1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is directed to treating obesity or fat deposits, and, more particularly, to the use of ultrasound in such treatment.
2. Description of Related Art
A. Introduction
Ultrasonic treatment of mammalian obesity, fat-deposits, cosmetic issues or for delivering bodily-therapy is not a new idea. Fat deposits indicative of obesity are widely known to contribute to a number of debilitating or life-threatening diseases such as diabetes and heart disease. Numerous inventors have patented a wide variety of vibratory, sonic and ultrasonic means, some of which are claimed to operate effectively in conjunction with particular recommended drugs and skin-applied medications to reduce fat or ameliorate visible imperfections such as cellulite. Others claim to beneficially treat muscles, visceral tissues or organs, improve circulation or accelerate wound, burn or injury-healing. Very few of these inventors have provided clinical proof of the workability of these methods, apparatus and compositions and only a handful have attracted serious investment funding despite having little or no clinical evidence of workability in humans, unproven markets and unknown, questionable and/or unclear need for regulatory acceptance. However, we have recently begun to hear of some limited clinical and lab-results for obesity or cosmetic fat treatment which appear to have some scientific basis. Utilizing these recent results we herein provide a variety of new apparatus and methods for obesity and unrelated acoustic procedures which implement currently understood therapy mechanisms as well as future anticipated mechanisms in a manner which offers the user, for the first time, complete safety of operation and uniformity of treatment. The inventive apparatus and associated methods, as far as we are aware, are also the first which can offer a home-use embodiment as well as a wearable embodiment that is safe both from the potential shock-hazards but also from the potential over-treatment hazards.
B. The Prior Art
Regarding the prior art we shall focus on the most demanding therapy applications requiring the most of such apparatus. The treatment of fat and cellulite is probably the most challenging because one either destroys or degrades cells or at least encourages the body itself to destroy or burn fat. Fat cells or adipocytes are known or thought to be degraded and/or destroyed by ultrasound, directly or indirectly, via several different mechanisms. The challenge is to perform such ultrasonic therapy without causing other injuries such as hemolysis, tissue burns, nerve-damage or organ-damage. The relevant prior art involving ultrasound, vibration or sonics for fat, cellulite and cosmetic treatment can be divided up into a few mechanism or mechanistic categories as follows:
We shall now provide examples of each of these categories reminding the reader that our own invention herein may utilize one or more of these mechanisms as well as future-discovered mechanisms.
B1. Thermally Damaging Adipocytes.
Let us begin by saying that the delivery of heat to tissues via ultrasound heating for beneficial medical purposes is not at all new. There has been a history of work in the area of hyperthermia wherein electromagnetic (RF and microwave) or ultrasound-induced heating of tissues either accelerates the action of an anti-cancer drug or the mild heating is used to directly kill metastatic cancer or infections such as HIV. Hyperthermia typically heats the tissues modestly, a few degrees C, such that healthy cells can survive. Hyperthermia is quite distinct from HIFU (high-intensity focused ultrasound) wherein a highly focused transducer burns or necroses a tumor or fat by heating it several tens of degrees C. Such HIFU therapy usually kills all cells in the acoustic focus region so HIFU must be aimed very carefully. In any event these are all implementing at least thermal damage.
