The present invention regards protecting a coated work-piece during its manufacture or reconfiguration. More specifically the present invention regards reducing the probability of damaging the coating of a work-piece during the work-piece's manufacture by managing or regulating the temperature of the coating.
Articles of manufacture are regularly coated for numerous and varying reasons. For example, they may be coated to protect them from the intrusive handling they may be subjected to during their manufacture or to protect them from the environmental effects they may endure after they are manufactured. In either of these, as well as in others, damage to the coating of a work-piece, resulting from the handling or reconfiguration of the work-piece, is an unwanted result.
When the coating of a work-piece becomes scratched or otherwise damaged during the work-piece's manufacture, the scratches can promote the deterioration of the work-piece by exposing the work-piece's surface to its surroundings. Should the work-piece, upon its completion, be employed in a corrosive environment, the exposed surface of the finished product would be more vulnerable to corrosion than if its coating were completely intact. Moreover, the scratches and inconsistencies in the coating of the work-piece may also reduce the effectiveness of the finished product. For example, should the coating be used to uniformly deliver some type of releasable substance, inconsistencies in the surface of the coating can foster uneven and inconsistent delivery of the releasable substance to the deployed product's final surroundings.
An expandable coated stent is one specific example of the coated work-pieces described above. Expandable stents are tube-like medical devices designed to support the inner walls of a vessel within the body of a patient. These stents are typically positioned within a targeted lumen of the body and then expanded to provide internal support for the lumen. These stents may be self-expanding or, alternatively, may require external forces to expand them. In either case they are typically deployed through the use of a catheter of some kind. These catheters typically carry the stent at their distal ends. In use, a practitioner will position the catheter's distal end near the target area of the lumen. Once properly positioned the stent will be deployed by the practitioner such that it comes to rest near or in direct contact with the inner walls of the lumen. There, the stent will remain to provide support for the lumen.
Due to the interaction of the stent with the inner walls of the lumen, stents have been coated to enhance their effectiveness. These coatings may, among other things, be designed to facilitate the acceptance of the stent into its applied surroundings or to enable the delivery of therapeutic to the lumen and its surroundings. Thus, when the coating is haphazardly applied or has somehow been removed during the stent's manufacture, both the stent's longevity and its effectiveness can be reduced.
The coatings on the stent may be applied at various times during its life cycle including its manufacture, its placement onto the distal end of the delivery catheter, and contemporaneous with the medical procedure. At each of these times the coating may be at risk of being scratched, damaged or otherwise removed from the surface of the stent. For example, during their manufacture, stents are often crimped onto the distal end of a delivery catheter. This crimping process requires the exertion of significant forces against the coating of the stent to facilitate a reduction in the stent's circumference to secure it to the catheter. During this crimping, the mechanical arms of a crimper may come in contact with the coating of the stent as they reduce the diameter of the stent. This compressive contact can scratch, indent, wipe-off or otherwise breach the integrity of the coating—an undesirable result.
Apparatus for configuring an externally coated workpiece are provided. In one example, the apparatus includes a tubular reconfiguration chamber having a plurality of slidably mounted outer walls, the outer walls slidably mounted along individual radial lines emanating from and orthogonal to the central longitudinal axis of the tubular reconfiguration chamber; and a means for adjusting and maintaining the temperature of the external coating of a work-piece located within the tubular reconfiguration chamber.
In another example the apparatus includes a reconfiguration chamber; a nozzle in fluid communication with the reconfiguration chamber, a regulator in fluid communication with the nozzle, the regulator adapted to regulate the flow of a thermal transfer fluid exiting the nozzle, and a controller in communication with the regulator, the controller adapted to send control signals to the regulator to maintain the surface temperature of the external coating of the reconfigurable work-piece within a predetermined temperature range, the predetermined temperature range associated with a predetermined minimum hardness of the external coating of the reconfigurable work-piece.
In one embodiment of the present invention the hardness or resilience of the coating of a work-piece is temporarily increased by adjusting its preexisting temperature to be closer to its glass transition temperature. Then, while the coating is in this temporarily hardened or more resilient state, the force required to reconfigure the work-piece is applied against the coating. By temporarily increasing the hardness of the coating through its change in temperature, the coating is better able to withstand the forces and pressures exerted upon it during the reconfiguration of the work-piece. Thus, the coating is more likely to remain intact both during the remainder of the manufacturing of the work-piece and after the work-piece has been completely manufactured and is employed for its intended purpose.
