The present disclosure is related to the inventions disclosed in the following United States patent applications:
United States Patent Application No. [Attorney Docket Number 03-003] filed concurrently herewith, entitled “System and Method for Providing a Medical Lead Body With Dual Conductor Layers”; and
United States Patent Application No. [Attorney Docket Number 03-009] filed concurrently herewith, entitled “System and Method for Providing A Medical Lead Body Having Conductors That Are Wound in Opposite Directions.”
These patent applications are commonly owned by the assignee of the present invention. The disclosures of the related United States patent applications are incorporated herein by reference for all purposes as if fully set forth.
The present invention generally relates to medical leads and, more particularly, to a system and method for manufacturing an implantable lead that includes a lead body having conductors that are located between an inner layer of extrusion material and an outer layer of extrusion material.
Electrical signals may be used in a variety of medical applications to provide electrical stimulation to various parts of the body of a patient. For example, electrical signals may be used to modulate the amount of pain perceived by a patient by electrically stimulating a site near one or more nerves of the patient. A source of electrical signals may be implanted within the body of a patient. Electrical signals are conducted from the source of electrical signals to the stimulation site of the patient through a lead implanted within the body of the patient.
A lead generally includes a thin, flexible, lead body that contains electrically conducting conductors (e.g., wires) that extend from a first end of the lead (the proximal end) to a second end of the lead (the distal end). The lead body includes insulating material for covering and electrically insulating the electrically conducting conductors. The proximal end of the lead further includes an electrical contact that may be coupled to a source of electrical signals and the distal end of the lead includes an electrode that may be placed at the stimulation site within the body of the patient.
A prior art manufacturing process that the inventors developed for a lead involved placing a plurality of electrically conducting conductors on a layer of extrusion material placed on an underlying mandrel. This method was developed for only up to four conductors, because the conductors ran longitudinally along the length of the mandrel. Because only four wires were used, concern about insulating the conductors were minimized by evenly spacing the wires along the length, something that was simplified because of placement of the wires along the length of the mandrel. Greater than four conductors caused concern for mass production because of narrowing spacing requirements tended to cause conductor interference and shorts, since it became more difficult to evenly space the conductors.
After the conductors were in place on the extrusion material on the mandrel in this method, the conductors were then covered with another layer of extrusion material and a heat shrink process is applied to melt the extrusion material. The extrusion material was then cooled to form a lead body that encapsulates the conductors.
Different prior art conductors suggest that the conductors may be wound around a cylindrically shaped mandrel in a spiral manner. Here, a mechanical comb is utilized in the prior art winding process to keep the conductors separated as the conductors are wound around the mandrel. The use of a mechanical comb can sometimes cause the pitch of the conductors to vary. The term “pitch” refers to the distance along the axis of the mandrel that represents one turn of conductor around the mandrel.
The use of mechanical combs can also sometimes damage the conductors. Prior art manufacturing methods can also result in a lead body that has variable (non-uniform) conductor pitches for the conductors in the lead body. Prior art manufacturing methods can also result in a lead body that has variable (non-uniform) wall thicknesses. Prior art manufacturing methods also can result in the creation of lead bodies that have relatively large diameters.
Larger electrode-carrying catheters in the prior art (such as those used in cardiology applications) may utilize electrically conducting wires that are spirally wound around a cylindrically shaped wire core. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,417,208 issued to Winkler describes an electrode-carrying catheter that comprises insulated wires (or non-insulated wires) that are spirally wound under hand tension around a cylindrically symmetrical wire core. The wires are embedded in a soft plastic covering (such as polyurethane having a durometer hardness of 80A available under the trade name Tecoflex) over-extruded over the wire core. The wires are embedded in the plastic covering to preclude accidental movement of the wires with respect to the wire core. Subsequently, an insulating layer of plastic is over-extruded over the soft core covering layer. This insulating layer forms a hard outer layer.
There is a need in the art for an improved system and method for manufacturing a lead body. In particular, there is a need in the art for a system and method for manufacturing a lead body that is capable of protecting and accurately placing electrically conducting conductors within the lead body during the manufacturing process. There is also a need in the art for a system and method for manufacturing a lead body that has a minimal diameter.
The present invention is directed to a system and method for manufacturing a medical lead that includes a lead body composed of a plurality of conductors that have been previously coated with extrusion material before the plurality of conductors are assembled to form the lead body.