Others investigators have used ultrasound-induced heating to specifically melt or dissolve fat. U.S. Pat. No. 4,886,491 to Parisi teaches an invasive liposuction probe with ultrasonic 40 khz excitation and the use of infused saline. The ultrasonic energy, via fat-cavitation for example, heats, melts and/or emulsifies the fat and saline such that it can be sucked out of the hollow tubular ultrasonic liposuction probe. U.S. Pat. No. 5,143,063 to Fellner teaches the use of externally noninvasively focused ultrasound, RF or microwave energy to thermally destroy adipose tissue or fat via thermal necrosis. Finally, WO00132091A2 to Riaziat also describes a means of noninvasively thermally necrosing fat using ultrasound or RF energy in combination with a surface cooling plate to prevent superficial skin from burning. We note that if one is cavitating strongly in fat then one is also producing at least some modest heat due to the cavitation itself and the power-level required to cavitate. It is widely known that cavitation bubbles attain super-hot temperatures of over a thousand degrees K at least for very short moments at least within their volume. We also note that ultrasonic frequencies most useful for producing such cavitation, namely low frequencies in the general range of tens of kilohertz up to a megahertz or so, do not cause high heating of tissues without such cavitation due to their inherent low attenuation. Thus the reader will realize that a fat cavitation treatment generates at least modest heat, at least locally at the cavitation bubbles, and it is therefore not completely true that such a cavitation treatment is a completely “nonthermal” treatment. In order to keep a cavitation method from also becoming a thermal method one usually utilizes short ultrasonic pulses and low duty-cycles allowing for cooling between cavitation events. If one utilized sufficiently long continuous waves of 100% duty-cycle to cavitate, one would also experience significant heating-even at the weakly attenuating low frequencies mentioned.
Liposonix of Bothell, Washington is a startup company proposing to use ultrasound to perform noninvasive body-sculpting. Because the procedure is one of several new noninvasive ones, the fat that is liberated (or destroyed) within the body needs to be processed by the body itself as opposed to being sucked out as by liposuction. Such totally noninvasive products and methods are intended to make a dent in the conventional invasive liposuction market. US2004039312A1 to Hillstead et al of Liposonix describes a noninvasive ultrasonic lipolysis system having boiling and cavitation sensors. The patent application says little or nothing about recommended operating conditions—only that the two mentioned sensors may be used to control the therapy process. Thus a therapy that was entirely mainly thermal or mainly cavitational or both of these could be monitored or controlled by one or both such sensors. Thus we will include this apparatus under both thermal tools and cavitational mechanisms. It will be noted that the Liposonix inventive device has a complex tracking and/or guidance system to assure uniform treatment and assure no over-treatment. WO03070105A1 to Cribbs of Liposonix is equally vague about their recommended operational parameters-however there is some industry-journal indication that normal operation will involve both cavitation and boiling mechanisms.
B2. Cavitationally Damaging Adipocytes.
There are numerous patents pertaining to using cavitation to treat a variety of pathological or undesired tissues without necessarily specifically focusing on adipose tissues—but seemingly covering adipose tissues. Among these are U.S. Pat. No. 5,143,073 to Dory, U.S. Pat. No. 5,209,221 to Reidlinger, U.S. Pat. No. 5,219,401 to Cathignol, U.S. Pat. No. 5,301,660 to Rattner which may employ cavitation, U.S. Pat. No. 5,419,761 to Narayanan (invasive), and U.S. Pat. No. 6,607,498 to Eshel at Ultrashape. The noninvasive fat-attacking Ultrashape™ device clearly operates by relatively low-frequency cavitation in a mainly nonthermal manner using short pulses. Thus its thermal destructive component is probably nil. US2003083536A1 also to Eshel and Ultrashape Inc. is similar to U.S. Pat. No. 6,607,498 in terms of the intentional cavitation being done in a mainly nonthermal pulsed manner. We note here that both the Liposonix device and the Ultrashape device are noninvasive and rely on the human body to absorb or process the released fat cells or fat-fragments. We also remind the reader that the Liposonix device also appears to be able to operate with cavitation. Reliance on the body to naturally dispose of destroyed fat cells is not yet been proven safe but will likely be in the future, at least for small quantities of such fat byproducts being released in an exercising patient over an extended or multisession period.
B3. Ultrasonic Therapies Which Promote Or Encourage The Release Or Activation Of In-Situ Generated Lipolyzing Agents.
It turns out that even relatively low-power ultrasound can cause chemical or physical changes in tissue which can contribute to adipocyte degradation or destruction. Several examples of these approaches are now mentioned. First we have U.S. Pat. No. 5,507,790 to Weiss which teaches heating adipose tissue tens of minutes to a temperature range of 40-41.5 Deg C. which nondestructively thermally accelerates the body's own lipolysis processes. Second, we have EP01060728A1 and WO09853787A1 to Miwa which admirably teach the use of low-power and diagnostic power-level ultrasound exposures to biochemically excite the lipolysis process as by encouraging the release of natural lipolysis hormones or by disrupting the adipocytes own phospholipids layer. Both of these patents are of great interest because of the low-power ultrasound or lack of ultrasound utilized.