The exemplary polymer graphed in
When the polymer temperature is within the liquid range 16 the chains of molecules comprising the polymer may move freely amongst one another and, consequently, the polymer behaves much like a liquid. As the temperature decreases, the thermal agitation among the molecules lessens and the volume of the liquid shrinks. This decrease in volume continues below the melting point (Tm) 13 of the polymer and into its super-cooled liquid range. Below the melting point (Tm) 13, the chains of molecules may still flow around and among themselves but they do so at a lower rate than in the liquid phase. It is here, in this super-cooled liquid range, that the hardness and resiliency of the polymer will increase as its temperature approaches the glass transition temperature (Tg) 12. When the temperature of the polymer reaches the glass transition temperature (Tg) 12 the polymer enters the glass phase 14. Here, the polymer becomes more brittle than in the super-cooled liquid phase as the molecules can no longer continually rearrange themselves. Moreover, as is evident in the graph of
In order to increase the resiliency and hardness of the coating and to reduce the potential damage to it from the direct contact with the slidable outer wall 20, the coating may be cooled to be within its super-cooled liquid range. By lowering the temperature of the coating 21, closer to the glass transition temperature of the coating, the coating 21 can be sufficiently hardened to protect it from the forces generated by its direct contact with the slidable outer wall 20. Due to this temporal hardening, the coating 21 may remain substantially intact on the work-piece and may be able to continue to protect the work-piece 22 during the remaining steps of its manufacture and, afterwards, as the work-piece is deployed for its intended use.
The slidable outer wall 20 provided in
In this embodiment, the slidable outer walls 41 of the reconfiguration chamber 40 are activated to crimp the stent 42 onto the balloon catheter 44. When activated, the slidable outer walls 41 slide towards one another and, thus, reduce the size of the aperture defined by them. As the aperture's diameter reaches the size of the exterior surface 48 of the coating 47, pressure is begun to be exerted on the coating 47 of the stent 42 and the stent begins to be reconfigured. As the diameter of the aperture is further reduced so too is the cross-sectional diameter of the stent 42. In order to retard damage to the coating 47 that contacts the slidable outer walls 41, the temperature of the coating 47 has been adjusted either before placing the stent 42 into the reconfiguration chamber 40 or while the stent 42 is located within the reconfiguration chamber 40.
In this embodiment the temperature of the coating 47 is adjusted after the stent has been placed within the reconfiguration chamber 40. Here, a thermally conductive fluid may be flushed through the void 43 and in contact with the coating 47 to adjust the coating's temperature. Dependant upon the ambient temperature, the coating's preexisting temperature, and the glass transition temperature of the coating, the temperature of the existing surface of the coating 47 may be either heated or cooled. In this embodiment the temperature of the coating is reduced through the introduction of cooled ultra-dry air into the void 43 until the desired resultant temperature of the coating 47 is achieved. Other cooling mediums may also be used including both compressible and non-compressible fluids. The desired resultant temperature may depend upon the glass transition temperature of the coating, the structural rigidity of the stent, the properties of the balloon catheter, and the anticipated future handling of the stent. The desired temperature or temperature range may be a percentage of the Tg or it may be a specific range of quantified values. In this embodiment, the desired temperature range is approximately 20° Celsius above the glass transition temperature of the coating.
In this embodiment, once the temperature of the coating has been adjusted to be within the desired temperature range, the slidable outer walls 41 may complete a work stroke by sliding inwardly and, consequently, reconfiguring the stent 42 from a first position having a diameter d1 to a second position having a diameter d2 (illustrated in
An insulating tube 46 is positioned around the slidable outer walls 41 and is clearly evident in
After the distal end of the catheter 44 has been placed within the reconfiguration chamber 40, in order to adjust the temperature of the coating 47, thermal transfer fluid 53 may be delivered through tube 51 and nozzle 52 into direct contact with the coating 47. Then, after passing over the coated stent, the fluid 50 may be recaptured through nozzles 54 and exit tubes 53 where it can be stored or recycled back into the process. The thermal transfer fluid 55 may be introduced and circulated both prior to and during the reconfiguration of the stent 42, although it is preferable that the flow of the thermal transfer fluid 55 be halted once the slidable outer walls 41 have begun to move. The thermal transfer fluid may be any one of numerous suitable fluids, including liquid nitrogen, water, liquid helium, dry air, nitrogen, helium, or any other suitable compressible and non-compressible fluids.