In one advantageous embodiment of the present invention, a lead body assembly is formed by placing an inner layer of extrusion material on a mandrel. A plurality of conductors is coated with extrusion material and each coated conductor is wrapped around the inner layer of extrusion material on the mandrel. An outer layer of extrusion material is then placed over the plurality of conductors that are coated with extrusion material. Heat shrink tubing is then placed over the lead body assembly and the lead body assembly is heated to melt the extrusion material. The melted extrusion material is compressed around the plurality of conductors as the heat shrink tubing shrinks. The lead body assembly is then cooled to form a lead body and the heat shrink tubing is removed. The solidified extrusion material forms a protective wall that encapsulates the plurality of conductors in the lead body. The lead body is then removed from the mandrel.
In another advantageous embodiment of the present invention, a lead body assembly is formed by coating a plurality of conductors with extrusion material and wrapping each of the coated conductors around a mandrel. An outer layer of extrusion material is then placed over the plurality of conductors that are coated with extrusion material. Heat shrink tubing is then placed over the lead body assembly and the lead body assembly is heated to melt the extrusion material. The melted extrusion material is compressed around the plurality of conductors as the heat shrink tubing shrinks. The lead body assembly is then cooled to form a lead body and the heat shrink tubing is removed. The solidified extrusion material forms a protective wall that encapsulates the plurality of conductors in the lead body. The lead body is then removed from the mandrel.
In another advantageous embodiment of the present invention, a lead body assembly is formed by placing an inner layer of extrusion material on a mandrel. A plurality of conductors is coated with extrusion material and each coated conductor is wrapped around the inner layer of extrusion material on the mandrel. Heat shrink tubing is then placed over the lead body assembly and the lead body assembly is heated to melt the extrusion material. The melted extrusion material is compressed around the plurality of conductors as the heat shrink tubing shrinks. The lead body assembly is then cooled to form a lead body and the heat shrink tubing is removed. The solidified extrusion material forms a protective wall that encapsulates the plurality of conductors in the lead body. The lead body is then removed from the mandrel.
In another advantageous embodiment of the present invention, a lead body assembly is formed by coating a plurality of conductors with extrusion material and wrapping each of the coated conductors around a mandrel. Heat shrink tubing is then placed over the lead body assembly and the lead body assembly is heated to melt the extrusion material. The melted extrusion material is compressed around the plurality of conductors as the heat shrink tubing shrinks. The lead body assembly is then cooled to form a lead body and the heat shrink tubing is removed. The solidified extrusion material forms a protective wall that encapsulates the plurality of conductors in the lead body. The lead body is then removed from the mandrel.
The foregoing has outlined rather broadly the features and technical advantages of the present invention so that those skilled in the art may better understand the detailed description of the invention that follows. Additional features and advantages of the invention will be described hereinafter that form the subject of the claims of the invention. Those skilled in the art should appreciate that they may readily use the conception and the specific embodiment disclosed as a basis for modifying or designing other structures for carrying out the same purposes of the present invention. Those skilled in the art should also realize that such equivalent constructions do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention in its broadest form.
For a more complete understanding of the present invention, and the advantages thereof, reference is now made to the following descriptions and the accompanying drawings, wherein like numbers designate like objects, and in which:
Electrical contact 140 is not visible in
Electrical contact 140 is not visible in
As shown in
An advantageous embodiment of a method for making the first embodiment of lead body 120 (shown in
In an alternative embodiment of the method of the present invention, each conductor 420 of the plurality of conductors 420 is not coiled around the inner layer 410 of extrusion material, but instead is placed lengthwise along the axial length of inner layer 410. An outer layer 440 of extrusion material is placed over the plurality of conductors 420 in the same manner as in the case of the coiled conductors 420.
The extrusion material is formed of an insulating material typically selected based upon biocompatibility, biostability and durability for the particular application. The extrusion material may be silicone, polyurethane, polyethylene, polyimide, polyvinylchloride, PTFT, EFTE, or other suitable materials known to those skilled in the art. Alloys or blends of these materials may also be formulated to control the relative flexibility, torqueability, and pushability of the lead body 120. Depending on the particular application, the diameter of the lead body 120 may be any size, though a smaller size is more desirable for neurological and myocardial mapping/ablation leads and neuromodulation and stimulation leads.
The conductors may take the form of solid conductors, drawn-filled-tube (DFT), drawn-brazed-strand (DBS), stranded conductors or cables, ribbons conductors, or other forms known or recognized to those skilled in the art. The composition of the conductors may include aluminum, stainless steel, MP35N, platinum, gold, silver, copper, vanadium, alloys, or other conductive materials or metals known to those of ordinary skill in the art. The number, size, cross-sectional shape, and composition of the conductors will depend on the particular application for the lead body 120.