B4. Other Mechanisms.
Cooling damage (as opposed to heating damage) has been directed at adipocytes and their contents. WO03078596A2 to Anderson teaches the selective disruption of lipid-rich cells by cooling. Taught therein is that cells having less lipid-rich contents, such as skin cells, are less susceptible to such cold damage than are lipid-rich cells such as adipocytes. Anderson teaches the imposition of a thermal gradient such that the adipocytes are damaged by cold temperature whereas the near-surface cells are not damaged because of their inherent greater resistance to cold. The teaching explains possible mechanisms for workability as being fat crystallization-induced ruptures of the adipocytes and/or simple thermal activation of natural lipolysis. In our own invention herein we shall also improve upon this approach.
Several patents or filings address the use of diets, skin-applied salves or ointments, skin patches, systemic drugs and even genetic molecular biology means to chemically or biologically cause fat or fat-formation disruption. We mention these because one or more of these may be used in combination with the use of our own inventive apparatus and method. In fact, several inventors have taught the driving through the skin of various drugs for various purposes by both ultrasound and various electroporation and iontophoretic means. Such drugs are occasionally mentioned therein as being anti-fat drugs or anti-cellulite drugs. Included in this drug/biotechnology list are the following patents or patent-filings: U.S. Pat. No. 5,884,631 to Silberg teaches a noninvasive ultrasonic technique using an injected tumescent fluid which is claimed to enhance ultrasonic direct destruction of adipocytes and/or the indirect destruction of adipocytes via an attack on their connective surrounding tissue. Silberg describes both invasive (suction) fat remnant removal as well as natural bodily removal. We emphasize that in the scope of our own invention herein that by “attacking fat cells” we mean directly and indirectly such as by their direct rupture or melting or as by damaging or freeing them as by attack of their membranes and/or connective tissues. U.S. Pat. No. 6,039,048 also to Silberg is similar in nature. U.S. Pat. No. 6,746,695 to Martin teaches the use of plant-extracts for a diet-based antiobesity program. US2003133961A1 to Nakamura teaches cosmetically applied gel-based compositions for an antiobesity or antifat program. US2004106123A1 to Smolyar and US2004106538A1 to Hariharan both teach genetic drug approaches to antiobesity therapy. US2004106576A1 to Jerussi and US2004106583A1 to Jaehne both teach drug-based approaches to antiobesity therapy. US2004115135A1 to Quay teaches a mucosal-delivered antiobesity drug. US2004122033 to Nargund teaches the use of combined drugs for an antiobesity therapy. US2004122038A1 to Hammond and US2004122046A1 to Elliott both teach the use of NPY-5 antagonists to suppress appetite for purposes of obesity control. US2004122091 to Dasseux teaches the use of sulfoxide compounds to treat obesity. US2004126852A1 to Stewart teaches the manipulation of fibroblast growth factor in controlling obesity. US2004127415A1 to Hsu teaches the use of stresscopins to suppress appetite and obesity. US2004127518A1 to Piomelli teaches the use of anti-anxiety drugs to treat obesity. US2004132745A1 and US2004132779A1 both to Bertinato teach the use of microsomal triglyceride transfer protein manipulation to treat obesity. US2004146908A1 to Adams also teaches the use of fibroblast growth-factor manipulation for obesity treatment. WO04045560A2 to Girouard teaches the use of monosaturated fatty-acid manipulation for the treatment of obesity, WO04047855A2 to Meise teaches the manipulation of proteins involved in the regulation of energy homeostasis in obesity treatment. WO04052864A1 to Dow teaches the use of Pyrazole and Imadazole compounds to treat obesity, WO04055002A1 also to Elliott teaches the use of Carbazole derivatives and NPY-5 antagonists to treat obesity, WO04054981A1 to Hammond also teaches the use of NPY-5 antagonists such as Aminophenanthridine derivatives to treat obesity. WO04056314A2 to Quay again teaches mucosal-delivered Y2 receptor obesity therapies. WO04056775A1 and WO04056777A1 again both to