The present invention relates generally to steerable catheters, and more specifically to steerable electrophysiology catheters for use in mapping and/or ablation of accessory pathways in myocardial tissue of the heart wall.
Many elongated medical devices are known that are inserted through an access pathway into a body vessel, organ or cavity to locate a therapeutic or diagnostic distal segment of the elongated medical device into alignment with an anatomic feature of interest. For example, catheters, introducers and guide sheaths of various types, drainage tubes, and cannulae are available that extend from outside the body through an access pathway to a site of interest and provide a lumen through which fluids, materials, or other elongated medical devices are introduced to the site or body fluids are drained or sampled from the site.
Such elongated medical devices must have flexibility to navigate the twists and turns of the access pathway, sufficient column strength in the proximal segment thereof to be pushed through the access pathway alone or over a guidewire or through a lumen, and the capability of orienting the distal segment and any electrodes or sensors or ports of the distal segment in a preferred alignment with an anatomical feature at the accessed site so that a diagnostic or therapeutic procedure can be completed. In general terms, the elongated medical device body must also resist kinking and be capable of being advanced through access pathways that twist and turn, sometimes abruptly at acute angles.
The distal segments of such elongated medical devices frequently need to be selectively deflected or bent and straightened again while being advanced within the patient to steer the catheter body distal end into a desired body lumen or chamber. Various steerable mechanisms have been disclosed to steer catheters and other elongated medical devices, e.g., steerable guidewires and stylets, that involving use of a deflection mechanism extending through a deflection lumen of the catheter body to an attachment point in the catheter body distal segment. Typically, elongated wires variously referred to as control lines or reins or deflection wires or traction wires or push-pull wires or pull wires (herein “deflection wires” unless otherwise specified), extending between a proximal control mechanism and the distal attachment point. More complex steerable catheters have two or more deflection lumens and deflection wires extending from the handle through the deflection wire lumens to different points along the length or about the circumference of the catheter body to induce bends in multiple segments of the catheter body and/or in different directions. The deflection lumens extend parallel to the central catheter body axis. In many cases, a handle is attached at the elongated catheter body proximal end, and the proximal end(s) of the deflection wire(s) is coupled to movable control(s) on the handle that the user manipulates to selectively deflect or straighten the distal segment and, in some cases, intermediate segments of the catheter body.
Many versions of electrophysiology (EP) catheters have been disclosed that are designed to perform mapping and/or ablation of cardiac tissue to diagnose and treat abnormal tissue that induces or sustains cardiac arrhythmias and that employ deflectable distal and intermediate segments controlled by deflection wire mechanisms. During an EP ablation or mapping procedure, the guide catheter must be maneuvered through a patient's branched vasculature to advance an EP device into a patient's coronary sinus. The steerable distal end of the guide catheter is used to orient the distal tip of the EP device with respect to tissue, such as a patient's endocardium, to facilitate proper delivery of the device's RF or ablation energy to the tissue. Highly complex shapes are sometimes found necessary to encircle a pulmonary vein orifice, for example, to ablate the left atrial wall tissue to interrupt arrhythmic pathways.
There remains a need for an ergonomic handle incorporating an effective and easy to use deflection mechanism.
The following drawings are of particular embodiments of the invention and therefore do not limit its scope, but are presented to assist in providing a proper understanding of the invention. The drawings are not to scale (unless so stated) and are intended for use in conjunction with the explanations in the following detailed description. The present invention will hereinafter be described in conjunction with the appended drawings, wherein like numerals denote like elements, and:
FIGS. 4A-B are cross-section views taken along section line 4-4 of
The following detailed description is exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the scope, applicability, or configuration of the invention in any way. Rather, the following description provides a practical illustration for implementing exemplary embodiments of the invention.
The present invention is preferably embodied in a steerable catheter comprising an elongated catheter body having a deflectable catheter body distal segment and an ergonomically shaped handle adapted to be grasped in use of the steerable catheter. A particular example of such a steerable catheter as described herein as an EP catheter 10 including an elongated catheter body 20 and a handle 40. However, it will be understood that the present invention can be practiced in other steerable catheters used to access a site in the body.
As shown in
According to one embodiment of the present invention, as illustrated by arrows in
As shown in
FIGS. 4A-B, and 7-9 illustrate thumb wheel 50 including first and second thumb wheel sidewalls 90 and 100 to be joined together along a plane substantially perpendicular to a thumb wheel axis 14 (
In a further aspect of the invention, a rack arm 30 depicted in
As shown in
As shown in FIGS. 4A-B and 5, the second wheel sidewall 100 is fitted into engagement with the second handle body portion 44 so that axle 84 extends inwardly from second handle body portion 44 through central axis bore 108, and second wheel sidewall 100 rests against an O-ring 80. A guide 88 extends inwardly from the second handle body portion 44 through the arcuate opening 112 so that a space is defined between the teeth of the pinion gear 110 and the guide 88. It will be understood the guide 88 bears against a matching guide that extends inwardly from the first handle body portion 42 and through the arcuate opening 99 of the first wheel sidewall 90. According to the illustrated embodiments, guide 88 and the matching guide, fitting through the arcuate openings 112 and 99, respectively, hold linear rack 34 of rack arm 30 against pinion gear 110; according to alternate embodiments, an internal feature of thumb wheel 50 may perform the same function.