As previously mentioned, the conductors may be configured along the lead body 120 in a straight orientation or cylindrically or helically wound around the lumen 450 at the center of the lead body 120. The conductors are typically insulated from the lumen 450, and from each other, and from the external surface of the lead body 120 by the extrusion material. As also previously mentioned, the extrusion material may be of single composition, or of multiple layers of the same or different materials.
In one embodiment of the invention, the combined portions 400 of lead body assembly 115 are then covered with heat shrink tubing (not shown) and heat is applied. The heat melts the layers (410, 430 and 440) of extrusion material and the melted extrusion material flows together to form an integral body. The heat shrink tubing holds and compresses the melted extrusion material around the conductors that are located within the extrusion material to create a unitary body lead 500 as shown in
Thus, once formed as described above, there is no need to have a separate or secondary electrical insulation material (separate from the extrusion material that forms wall 510) surrounding the conductors as in the prior art. This is because the unitary construction of wall 510 acts as the electrical insulation material and forms the unitary core of the unitary body. This is true for embodiments of this invention including those described below.
Wall 510 is formed from the layers that include the layers (410, 430 and 440) of extrusion material shown in
In the embodiment described above, the unitary body lead 500 is cooled and the heat shrink tubing removed. Lumen 520 is formed when the unitary body lead 500 is removed from the mandrel (not shown). There may be some release of coiled tension in the conductors 420 when the heat shrink tubing is removed. This holds true for all embodiments of the invention described below.
While the previous paragraphs describe one embodiment of forming the unitary body, those skilled in the art will recognize that other like methods may be used. For example, some of the other possible ways of forming the lead without heat shrink could be: a single hot die, successively smaller dies wherein the dies are used to draw the product to a final outside diameter. Other methods could be a compression mold or hot die drawing or other methods familiar to those in the arts. In fact, as those skilled will understand, any heating method that results in the wires becoming imbedded in a homogenous plastic or unitary body may be used. This holds true for all embodiments of the invention described below.
The present invention provides a layer 430 of extrusion material around each conductor 420. This protective layer 430 of extrusion material provides an electrical barrier between each of the conductors 420. This process also provides a significant improvement over the prior art method that uses a mechanical comb in the winders to try to keep the conductors 420 separate. The protective layer 430 of extrusion material also allows the present invention to create leads that are smaller and thinner than prior art leads.
The method of the present invention provides several advantages over prior art methods. Advantages of the method of the present invention include: (1) more accurate conductor placement during the process of coiling the conductor around a mandrel, (2) more accurate conductor pitches, (3) improved pitch consistency, (4) more conductor protection during the process of coiling the conductor around the mandrel, and (5) precise centering of the conductors within the resulting unitary body.
In addition, the apparatus and method of the present invention makes possible the construction of lead bodies that have a smaller diameter than prior art lead bodies. That is, the lead bodies of the present invention may be made thinner than prior art lead bodies. In general, the inventive lead body diameter will be smaller than 34 French and can be smaller than 9 French. (This holds true for the embodiments described below). The cylindrically symmetrical embodiment of the lead body 120 of the invention can also better withstand lateral stretching than prior art lead bodies.
The lead body assembly 115 shown in
The lead body assembly 115 shown in
An advantageous embodiment of a method for making the second embodiment of lead body 120 (shown in
In an alternative embodiment of the method of the present invention, each conductor 620 of the plurality of conductors 620 is not coiled around the cylindrically shaped mandrel, but instead is placed lengthwise along the axial length of the cylindrically shaped mandrel. An outer layer 640 of extrusion material is placed over the plurality of conductors 620 in the same manner as in the case of the coiled conductors 620.
The combined portions 600 of lead body assembly 115 are then covered with heat shrink tubing (not shown) and heat is applied. The heat melts the layers (630 and 640) of extrusion material and the melted extrusion material flows together to form an integral body. The heat shrink tubing holds and compresses the melted extrusion material around the conductors that are located within the extrusion material to create a unitary body lead 700 as shown in
The lead body assembly 115 shown in
An advantageous embodiment of a method for making the third embodiment of lead body 120 (shown in
In an alternative embodiment of the method of the present invention, each conductor 820 of the plurality of conductors 820 is not coiled around inner layer 810 of extrusion material, but instead is placed lengthwise along the axial length of the inner layer 810 of extrusion material.