Bertinato again teach the use of microsomal triglyceride transfer-protein inhibitor manipulation to treat obesity, WO04058988A2 to Han teaches the use of binding-agents which inhibit myostatin as an obesity therapy. WO04060268A2 to Eglington teaches the use of a drug-bearing skin patch to treat cellulite. WO04062685A2 to Bloom teaches the use of OXM drugs such as for inhibiting appetite. WO04063218A1 to Collier teaches a number of obesity therapies based on manipulation of obesity genes. Some clinics are known to administer substances such as vitamins or beta-carotenes to treat obesity. Guarente of MIT has recently demonstrated that the sirt1 gene can suppress fat cell growth. Kolonin has recently demonstrated (Nature Medicine, published on-line 9 May 2004) in obese mice that injection of a chimeric peptide selectively attacks blood vessels which feed the growth and maintenance of adipose cells. The attack thereby indirectly kills the adipose cells. Finally, it has also been suggested by Kondo et al (International Journal of Radiation Biology, 1988, vol 54, No. 3 pp 475-486) and (International Journal of Radiation Biology, 1988, vol 54, No. 6, pp 955-962), particularly for cavitating processes, that cavitation-induced chemical radicals can kill cells-however it is currently postulated based on Kondo's evidence that the main cell-damage comes from the shear-stresses and microjetting or microstreaming developed by cavitation.
We have not spoken much about existing surgeries such as stomach-stapling to inhibit food intake. Obviously these are radical and can be very invasive. WO04082763A1 to Aldrich reviews some of these and teaches a new means of interrupting the vagal nerve by ablation in order to suppress appetite. This ablation is done using a transesophageal probe so it is minimally invasive surgery. While our invention herein strives to avoid very-invasive procedures we believe that there will be cases where use of our invention may be combined with a preferably minimally-invasive technique such as using the Aldrich device.
It will be noted by those familiar with the invasive liposuction art that there are numerous nonultrasonic and ultrasonic-based invasive techniques in wide use. We have only mentioned one or two of these invasive approaches above as our inventive focus below is preferably on noninvasive obesity or fat-therapies or treatments which would logically replace or displace invasive techniques. The present inventors believe that a totally noninvasive approach is preferred—and that the second less-attractive but still useful preference is for a technique wherein adipocyte destruction is done noninvasively and the fat is subsequently removed via suction through minimally invasive very small incisions or punctures. The gold standard would be a totally noninvasive technique wherein fat destruction and fat/fat byproduct removal are both noninvasive as wherein externally applied ultrasound allows for damaged fat to be absorbed or otherwise processed by the body itself in controllable amounts with-out complications.
The present invention has three primary embodiments.
The first embodiment is a waveguide-based apparatus and method for applying ultrasound to a treatment-subject for the purpose of providing treatment or therapy for obesity, fat-deposits, cosmetic benefit or other bodily therapy tasks such as improved skin-properties or injury treatment. Several mechanisms by which the treatment achieves its benefit are taught and one or more of these mechanisms can be practiced using the invention.
The second embodiment is an entirely novel apparatus and method for providing at least one such treatment or therapy using a liquid-based waveguide.
The third embodiment is a wearable apparatus that incorporates a waveguide of the invention.
Any of the embodiments has application to hospital-use, clinical-use or home-use, for example, and the place of use will likely be determined by which treatment mechanism is employed and at what power-level. There are FDA and other regulatory requirements (power, intensity or temperature limitations as mentioned in the Miwa references) for such mechanisms which will be mentioned herein and are long-known to those skilled in the medical ultrasound product-development and regulatory approval areas.
