7. Parts A, B and C of the catheter 1 pass through this opening in succession, not causing any widening of said opening since, as mentioned above, parts A and C and part B, fitted with the deflated balloon 6, have substantially the same diameter. Once the catheter 1 is in position, i.e. once the balloon 6 occupies the region of the blood vessel to be treated, the insertion point is then filled perfectly by part C of the catheter and the blood flow is thus reduced or stopped.
Said inflation means 9 comprises:
The catheter 1 according to the invention is inserted into a patient's blood vessel, as described above. The end of the fluid connection port 8 projecting from the patient's body is connected to the bag 10. The bag 10 is then filled with fluid 11 (which may be helium, carbon dioxide, physiological saline solution) by opening the valve 12 (this operation may be performed prior to the connection of the fluid connection port 8 to the bag 10). The bag 10 is then inserted in the recess 16 of the compression compartment 14 controlled by the electromechanical control 15. According to the instructions received by said electromechanical control 15, a precise bag 10 compression/decompression rate is established, this rate possibly being, for example, 10 to 300 compressions per minute. The compression of the bag 10 gives rise to a flow of fluid 11 towards the balloon 6 which is inflated and the decompression of the bag 10 gives rise to an intake of fluid 11 from the balloon 6 to the bag 10, which deflates the balloon. A pulsating movement of the fluid is thus transferred from the bag 10 to the balloon 6. This catheter-balloon-inflation means assembly (as described in
The inflation means is low in cost and simple to use. Indeed, compression/decompression does not require a costly pressure source unlike the intra-aortic balloons according to the prior art.
Since the pulsating devices according to the invention can be applied to small-diameter catheters, small pulsating catheters will be available, which is currently not the case. These small pulsating catheters may be used in numerous applications.
Indeed, the inventor unexpectedly discovered that inflating the balloon, inserted into a blood vessel, increases the shear strength on the wall of the blood vessel.
These small pulsating catheters may thus be used not only for treating blocked coronary arteries (the smallest catheter diameter making it possible to reach the blocked region of the artery and the pulsating movement of the balloon enabling the gentle treatment of said region), but also for treating possible foetal malformations through umbilical vessels. Numerous other applications may be envisaged such as in angiogenesis-apoptosis interdependence (for example, increasing angiogenesis in the event of a fracture in an elderly subject in order to speed up healing), atherosclerosis (coronary, cerebral, renal), the immune system, cardiogenesis, nitrogen monoxide secretion (for example, for treating systemic or acute and above all chronic pulmonary arterial hypertension).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
08 01816 | Apr 2008 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR2009/050564 | 4/2/2009 | WO | 00 | 9/29/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2009/136034 | 11/12/2009 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4362150 | Lombardi, Jr. et al. | Dec 1982 | A |
4902273 | Choy et al. | Feb 1990 | A |
5090957 | Moutafis et al. | Feb 1992 | A |
5697906 | Ariola et al. | Dec 1997 | A |
5718861 | Andrews et al. | Feb 1998 | A |
5759175 | Ariola et al. | Jun 1998 | A |
5817001 | Leschinsky et al. | Oct 1998 | A |
5910103 | Saper et al. | Jun 1999 | A |
6149578 | Downey et al. | Nov 2000 | A |
6190304 | Downey et al. | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6346092 | Leschinsky | Feb 2002 | B1 |
6666814 | Downey et al. | Dec 2003 | B2 |
6733459 | Atsumi | May 2004 | B1 |
7250025 | Nigroni et al. | Jul 2007 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2008000110 | Jan 2008 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20110021987 A1 | Jan 2011 | US |