The present application belongs to the field of medical equipment, and relates to a two-in-one catheter for real-time ultrasound monitoring and radiofrequency ablation, and an application of the catheter in radiofrequency ablation.
Radiofrequency ablation technology is widely used in a variety of medical procedures, especially radiofrequency ablation treatment for arrhythmia. The radiofrequency ablation necessarily causes a certain range of tissue damage to ensure an ablation effect. At present, when performing the radiofrequency ablation, since the ablation catheter and the ultrasound catheter are separated, an ablation catheter has to be withdrawn and replaced with an ultrasound catheter to determine the range of tissue damage by ultrasound. This is time-consuming. Further, since the diameter of the ablation electrode is only several millimeters and the tissue damage range is small, it is usually difficult to find the previous ablation point with the ultrasound catheter after the catheter is exchanged. In this regard, it is unlikely to observe the tissue damage situation under ultrasound. Besides, if it is found under ultrasound that the tissue damage range is insufficient, the catheter has to be changed again and it is very troublesome. Therefore, it is necessary to develop an ultrasound and radiofrequency ablation two-in-one catheter, which can save the time for exchanging the catheters and reduce the difficulty of finding the ablation site after the catheters are exchanged, while monitoring the ablation effect in real time using an ultrasound imaging to reach a predetermined tissue damage range, thereby increasing the success rate of surgery and reduce complications.
A purpose of the present disclosure is to provide a two-in-one catheter for real-time ultrasound monitoring and radiofrequency ablation, which is composed of a tube body, an ultrasound probe, cold saline infusion holes, recording electrodes and an ablation electrode. The ultrasound probe is located in a tube cavity of the tube body. The ablation electrode is located at a head end of the tube body. The cold saline infusion holes and the recording electrodes are located at a front segment of the tube body. The ablation electrode is a metal mesh or a metal column, and made of a material with pores, in which a diameter of a metal wire used or a diameter of an aperture formed by the metal mesh or the metal column is adapted to the same order of magnitude of the ultrasound wavelengths commonly used in clinical, ranging from 0.05 mm to 0.3 mm. At present, an intraluminal ultrasound frequency commonly used in clinical practice is 5-15M, so that the ultrasound wave can reach the back of the ablation electrode through diffraction for imaging. Thus, the entire ablation process can be monitored by the ultrasound. The cold saline infusion holes have a pore-like structure and includes 6 cold saline infusion holes provided around the tube body, which are configured to infuse cold saline during ablation to prevent formation of eschar at a contact interface between the catheter and the tissue, thereby reducing resistance. The recording electrodes are a pair of ring electrodes made of a platinum material and fixed on a surface of the tube. The recording electrodes are configured to record an electrocardiogram of a myocardial tissue in contact with the catheter, so as to find an ectopic pacemaker of arrhythmia.
The ablation electrode is preferably a metal mesh, and may be made of any metal such as platinum, titanium, copper, iron, stainless steel, etc., and preferably made of platinum or titanium.
The application of the present disclosure includes steps of turning on ultrasound, performing ablation under ultrasound monitoring, and turning off a radiofrequency ablation current when a tissue damage reaches a predetermined range.
The catheter designed according to the present disclosure integrates ultrasound and radiofrequency ablation. The ablation electrode is designed as, for example, a metal mesh or a metal column, which has pores. A diameter of the pores is adapted to the same order of magnitude of a wavelength of the ultrasound wave, so that the ultrasound can reach the back of the ablation electrode by diffraction for imaging. When performing the radiofrequency ablation according to the present disclosure, a real-time monitoring can be performed with the ultrasound without exchanging catheters, which is time-saving and avoids the trouble of finding an ablation site after the catheters are exchanged. The radiofrequency ablation under real-time ultrasound monitoring can also help the operator accurately reach the predetermined tissue damage range, and thus a success rate of surgery can be increased and surgical complications can be recued, which is beneficial to the radiofrequency ablation surgery. The present application is reasonably designed, the preparation and operation thereof are simple and convenient, and thus has the prospects of application.
The present disclosure is further described below with reference to the drawings and examples.
As shown in
The ablation electrode 5 is preferably a metal mesh, and may be made of any metal, such as platinum, titanium, copper, iron, stainless steel, etc., preferably platinum or titanium.
A 30-mesh copper mesh (a diameter of a copper wire is about 0.3 mm), a 100-mesh copper mesh (a diameter of a copper wire is about 0.1 mm), a 200-mesh copper mesh (a diameter of copper wire is about 0.05 mm) were respectively used to wrap the ultrasound probes, and then ultrasound imaging was performed at the inventor's wrist with an ultrasound frequency of 10M Hz. As shown in
A metal mesh was fixed on a tip of disposable chopsticks, and the metal mesh was connected to a commercial ablation electrode with crocodile forceps. An isolated pig heart was placed in a basin, and physiological saline was placed in the basin. The metal mesh was attached on the surface of the pig heart, the back of the electrode was immersed in the saline in the basin, and then radiofrequency ablation was performed.
A metal mesh was used to wrap an ultrasound probe, a pig heart was placed in a basin, saline was placed in the basin, and ultrasound imaging was performed before ablation. Subsequently, a metal mesh was fixed to the tip of disposable chopsticks, and the metal mesh was connected to a commercial ablation electrode with crocodile forceps. An isolated pig heart was placed in a basin, physiological saline was placed in the basin, the metal mesh was attached on the surface of the pig heart, the back of the electrode was immersed in the saline in the basin, and then radiofrequency ablation was performed. After the radiofrequency ablation, ultrasound imaging was performed again with the ultrasound probe wrapped with the metal mesh.
As shown in
It can be seen from the above examples that the ultrasound imaging will not be affected by placing a metal mesh in front of the ultrasound probe. Besides, the use of the metal mesh for radiofrequency ablation does not affect the ablation effect and can form the tissue damage. Therefore, by placing the ultrasound probe inside the catheter and using the metal mesh as the ablation electrode at the tip of the catheter, the present disclosure can achieve the following effects: the ultrasound can penetrate through the metal mesh for imaging, and in the meantime, the metal mesh is used as an ablation electrode for radiofrequency ablation, such that the radiofrequency ablation and the real-time ultrasound monitoring can be performed at the same time, thereby accurately reaching the predetermined tissue damage range. When the two-in-one catheter of the present disclosure is used for radiofrequency ablation, it is unnecessary to exchange the catheters, which is time-saving and reduces the difficulty of finding the ablation site after the catheters are exchanged. The radiofrequency ablation under the real-time ultrasound monitoring can also help the surgeon accurately reach the predetermined tissue damage range, thus the success rate of surgery is increased and the surgical complications are reduced. Therefore, the present disclosure is extremely helpful for the radiofrequency ablation surgery, is simple and easy to be implemented, and thus has the prospects of application.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201910257969.X | Apr 2019 | CN | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/CN2019/094962 | 7/7/2019 | WO | 00 |