Our above prior art discussion focused on known beneficial operative mechanisms in detail, while mentioning some of the specific prior art apparatus of relevancy. It is the aim of these inventive devices herein that they can be designed and operated to practice one (or possibly more) of the above mechanisms in the manners known to be of benefit from that art. So the first embodiment is an improved apparatus capable of practicing any or all of these mechanisms as well as future mechanisms for any such therapy or treatment. The second embodiment based on liquid-streamed waveguides, as mentioned, is in one variation, an entirely new apparatus and in the other also an improved apparatus. The third wearable embodiment is preferably utilized at-home or out-of a clinic and utilizes relatively low-power ultrasonic therapies not necessarily requiring regulatory approval.
a depicts a simple elongated waveguide or wave conduit guiding an energy type from left to right.
b depicts an apparatus employing an acoustic energy source delivering energy into an elongated waveguide and then rightward into a treatment subject without any additional focusing.
c depicts an apparatus employing an acoustic energy source delivering energy into an elongated waveguide and then rightward into a treatment subject with beam spreading.
d depicts an apparatus employing an acoustically edge-excited or end-excited vibrating plate-like. bar-like or membrane waveguide emitter.
e depicts an apparatus employing an acoustically surface-excited vibrating plate-like, bar-like or membrane waveguide emitter with one transducer.
f depicts an apparatus employing an acoustically surface-excited vibrating plate-like, bar-like or membrane waveguide emitter with multiple transducers.
a illustrates a bathtub or Jacuzzi® hot tub equipped with a multitransducer excited plate-like or membrane waveguide emitter.
b illustrates a bathtub or Jacuzzi® hot tub equipped with a multitransducer excited plate-like or membrane waveguide emitter as well as a handheld emitter.
a shows a therapy applicator of the apparatus delivering two shown continuous streams of liquid which act as acoustic waveguides for acoustical energy passing therethrough.
b shows an applicator of the apparatus delivering two shown droplet streams of liquid which act as their-own acoustic excitation means upon impact with the treatment subject due to the continuous conversion of droplet kinetic energy to pressure waves.
c shows a wearable therapy-delivery portion of the apparatus of the invention for strapping onto the thigh, for example.
For the invention herein we utilize the following definition of “waveguide”. Note carefully that our waveguide can have two very different generic forms:
Waveguide:
With regard to Form 1, it will be noted that the input and output locations, per this definition, need not be limited to one-each, limited to remote or separated locations, limited to point-locations, or even limited to being the same energy type. Even more importantly, the waveguide is not necessarily a passive energy conduit.
Let us begin with
Many types of energy can be guided by an appropriately designed waveguide 1. Acoustic energy is another wave-type energy which can be guided and microwave energy as used in radar or tissue-ablation/heating could possibly be another. Further, we have defined waveguides more broadly that conventional ones (like that of fiber-optic
Practitioners of the acoustic arts will be aware that acoustic waveguides, particularly of the passive point-to-point delivery type, are commonly employed. Frequently, for example, a metallic rod or wire is excited on one end and the acoustic energy delivered to the remote end of the waveguide by such guiding action. A good example of this is an ultrasonic wire-bonder bonding-tip used in microelectronic packaging wire-bonders wherein the bonding-wire is acoustically (thermomechanically) welded to a substrate using a tapered acoustic waveguide bonding-tool tip sometimes called a “horn” or capillary. The tip's taper acts to beneficially amplify the lateral microscopic scrubbing and welding vibrations. Note that for this example that the acoustic waves are primarily transverse to the long capillary axis yet they still propagate along the length axis. Another example would be the products of Omnisonics™ of Wilmington, Mass. Their acoustically excited wire-type waveguides are used for unblocking a patient's bodily vasculature as they are fed through such blocked vessels and the ultrasonic vibrations break up the blockages. Omnisonic's technology for such products is described in Patents Nos. WO04058131A2, WO04012599A1, WO02070158A1, WO00213678A2, US24176686A1, US24162571A1, US24158150A1, US24,171,981A1, US24031308A1, US24019266A1 and US23236539A1, for example. Note that Omnisonic's waveguides typically have a single energy input at an end but have several energy output positions at antinodes along the length of the excited catheter-like wire. So Omnisonics represents a case of a waveguide driven to operate such that transverse acoustic input energy passing along its length leaks out at a number of transversely vibrating antinodes into surrounding materials. The leaked energy is a combination of pressure waves and shearwaves. Thus in just these couple of examples we already see that acoustic waveguides can not only guide energy along their lengths but can also be used to deliver or distribute energy to their ends and/or sides in a controlled fashion. The basic waveguide of
So we see that the waveguide of
Being consistent with our definition of waveguide we include acoustic lenses which act to distribute (steer or direct) acoustic waves as well as acoustic matching-layers which act to enhance the passage of such waves. Finally, an acoustic mirror, reflector or refractor would also be an example of a waveguide as we define it as it redirects such waves. So, in summary, the reader should see that the “guide” aspect of waveguide means herein that the wave may beneficially be acted upon in one of several possible manners beyond simple passive propagation such that the modified, modulated or redirected propagating energy or waves can perform a useful function in a superior manner.
