The present invention relates to medical implants, and more specifically to a permanent magnet arrangement for use in such implants.
Some implants such as for example Vestibular Implants, (VI's), Middle Ear Implants (MEI's) and Cochlear Implants (CI's) employ attachment magnets in the implantable part and an external part to hold the external part magnetically in place over the implant. For example, as shown in
One problem arises when the patient undergoes Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) examination. Interactions occur between the implant magnet and the applied external magnetic field of the MRI. As shown in
of the implant attachment magnet 202 is perpendicular to the skin of the patient. Thus, the external magnetic field
from the MRI may create a torque
={right arrow over (m)}×{right arrow over (B)} on the attachment magnet 202, which may displace the attachment magnet 202 or the whole implant housing 201 out of proper position. Among other things, this may damage the adjacent tissue in the patient. In addition, the external magnetic field
from the MRI may reduce, remove or invert the magnetic dipole moment
of the attachment magnet 202 so that it may no longer be strong enough to hold the external transmitter housing in proper position. The attachment magnet 202 may also cause imaging artifacts in the MRI image, as well as there are maybe induced voltages in the receiving coil creating hearing artifacts. This is especially an issue with MRI field strengths exceeding 1.5 Tesla.
Thus, for existing implant systems with magnet arrangements, it is common to either not permit MRI, or at most limit use of MRI to lower field strengths. Other existing solutions include use of surgically removable attachment magnets, spherical attachment magnets (e.g. U.S. Pat. No. 7,566,296), and various ring magnet designs (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 8,634,909 and U.S. Patent Publication 2011/0022120), all of which are incorporated herein by reference. Various other complex arrangements of magnetic elements have been described for use in hearing implant applications; See for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,549,532 and 7,608,035, which are incorporated herein by reference. However, there is no suggestion that such therapeutic arrangements might potentially have any utility for magnetic attachment applications such as those described above.
Embodiments of the present invention are directed to a magnetic system for a medical implant system. As shown in
In further specific embodiments, there is an implant housing configured to contain the implant receiver coil and the attachment magnet. The implant housing and the attachment magnet may be configured to enable rotation of the attachment magnet within the implant housing to avoid creating torque on the attachment magnet in the presence of an external magnetic field. Or the implant housing and the attachment magnet may be configured to prevent rotation of the attachment magnet within the implant housing. There may be a volume of damping oil within the implant housing around the attachment magnet configured to resist movement of the implant magnet within the implant housing
The attachment magnet may include multiple local magnetic sections, wherein each domain can be either radially or diametrically magnetized to enable a ring-magnet acting by connecting the single domains. The segmented magnet may have the same magnetic and MRI behavior as the described ideal ring magnet and may be encapsulate in a biocompatible material to guarantee mechanical and biological safety.
The attachment magnet may include multiple local magnetic sections, wherein each local magnetic field has an independent local magnetic field and an independent local magnetic field direction, and wherein a combined magnetic field for all the local magnetic fields has a zero overall magnetic dipole moment. In such an embodiment, each local magnetic section may be a physically distinct ring segment, whereby the attachment magnet comprises multiple ring segments connected together to form a ring shape. Or the attachment magnet may comprise a single integral structure without distinct ring segments. In another embodiment, the attachment magnet may be characterized by a single magnetic dipole moment oriented across the ring diameter parallel to the overlying skin.
The receiver coil may have a disk shape. And the attachment magnet is encapsulated in biocompatible material.
In any of the above, the medical implant system may be a hearing implant system such as a cochlear implant system, a middle ear implant system, a bone conduction hearing implant system, or a vestibular implant system.
Various embodiments of the present invention are directed to an improved implant attachment magnet arrangement that reverses the conventional structure. Instead of a cylinder-shaped attachment magnet surrounded by a ring-shaped receiver coil, embodiments of the present invention have a center receiver coil surrounded by a ring-shaped attachment magnet with one overall or locally varying magnetic dipole moment orientations. One advantage of the invention is, that the ring shape of the attachment magnet distributes the attractive magnetic holding force exerted to the external attractive magnetic holding part to a larger area around the center coil, compared to the conventional design where the attractive magnetic holding force is exerted to the external part from the small center magnet to a small area around the coil center only. Another advantage is, that the receiver and transmitter coils for transcutaneous transmission may use the area up to the transmitter or receiver coil center, such that a better coupling can be achieved. This in turn can improve in case of power transfer the power transfer efficiency and in case of data transfer the signal-to-noise ratio of the data signal at the receiver coil. Another advantage of the ring-shaped attachment magnet is, that the volume and hence the holding force exerted to the external part can be increased in comparison to the conventional design. The ring-shaped attachment magnet also offers greater internal space for electronic components, which can lead to a size reduced implant and a correspondingly smaller external part size as well. The internal space may have one sidewall facing the bone or skin of the patient head that may be adapted to fit the outer shape of the bone or skin for the implantable and external part respectively. For example, the sidewall may have a concave shape. For the external part this may further improve the attractive magnetic holding force distribution and thereby additionally increase the retention abilities and patient comfort.