The combined portions 800 of lead body assembly 115 are then covered with heat shrink tubing (not shown) and heat is applied. The heat melts the layers (810 and 820) of extrusion material and the melted extrusion material flows together to form an integral body. The heat shrink tubing holds and compresses the extrusion material around the conductors that are located within the extrusion material to create a unitary body lead 900 as shown in
The lead body assembly 115 shown in
An advantageous embodiment of a method for making the fourth embodiment of lead body 120 (shown in
In an alternative embodiment of the method of the present invention, each conductor 1020 of the plurality of conductors 1020 is not coiled around a cylindrically shaped mandrel, but instead is placed lengthwise along the axial length of the mandrel.
The combined portions 1000 of lead body assembly 115 are then covered with heat shrink tubing (not shown) and heat is applied. The heat melts the layers 1030 of extrusion material around the plurality of conductors 1020 and the melted extrusion material flows together to form an integral body. The heat shrink tubing holds and compresses the extrusion material around the conductors 1020 that are located within the extrusion material to create a unitary body lead 1100 as shown in
The lead body assembly 115 shown in
An inner layer of extrusion material is placed on a cylindrical mandrel (step 1410). A plurality of conductors is provided in which each conductor is coated with extrusion material (step 1420). Each coated conductor is then wrapped around (or placed on) the inner layer of extrusion material (step 1430). An outer layer of extrusion material is then placed over the plurality of coated conductors on the inner layer (step 1440).
The assembly of the inner layer, the coated conductors, and the outer layer is then covered with heat shrink tubing and heat is applied to melt the layers of extrusion material (step 1450). The heat shrink tubing compresses the extrusion material around the conductors to form a unitary body lead (step 1460). The unitary body lead is then cooled and the heat shrink tubing is removed (step 1470).
A plurality of conductors is provided in which each conductor is coated with extrusion material (step 1510). Each coated conductor is then wrapped around (or placed on) a cylindrical mandrel (step 1520). An outer layer of extrusion material is then placed over the plurality of coated conductors on the cylindrical mandrel (step 1530).
The assembly of the coated conductors and the outer layer is then covered with heat shrink tubing and heat is applied to melt the layers of extrusion material (step 1540). The heat shrink tubing compresses the extrusion material around the conductors to form a unitary body lead (step 1550). The unitary body lead is then cooled and the heat shrink tubing is removed (step 1560).
An inner layer of extrusion material is placed on a cylindrical mandrel (step 1610). A plurality of conductors is provided in which each conductor is coated with extrusion material (step 1620). Each coated conductor is then wrapped around (or placed on) the inner layer of extrusion material (step 1630).
The assembly of the inner layer and the coated conductors is then covered with heat shrink tubing and heat is applied to melt the layers of extrusion material (step 1640). The heat shrink tubing compresses the extrusion material around the conductors to form a unitary body lead (step 1650). The unitary body lead is then cooled and the heat shrink tubing is removed (step 1660).
A plurality of conductors is provided in which each conductor is coated with extrusion material (step 1710). Each coated conductor is then wrapped around (or placed on) a cylindrical mandrel (step 1720). The assembly of the coated conductors is then covered with heat shrink tubing and heat is applied to melt the layers of extrusion material (step 17930). The heat shrink tubing compresses the extrusion material around the conductors to form a unitary body lead (step 1740). The unitary body lead is then cooled and the heat shrink tubing is removed (step 1750).
It may be advantageous to set forth definitions of certain words and phrases that may be used within this patent document: the terms “include” and “include,” as well as derivatives thereof, mean inclusion without limitation; the term “or,” is inclusive, meaning and/or; the phrases “associated with” and “associated therewith,” as well as derivatives thereof, may mean to include, be included within, interconnect with, contain, be contained within, connect to or with, couple to or with, be communicable with, cooperate with, interleave, juxtapose, be proximate to, be bound to or with, have, have a property of, or the like; and the term “controller” means any device, system or part thereof that controls at least one operation, such a device may be implemented in hardware, firmware or software, or some combination of at least two of the same. It should be noted that the functionality associated with any particular controller may be centralized or distributed, whether locally or remotely.
While this disclosure has described certain embodiments and generally associated methods, alterations and permutations of these embodiments and methods will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, the above description of example embodiments does not define or constrain this disclosure. Other changes, substitutions, and alterations are also possible without departing from the spirit and scope of this disclosure, as defined by the following claims.