Moving now to
So the bathtub wall 8 whose outside surface 10 and inside (wet) surface 9 is shown passing the acoustical energy through its thickness, a thickness shown as being generally uniform as for an acoustic matching layer or an acoustic window, is simply a short intermediate path for the acoustical energy 5a. So in
Within the scope of the invention is performing additional waveguide (see definition) related functions to acoustic energy 5a before it gets to the patient 11. Although not shown in
It should be clear from
We note specifically that we have shown in
The ultrasound energy source 6 may take any form including all manner of piezoelectric, electromagnetic, electrostrictive, electrostatic, electroscopic, magnetic, magnetostrictive and photoacoustic transduction means. Pneumatic and hydraulic exciters 6 are also known to the art as are rotating or oscillating vibration mechanisms 6. In any case, in the
c is very similar to that of
Let us now move to
Moving now to
Moving now to
Moving now to
So membrane/transducers 1d/6c of
Moving now to
It will be noted that in the preferred arrangement of
Moving now to
Our waveguide conduit 1b′ is useful for electrically isolating applicator 14a. The waveguide plate 18 is useful to spread and distribute that energy across the entire face of the aperture or orifice plate 17. Per our previous teaching the waveguide plate or membrane 18 may be excited by a waveguide 1b/1b′ (shown) or by one or more coupled transducers in a manner allowing for one or more membrane modes to be excited.
As an example, waveguide plate 18 could be excited in a low or first drumhead mode or a simple piston-mode by the single centrally coupled incoming waveguide 1b/1b′ (shown). Alternatively, one or more waveguides or transducers could excite membrane 18 in one or more membrane modes depending on where the waveguides or transducers are mounted/coupled and how they are operated individually or together. Practitioners of ultrasound will note that it would be preferred not to have aperture plate 17 absorb a large amount of the incoming acoustical energy such that a reduced amount is able to progress along waveguide streams 20. Such practitioners will realize that one could take several measures to enhance energy-efficiency such as by combining aperture plate 17 and waveguide plate 18 into a single plate or by making a separate aperture plate 17 to be very stiff and/or have very loss losses. It is the employment of engineered waveguides of the type 1b′/1b and 18 that we consider novel in
We note a few further details in
Moving now to
We note in
It can be seen that a regularly spaced series of droplets (as shown) passing rightwards at velocity V meters/sec with a droplet packing density of N drops/meter will excite an acoustic wave at the point of impact having a frequency of VN droplets/second or VN hertz. So if one desired to excite a 150 kilohertz wave at the point of impact one could choose one of the following combinations if we assume, for simplicity, that droplets are spaced by gaps of one drop-diameter in size:
Note that for equal drop spacing and diameter the drop size scales proportionally to 1/(#drops/meter). The drop size does not necessarily have to scale with the spacing-this is just a simple example.