After the crimping has occurred the slidable outer wall 41 may open and the thermal transfer fluid 55 may cease its flow through the chamber. The balloon catheter 44 may then be removed from the reconfiguration chamber 40 and its temperature permitted to return to the ambient temperature. Alternatively, the distal end of the catheter 44, carrying the now crimped stent 42, may be subjected to other manufacturing steps that may also benefit from the coating's temporally increased hardness.
In this embodiment the regulator 56 and controller 57 act together as a means for adjusting and maintaining the temperature of the coating 58 although other configurations for this means are plausible. These components work together to adjust and maintain the temperature of the coating 47. The amount of fluid flowing through the entrance nozzles 52 into the reconfiguration chamber may be monitored by the controller 57. When the requisite flow is detected no action may be required. However, should the controller 57 determine that the rate of fluid flow should be adjusted, in order to adjust or maintain the temperature of the coating 47, it may, as required, send a signal that opens or closes the regulator 56.
This means for adjusting and maintaining the temperature 58 can take numerous other configurations. For example, while it is illustrated as being comprised of regulators and controllers regulating the flow of fluid into the reconfiguration chamber, this means could, instead, comprise manually adjustable valves that are adjusted by an operator monitoring the temperature of the coating. Alternatively, this means could also be electrical coils or hollow thermal conduction tubes carrying a thermal conductive fluid such as liquid nitrogen. The coils in either case may be placed within the slidable outer walls 41 and may be used to provide the thermal adjustment of the coating of the stent via the regulation of the fluid or electrical current flowing through them.
Although not illustrated in this figure, the thermocouple 78 may be in communication with a controller to act in conjunction with it as a means for adjusting and maintaining the temperature of the coating.
While several of the above embodiments describe a balloon expandable stent, self-expanding stents may also be crimped in accord with the processes described above. These self-expanding stents, rather than requiring the forces generated by the balloon catheter to expand them, are capable of expanding under their own power once they have been deployed. In
As described above and as shown in
In
These conduits or lines may be used in place of the thermal fluid transfer methods described above or in addition to the thermal fluid transfer methods described above. In other words, the conduits or lines placed into the walls 102 and 112 may be the sole source of adjusting the temperature of the coating or they may be a supplement to thermal transfer fluid being pumped over the coating. These conduits and lines may also be classified as a means for adjusting and maintaining the temperature of the coating.
Thermal conditioning of a coated work-piece during the reconfiguration of the work-piece is provided. While various embodiments have been conveyed, it will be evident to one of skill in the art that other embodiments, also within the spirit and scope of the present invention, are plausible.
This application is a Continuation of application Ser. No. 09/819,638, filed Mar. 29, 2001 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,739,033, which is included herein in its entirety by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3661655 | Hrusovsky | May 1972 | A |
5183085 | Timmermans | Feb 1993 | A |
5288356 | Benefiel | Feb 1994 | A |
5353623 | Bobenhausen | Oct 1994 | A |
5485667 | Kleshinski | Jan 1996 | A |
5546646 | Williams et al. | Aug 1996 | A |
5630830 | Verbeek | May 1997 | A |
5725519 | Penner et al. | Mar 1998 | A |
5766158 | Opolski | Jun 1998 | A |
5860966 | Tower | Jan 1999 | A |
5893867 | Bagaoisan et al. | Apr 1999 | A |
5893868 | Hanson et al. | Apr 1999 | A |
5899935 | Ding | May 1999 | A |
5911452 | Yan | Jun 1999 | A |
5931851 | Morales | Aug 1999 | A |
5951540 | Verbeek | Sep 1999 | A |
5992000 | Humphrey et al. | Nov 1999 | A |
6009614 | Morales | Jan 2000 | A |
6024737 | Morales | Feb 2000 | A |
6063092 | Shin | May 2000 | A |
6065197 | Iseki et al. | May 2000 | A |
6245076 | Yan | Jun 2001 | B1 |
6249952 | Ding | Jun 2001 | B1 |
6292990 | Iseki et al. | Sep 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
195 32 2888 | Mar 1997 | DE |
0301168 | Feb 1989 | EP |
WO 9720593 | Jun 1997 | WO |
WO 0191918 | Dec 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040177805 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 09819638 | Mar 2001 | US |
Child | 10812031 | US |