The specific embodiment shown in
from e.g. an MRI scanner may create a torque
on the attachment magnet 301. In one example, for improving MRI safety, the attachment magnet 301 may be fixated to the underlying bone by any suitable fixation means. This may for example be screws or pins as known in the art.
In another preferred embodiment, the attachment magnet 301 has a magnetic dipole moment 601 parallel to the skin and is rotatable around the common center axis 306 to align with the strong external magnetic field from e.g. the MRI and thereby avoid creating a torque
about the common center axis 306 of the attachment magnet 301. This avoids, when implanted, contact force onto the skull and thus pain to the patient and may even prevent displacement of the attachment magnet 301 and thereby improves MRI safety. For this purpose, one or more sliding surfaces of the attachment magnet 301 may be covered by titanium or some other material to reduce frictional abrasion. In some embodiments, the attachment magnet 301 may be rotatable located in the interior volume of the magnet housing 305. At least one part of the interior volume of the magnet housing 305 may include a volume of damping oil or ferromagnetic domain(s) around the attachment magnet 301 in a configuration that resists unintended movements of the attachment magnet 301 within the magnet housing 305 due to for example movement of the patient head. The magnet housing 305 may be an integral part of implant housing 308, where the internal volume of the magnet housing 305 may be formed by a closed compartment in the implant housing 308. For this embodiment with a rotatable magnet design the magnet material must not resist high demagnetization fields inside of a strong external magnetic field, because the internal magnetic dipole moment is aligned to the external field resulting in no magnet material harm.
at each point is directed to the rotation symmetry axis 306. The corresponding attachment magnet 301 of the external part 309 has a magnetic dipole moment orientation
in the opposite direction to develop an attractive force, i.e. the magnetic dipole moment
at each point is directed away from the rotation symmetry axis of the external attachment magnet 301. This radial symmetric magnetization results in a net zero magnet dipole moment
and as a consequence no torque
on the attachment magnet 301 occurs when exposed to an external magnetic field
, for example from a MRI scanner. In this embodiment, the magnet material used for the attachment magnet 301 must have the resistance against demagnetization, because at least one magnet domain is orientated opposite to the external magnetic field, for example from a MRI scanner.
or a diametrical magnetic dipole
or a combination of both. As in
and as a consequence no torque
on the attachment magnet 301 occurs when exposed to an external magnetic field
. In this embodiment, the magnet material has to have the resistance against demagnetization, because at least one magnet segment 401 has a magnetic dipole moment
orientated into opposite direction to the external magnetic field
, for example from a MRI scanner.
and an independent local magnetic dipole moment orientation (as shown by the adjacent arrows) that in this example is parallel to the plane of the overlying skin. In one embodiment, the local magnetic sections and their local magnetic dipole moment
may be arranged and orientated in such a way, that the exerted holding force on the external attachment magnet 303 has at least one distinguished maximum at one rotational angle about the common center axis 306 relative to the attachment magnet 301. Such an exemplary arrangement is shown in
together may have a zero combined magnetic dipole moment (the vector sum of the local magnetic dipole moments
as shown in
, the vector sum yields:
and as a consequence no torque on the attachment magnet 301 occurs when exposed to an external magnetic field
, for example from a MRI scanner.
The attachment magnet 301 shown in orientated into opposite direction to the external magnetic field
, for example from a MRI scanner.
In another embodiment, the attachment magnet 301 shown in
Although various exemplary embodiments of the invention have been disclosed, it should be apparent to those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made which will achieve some of the advantages of the invention without departing from the true scope of the invention. For example, the ring-shape although shown as a circular ring, may have any suitable geometric form, for example and without limitation a rectangular, quadratic, triangular, oval with or without rounded edges.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/634,247, filed Jan. 27, 2020, which in turn is a 371 national phase entry of Patent Cooperation Treaty Application PCT/US2018/043589, filed Jul. 25, 2018, which in turn claims priority from U.S. Provisional application 62/540,117, filed Aug. 2, 2017, each of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62540117 | Aug 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16634247 | Jan 2020 | US |
Child | 17684023 | US |