The present invention relates to less invasive surgical procedures, and more particularly to procedures that require no incision into the human body.
Less invasive procedures have been developed to resolve, e.g., by removal, maladies of tissue. An example of such a procedure is laparoscopy, in which a small incision is made near the navel and a device known as a laparoscope is inserted through the incision to view and/or remove tissue in the abdomen.
As understood herein, current less invasive procedures, while avoiding large incisions, nonetheless require incisions be made into the body through the abdominal wall, and any incision carries some degree of risk and patient discomfort. As further recognized herein, some commonly encountered maladies, including appendicitis and gall bladder derangements, can be surgically addressed without making any incision at all, but rather by advancing surgical instruments through a natural body orifice such as the anus or mouth (leading to the esophagus). The present invention still further recognizes, however, that aspects of such a procedure raise additional considerations that must also be addressed.
A method is disclosed for neutralizing an organ such as the gall bladder or appendix without making an incision in the patient. The method includes advancing a catheter assembly into the intestines of a patient through a natural orifice (anus or esophagus) of the patient. A neutralization element of the catheter assembly is advanced into an organ of the patient and actuated to neutralize the organ from the interior thereof.
In one implementation, the neutralization element is an ablation catheter. An ablating fluid is infused into the organ through the ablation catheter. The ablating fluid may be, e.g., hot saline to thermally ablate the organ, or it may chemically ablate the organ. Or, the ablating fluid can be liquid such as saline that can be electrified to ablate the organ. Yet again, the ablating fluid can be a gas that can be electrified to ablate the organ. The ablating fluid may be Silver Nitrate.
If desired, the ablation catheter can include a balloon. When the organ is the gall bladder, a portion of the catheter can be advanced into the gall bladder with the balloon in the bile duct and inflated to seal the ablating fluid in the gall bladder.
In other implementations the neutralization element can be an ablation catheter having an expandable ablation member configured for ablating the organ. The ablation member may include a balloon inflatable with a fluid to substantially fill the organ, with the fluid being electrified to ablate the organ. Or, the ablation member may be an expandable metal mesh or array that can be electrified to ablate the organ.
In still other implementations the neutralization element can be an antenna. High intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) energy can be transmitted to the antenna to ablate the organ.
In yet other implementations the neutralization element can be an adhesive infusion tube and adhesive can be infused into the organ through the tube to neutralize the organ.
In another aspect, a catheter assembly is advanced into the intestines of a patient through a natural orifice of the patient, and then a sealant element of the catheter is advanced into an organ of the patient. Sealant is infused through the sealant element into the organ to seal the organ.
In yet another aspect, a system for ablating the gall bladder or appendix include a catheter assembly that is advanceable into the intestines of a patient through a natural orifice of the patient. The system also includes an ablation catheter that is advanceable out of the catheter assembly into the gall bladder or appendix. Means are engaged with the ablation catheter for ablating the gall bladder or appendix or any other organ that can be reached via the natural orifice.
In still another aspect, a system for neutralizing the gall bladder or appendix includes a catheter assembly that is advanceable into the intestines of a patient through a natural orifice of the patient. A sealant catheter is advanceable out of the catheter assembly into the gall bladder or appendix, and a source of sealant is engaged with the catheter for infusing sealant through the catheter to seal the gall bladder or appendix.
The details of the present invention, both as to its structure and operation, can best be understood in reference to the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals refer to like parts, and in which:
Referring initially to
In the non-limiting implementation shown in
With the overall environment of the catheter assembly 10 in mind, attention is now directed to
As shown in
A guidewire 22 can be disposed in a lumen of the ablation catheter 21 and the catheter 21 slid over the guidewire 22. The guidewire 22 can be guided into the appendix or gall bladder by a surgeon viewing the organ using the endoscope 20 in conjunction with fluoroscopy or ultrasound or any other imaging modality such as magnetic resonance imaging or CT scan. Once the guidewire 22 is positioned in the organ, the ablation catheter 21 can be advanced into the organ and if desired radiopaque fluid infused into the appendix through the ablation catheter 21. In addition or in lieu of such infusion, the ablation catheter 21 can include axially-spaced radiopaque bands 24 that can be regarded as depth markings, for viewing of the ablation catheter 21 using fluoroscopy principles known in the art. Alternatively, ultrasonic imaging may be used. The guidewire 22 likewise can include axially-spaced radiopaque bands 24 that can be regarded as depth markings.
It is to be understood that prior to ablation, the bile duct and gall bladder may be first cleared of stones using, e.g., the vacuum lumen 40 of the catheter 21 or using another instrument such as a stone removal cannula that is first advanced through the endoscope 20. Chemical destruction of gallstones followed by removal can also be effected.
