The present invention pertains generally to systems and methods for cryoablating tissue in the vasculature of a patient. More particularly, the present invention pertains to systems and methods for cryoablating a circumferential band of tissue. The present invention is particularly, but not exclusively, useful as a single step process to treat atrial fibrillation by creating a substantially circumferential lesion around an ostium of a pulmonary vein where the pulmonary vein connects with the left atrium.
Atrial fibrillation is the most common form of heart arrhythmia. In a normally functioning heart, an electrical system directs electrical impulses through the heart in an organized fashion to stimulate the heart so that it properly contracts. Specifically, the upper chambers (atria) and the lower chambers (ventricles) of the heart are stimulated to contract in a synchronous manner. Fundamentally, atrial fibrillation is the loss of synchronicity between the upper chambers and the lower chambers of the heart. In effect, atrial fibrillation is a very fast, uncontrolled heart rhythm in which the atria quiver instead of beating. Atrial fibrillation can also be described as a storm of electrical energy that travels across both atria causing them to fibrillate at 300 to 600 times a minute. This storm of electrical energy interferes with the electrical system of the heart and prevents the heart from functioning properly.
Research has shown that almost all atrial fibrillation is due to abnormal electrical signals that pass through (or originate at) the tissue surrounding the ostia of the pulmonary veins where the pulmonary veins connect with the left atrium. Inside the heart, these abnormal electrical signals can disrupt the electrical system and cause the heart to beat abnormally. Accordingly, preventing the abnormal electrical signals from reaching the heart is one method for treating atrial fibrillation. In one such treatment method, a circumferential band of tissue surrounding the ostium of a pulmonary vein is ablated to destroy tissue and create a conduction block. Once ablated, the destroyed tissue is no longer able to initiate or conduct any type of electrical signal. Accordingly, abnormal electrical signals from the pulmonary vein are prevented from reaching the heart.
One technique for ablating the tissue surrounding the ostium of a pulmonary vein involves cryoablating the tissue with a cryoablation catheter. To date, this technique has typically required a plurality of locations to be sequentially ablated. To achieve this, the cold cryotip of the cryoablation catheter must be repeatedly moved (i.e. reoriented) to sequentially contact portions of tissue around the periphery of the ostium. In theory, these ablations can combine to establish an effective circumferential ablation band. However, in practice, this complex process often results in a non-uniform or discontinuous circumferential lesion that does not adequately block all of the abnormal electrical signals from entering the heart. Moreover, this procedure is time consuming (increasing patient risk) because it requires extensive manipulation of the cryotip around the ostium.
The present invention contemplates the cryoablation of a circumferential band of tissue in a single-step (i.e. the entire band of tissue is ablated simultaneously). This requires contacting the circumferential band of tissue with a contacting element having a relatively large-diameter, somewhat cylindrical shaped contact surface. The problem, however, has been the non-invasive delivery of a contacting element having this relatively large, bulky shape to the treatment site. In particular, the human vasculature is curved, branched and contains vessels having relatively small inner diameters. As a consequence, it is necessary to design a catheter having a relatively low profile to allow the distal end of the catheter to navigate through the complex vasculature. To solve this dilemma, the present invention contemplates a contacting element that can be reshaped in-situ from a relatively low profile shape to a shape suitable for contacting a circumferential band of tissue.
With the above in mind, certain alloys, called shape-memory alloys, are known for their ability to recover relatively large strains. As is well known, the crystal structure of alloys can be manipulated by thermal treatments and other processes to alter the alloy's microstructure from one crystal structure to another. Each crystal structure is known as a phase, such as an austenite phase or a martensite phase, and the change from one phase to another is termed a phase transformation. To use a traditional, one-way shape-memory alloy, a part is initially shaped from the alloy at a first temperature, above the phase transformation temperature. Next, the shaped part can be cooled to a second temperature, below the phase transformation temperature, thus inducing a phase transformation such as an austenite to martensite phase transformation. At the lower temperature, while the alloy is still in the martensite phase, a stress can be applied to deform the part to strains of up to approximately 8 percent. Upon release of the applied stress, the 8 percent strain will remain. Next, the deformed part can be heated back above the phase transformation temperature, thereby transforming the alloy back to the austenite phase. During this last phase transformation, the strain will be recovered, and the original (unstrained) shape of the part will return.
More recently, two-way shape memory alloys have been developed. These alloys have the ability to recover a first preset shape when cooled below their transformation temperature and return to a second preset shape when subsequently heated above their transformation temperature. These shapes can be preset, for example, using a training process that includes an overdeformation while the alloy is in the martensitic phase. Alternatively, a cool-deform-heat cycle can be performed two or more times to preset the shapes.
In light of the above, it is an object of the present invention to provide a system and method for performing a non-invasive, single-step cryoablation of a circumferential shaped band of tissue in the vasculature of a patient. Another object of the present invention is to provide a system and method for treating atrial fibrillation by cryoablating the peripheral tissue around the ostium of a pulmonary vein where the pulmonary vein connects to the left atrium. Still another object of the present invention is to provide a system and method for cryoablating tissue in the vasculature of a patient in an efficient and reliable manner.