In a further aspect of the invention, a friction application mechanism is selectively engageable in use to apply force laterally to thumb wheel 50 maintaining thumb wheel 50 in a selected position. The friction engaging mechanism includes a thumb slide 60 that can be retracted proximally within a thumb slide window 66 (
In FIGS. 4A-B, it will be noted that O-ring 80 is fitted into a groove around an axle 84 that extends inwardly from the second handle body portion 44. According to one embodiment, O-ring 80 functions as a resilient compressible member that is disposed between the thumb wheel 50 and the second handle body portion 44. O-ring 80 is compressed as the thumb wheel 50 is pressed against it to inhibit movement of the thumb wheel 50. A thumb slide 62 of slide mechanism 60 extends through the friction window 66 formed through the first major side 43 of the first handle body portion 42 as shown in FIGS. 4A-B. Thumb slide 62 can be retracted proximally to apply force laterally to thumb wheel 50 to move it against and compress O-ring 80 to maintain thumb wheel 50 rotated into a selected position.
According to the illustrated embodiment, thumb slide 62 is attached to an elongated ring 64 having an elongated opening through which inwardly extending first axle 82 extends. Thumb slide 62 and elongated ring 64 are normally disposed proximally as shown in
In assembly, the strain relief 28 is fitted to the distal end of the second handle body portion 44, and the electrical conductors are routed through the distal segment 61, the wheel mounting segment 51, and the handle grasping segment 41 for attachment to electrical connector terminals. The O-ring 80 and second wheel sidewall 100 are then fitted into the second handle body portion 44. The untrimmed deflection wire 21 may be passed through the bore 70.
In one approach, the linear rack 34 is fitted between the pinion gear 110 and the guide 88 with the teeth of linear rack 34 fitted into engagement with the teeth of the pinion gear 110. The runners 36 and 38 are at the same time inserted into the track defined by the track sides 116 and 118. The arm bar 32 then extends across the notch 114A and over the edge of the first internal axial extension 104. The second wheel sidewall 100 is rotated to move the runners 36 and 38 along the elongated guide track formed within the handle in substantial alignment with the axis 10 extending from an elongated guide track proximal end and an elongated guide track distal end.
The maximal axial proximal and distal movement of the runners 36 and 38 within the track defined by the track sides 116 and 118 upon rotation of the second wheel sidewall 100 can be obtained by proper alignment of the teeth of the linear rack 34 with the teeth of the pinion gear 110. The first wheel sidewall 90 is then fitted over the second wheel sidewall 100 after proper alignment is obtained, so that the linear rack 34 is trapped within the assembled thumb wheel 50.
In an alternative approach, the first wheel sidewall 90 can be fitted to the second wheel sidewall 100 with the linear rack 34 located inside the first and second wheel sidewalls 90 and 100. The assembly can then be mounted to the second handle body portion 44 by fitting the teeth of the linear rack 34 into engagement with the teeth of the pinion gear 110. The assembly is then fitted over the axle 84 and the runners 36 and 38 are inserted into the track defined by the track sides 116 and 118.
At this point, the deflection wire 21 extends through the axial bore 70 through the distal end of the rack arm 30. A set screw 74 or the like extending through a threaded transverse screw bore 72 is tightened against the deflection wire 21 extending through the bore 70 to fix the deflection wire 21 to the distal end of the rack arm. The distally extending portion of the deflection wire 21 can then be trimmed. In selecting a material for rack 30, not only strength but properties facilitating incorporation of a threaded interface for set screw 74 should be considered.
The friction engaging mechanism described herein above is then assembled to the first handle body portion 42. The assembly of the first handle body portion 42 and friction engaging mechanism is applied against the assembled push button 50 and the edge of the second handle portion 44 to couple the first and second handle body portions 42 and 44 together. As shown in
A selection of materials, according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, from which particular parts of handle 40 are formed, is presented in Table 1, wherein item numbers from the Figures are incorporated for reference.
According to some embodiments of the present invention materials forming handle body portions 42, 44 and rack 30 should be dissimilar while having a substantially similar hardness for smooth passage, without gouging, of runners 36 along linear track defined by track sides 116 and 118. Additionally, according to some embodiments, a material forming elongated ring 64 should have a low coefficient of friction and be dissimilar to the material forming portions 42, 44 and thumb wheel sidewalls 90, 100. Furthermore, according to some embodiments, a material forming O-ring 80 should be compressible with a low coefficient of friction and not graze at interfaces with handle body portion 44 and thumb wheel sidewall 100. Finally, a material forming thumb slide is preferably the same as that forming handle body portions 42, 44.
In addition to the materials listed in Table 1, a material providing superior tactile qualities to improve contact friction between handle 40 and a gloved hand of an operator may be included as a coating over outer surfaces of handle body portions 42, 44 and exposed outer surfaces of thumb wheel sidewalls 90, 100; an example of such a material is Styrene Ethylene Butadiene Styrene (SEBS) or Versaflex.
It will be understood that certain of the above-described structures, functions and operations of the above-described preferred embodiments are not necessary to practice the present invention and are included in the description simply for completeness of an exemplary embodiment or embodiments. In addition, it will be understood that specifically described structures, functions and operations set forth in the above-referenced patents can be practiced in conjunction with the present invention, but they are not essential to its practice. It is therefore to be understood, that within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described without actually departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.