It is to be further understood that prior to engaging the ablation catheter with the endoscope 20 and after positioning the endoscope through a natural orifice to locate its distal end adjacent the organ to be ablated, a fluidic substance can be infused through a channel of the endoscope 20 to destroy the mucus membrane of the organ. The fluid can then be evacuated through the endoscope. Alternatively, the ablation catheter can be advanced to the organ as described and the mucus membrane can be destroyed by infusing the fluidic substance through a lumen of the ablation catheter. Fluids for destroying mucus membranes are known in the art.
As yet another alternative, a coil or other electrocautery surface can be provided on the outside of the ablation catheter and energized once the catheter is positioned in the organ using bipolar or monopolar electrocautery principles known in the art to destroy by cautery the mucus membrane. As recognized herein, destruction of mucus membrane prior to ablation of the organ facilitates ablation.
In any case, in some instances without any preliminary steps or in other cases contemporaneous with or after gallstone removal and/or mucus membrane destruction as disclosed above, the catheter assembly 10 can be advanced, without making any incision, into the intestines of a patient through a natural orifice of the patient under, e.g., endoscopic guidance. The ablation catheter 21 then can be advanced into the gall bladder 26.
Once the gall bladder is cleared of stones (and in some cases with the mucus membrane of the gall bladder destroyed), the anchor balloon 38 can be inflated in the bile duct 28 to hold the catheter in place to isolate the gall bladder. Then, an ablating fluid can be infused into the organ through the infusion port or ports 32 of the ablation catheter. The ablating fluid can fill the organ to slightly distend it.
In one non-limiting implementation, the ablating fluid is hot saline to thermally ablate the organ. In another implementation the ablating fluid chemically ablates the organ through chemical oxidation. In another implementation the ablating fluid is electrified by, e.g., advancing an electrifying wire through the infusion lumen 30 and infusion port 32 of the ablation catheter 21 and energizing the wire using the source 18 of ablation energy shown in
After ablation, in some implementations the organ can be inverted and ligated. In one non-limiting embodiment and referring back to
Still further alternate inversion structure may be used as shown in
Once the inverter catheter 60 is positioned in the organ, structure on the catheter 60 urges the organ against the inverter catheter 60 so that upon proximal retraction of the inverter catheter 60 the organ inverts upon itself. Such structure can include vacuum holes that communicate with a vacuum lumen of the catheter 60 so that when a vacuum is drawn in the lumen, the organ is drawn against the catheter 60, with the sealing sleeve 62 functioning to prevent loss of vacuum within the organ.
It may now be appreciated that as the inversion catheter 60 is withdrawn in the overtube 19 the organ is inverted upon itself and is drawn into the overtube 19, with the loop of the ligating cord 66 surrounding the inverted organ. After the organ is inverted into the overtube 19, the loop of the ligating cord 66 is tightly cinched around the organ by appropriate pulling on the cord 66. If desired, the overtube 19 may be slightly retracted from the appendix at this point.
As understood herein, to facilitate inverting the appendix or gall bladder as additional tissue is being moved proximally, it may be necessary to use the cautery dissector catheter 64 to cut through the tissue being drawn into the overtube 19 to permit complete inversion by allowing the appendix to fully invert. The inverted, ligated organ may be left in the body to slough off and pass through the bowels, or it subsequently may be transected. Such transection methods and apparatus are disclosed in the assignee's co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/601,199, filed Nov. 17, 2006, incorporated herein by reference. As mentioned above, an ablated inverted organ may be left in situ as a non-functional organ.
The ablation catheter 70 shown in
With this structure, the mesh or array 74 in the collapsed configuration (and with the anchor balloon 72 deflated) can be advanced through a natural orifice through the overtube 19 into, e.g., the gall bladder or appendix (
With more specificity, the catheter 90 may include an anchoring balloon 92 that is inflatable inside the bile duct or just outside the appendix, and a sealant infusion tube 94 extending distally for advancement into the organ sought to be neutralized. Infusion holes 96 are formed in the infusion tube 94. The infusion holes 96 communicate through an infusion lumen of the catheter 90 with a source of adhesive outside the patient. The adhesive can be cyanocrylate glue. The infusion holes 96 may also communicate with the source 14 of vacuum shown in
With the above description in mind, with the anchor balloon 92 deflated, the infusion tube 94 is advanced into an organ such as the appendix (
The distal cystic duct can be closed using glue and vacuum as well.
In another embodiment recognizing that an adhesive membrane is between the gall bladder and the inferior portion of the liver, a small hydrodissector or inflatable balloon similar to those described above with a means (laser, chemical, electrical, or mechanical) for inducing hemostasis can be advanced into the gall bladder through a small incision in the membrane. Fluid or mechanical means can be used to dissect the gall bladder from the liver bed while applying hemostasis. The gall bladder is inverted on itself as described above and morcelated from within the bile duct, thus eliminating the need to enter the abdominal space.
While the particular SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR LESS INVASIVE NEUTRALIZATION BY ABLATION OF TISSUE INCLUDING THE APPENDIX AND GALL BLADDER is herein shown and described in detail, it is to be understood that the subject matter which is encompassed by the present invention is limited only by the claims.