In accordance with the present invention, a system and method are provided for cryoablating tissue in the vasculature of a patient. In one particular application of the present invention, the peripheral tissue surrounding the ostium of a pulmonary vein where the pulmonary vein connects to the left atrium is ablated in a single step, relatively non-invasive process to treat atrial fibrillation.
For the present invention, the system includes a cryotip that is attached to the distal end of a catheter tube. More specifically, the cryotip can include a contact segment and a cryo-element. In greater detail, the contact segment is attached to the cryo-element to establish a thermally conductive interface therebetween. With this cooperation of structure, the cryo-element can be cooled to lower the temperature of the contact segment.
Structurally, the contact segment is transformable in response to a temperature decrease from a first, relatively straight configuration to a second, substantially curved (e.g. coiled or spiral) configuration. In addition, the contact segment is transformable from the coiled configuration back to the relatively straight configuration in response to a temperature increase. In the relatively straight configuration, the contact segment can be somewhat easily passed through the vasculature to (and from) a treatment site. On the other hand, when the contact segment is in the coiled configuration, the contact segment can be cooled to a cryogenic temperature to cryoablate a circumferential band of tissue in a one-step process.
For the cryoablation system, the contact segment is made of a thermally-conductive, shape memory material that has been formed having a preset, relatively straight shape at a first, relatively high temperature (T1), and having a preset, substantially coiled shape at a second, relatively low temperature (T2). In the coiled configuration, the contact segment has a sufficiently large coil diameter to establish contact with the circumferential band of tissue that is to be cryoablated.
To cool the contact segment, the cryo-element is formed with an expansion chamber. In one embodiment, the cryoablation system includes a supply tube that is positioned inside the lumen of the catheter tube. In one implementation, the supply tube is positioned inside the lumen of the catheter tube to establish a return line between the inner surface of the catheter tube and the outer surface of the supply tube.
The system can further include a refrigerant supply unit that is positioned at an extracorporeal location to introduce a fluid refrigerant into the proximal end of the supply tube. The fluid refrigerant then traverses through the lumen of the supply tube and exits the supply tube into the expansion chamber of the cryo-element. In one implementation, a flow restricting device, such as a capillary tube, can be used to restrict flow at the distal end of the supply tube. In this implementation, the fluid refrigerant passes through the restriction and then expands into the chamber to cool the cryo-element. In a particular embodiment of the present invention, a fluid refrigerant is used that transitions from a liquid state to a gaseous state as it expands into the cryo-element chamber. Heat absorbed by the refrigerant during this phase transition (i.e. latent heat) cools the cryo-element. After expansion, the gaseous fluid refrigerant can pass through the return line and exit the patient at the proximal end of the catheter tube.
In the operation of the cryoablation system, the cryotip is initially maintained at a temperature that is at or above the first temperature (T1) to thereby configure the cryotip in a straight configuration. Typically, an alloy composition is used wherein the first temperature (T1) is at or below ambient room temperature allowing the cryotip to be in the straight configuration at both room temperature and at body temperature. While the cryotip is at or above the first temperature (T1), the cryotip is advanced through the vasculature of a patient to the treatment site.
Next, a refrigerant fluid (e.g. nitrous oxide) is passed through the supply tube for expansion into the expansion chamber of the cryo-element. This expansion cools the cryo-element, which in turn, cools the contact segment to the second temperature (T2), transforming the cryotip into the coiled configuration and into contact with a circumferential band of target tissue. Next, the contact segment is maintained at the second temperature (T2), which is typically approximately minus 85 degrees Celsius, until the target tissue is adequately cryoablated.
After the target tissue has been cryoablated, the cryotip is allowed to warm to a temperature that is at or above the first temperature (T1) to configure the cryotip into the straight configuration. Once the cryotip has transformed into the straight configuration, the cryocatheter can be withdrawn from the vasculature of the patient.
The novel features of this invention, as well as the invention itself, both as to its structure and its operation, will be best understood from the accompanying drawings, taken in conjunction with the accompanying description, in which similar reference characters refer to similar parts, and in which:
Referring initially to
Continuing with
Cross-referencing
For the system 10, the contact segment 24 is typically made of a thermally conductive material having two-way shape memory such as an alloy of nickel and titanium (e.g. Nitinol). As shown in
In greater detail, the contact segment 24 is made of a thermally-conductive, shape memory material that has been formed having a preset, relatively straight shape (
The operation of the system 10 (and by analogy, systems 10′ and 10″) can best be appreciated with reference to
With cross-reference now to
The flow of fluid refrigerant is continued until the cryo-element 26 and contact segment 24 are cooled and they are both substantially at the second temperature (T2), which is typically about minus 85 degrees Celsius. As a consequence of the contact segment 24 being cooled to the second temperature (T2), the contact segment 24 transforms from the straight configuration (
After the target tissue has been cryoablated, the contact segment 24 can be warmed (e.g. to the first temperature (T1)) to transform the contact segment 24 into the straight configuration (
While the particular cryoablation catheter system and method as herein shown and disclosed in detail is fully capable of obtaining the objects and providing the advantages herein before stated, it is to be understood that it is merely illustrative of the presently preferred embodiments of the invention and that no limitations are intended to the details of construction or design herein shown other than as described in the appended claims.