We also note that one may choose to deliver the droplets with the help of blown or forced air or gas. In that case one may choose to create the droplets, at least in part, using known aspiration nozzle techniques (optionally using our inventive membranes therein). Thus one could acoustically create droplets or utilize conventional nozzles to form the droplets. The invention is not tied to any particular way of droplet-creation however we prefer acoustical techniques since a high-quality stream can be created with excellent control. The embodiment of
It will be appreciated that the droplet impact energy is the droplet kinetic energy or (½)MV2 from basic physics and we can see from the earlier droplet spacing, velocity and size choices above that one can easily achieve a huge range of kinetic energy per droplet (by varying mass and velocity) and acoustic power (by further varying droplet lineal density).
We anticipate the possibility that the patient may desire to wear a protective layer such as a thin rubber or urethane coating to reduce the potential stinging effect of arriving droplets of very-high energy. The appropriate material, such as low-loss urethane, will not appreciably attenuate the acoustical energy. Such a coating could be in the form of a snug-fitting or elastic garment, perhaps disposable. One could also consider the use of a gel on the tissue to ameliorate impact sensation. By minimizing the throw-distance it is clear that one can deliver useful acoustical energy to the tissues with sufficiently high velocity and/or droplet size. Those familiar with droplet formation using ultrasound will also be aware that most techniques cannot easily produce droplets of diameter D spaced by gaps of dimension D. More typical is droplets of diameter D spaced by gaps of 2-5D and this is partly because of surface tension phenomenon and conservation of mass during stream-neckdown. Our
Droplets may be delivered as a continuous stream with a fixed frequency of arrival and constant droplet/droplet spacing or may be delivered as a packet or packets of closely associated droplets which are spaced further apart from each other. A constant stream of equally spaced droplets would act like a continuous wave or CW acoustic excitation at tissue 21a of
It will be recognized that for the apparatus of
Preferred frequencies of operation for the various apparatus of the invention are in the range of 1 hertz to 1.5 megahertz, more preferably in the range of 1 kilohertz to 600 kilohertz, and most preferably in the range of 25 kilohertz to 160 kilohertz. One may employ a fixed frequency, a variable frequency, multiple frequencies, a narrowband frequency range, a broadband frequency range, or a scanned frequency.
In the particular case of the droplet apparatus of
For the droplet apparatus of
The patient or treatment subject for any of the apparatus or methods may be entertained before, during or after an actual therapy or treatment delivery. Given that attractive feature we expressly include in the scope of the invention the apparatus incorporating, integrating or being used in cooperation with an entertainment device such as an audio or audio/video device, internet-surfing device or radio for example. W have already mentioned prior to this our inventive membrane(s) as being capable of also acting as audio speakers—even underwater.
Moving now to the final figure,
Acoustic waves 5d, can arise in several ways such as a) by passing from transducer 6d through the plate 1e and directly inwards, b) by passing from transducer 6d into plate 1e and then emanating from the plate, at least in-part, at a different location on the plate 1e, c) by acoustic leakage of in-plate waves that become laterally escaping waves. The reader will realize that transducer(s) 6d might be a pressure-mode or shear mode device for example. Preferably the transducer(s) 6d excite waves which travel in the plate waveguide 1e and are passed out or leaked out at several antinodes as per prior embodiments. Like the aforementioned Omnisonics products the waves within the plate may be standing waves having nodes and antinodes for example. Because of the skin-coupling to the thigh tissue 11a such in-waveguide waves will leak into the tissue as one or both of pressure waves and/or shear waves. Thus the waveguide plate in this example acts to distribute and homogenize the treatment around the circumference of the thigh 11a. One may choose to vary acoustic frequency for example such that a varying selection of antinodes are created and/or moved along the waveguide. The transducer(s) 6d might also be adjustable for position of coupling to the waveguide 1e so long as the needed good acoustic coupling between transducer 6d and waveguide 1e can be reestablished-such as by a gel contact between them. One may also permanently mount one or more transducers 6d to a waveguide 1e. Again we emphasize that we preferably are exciting the membrane or plate 1e into one or more of its vibrational modes using one or more transducers 6d such that most or all of the membrane 1e emits acoustical energy into the thigh 11a. This is very different than simply applying the bare transducers 6d directly to the thigh 11a (not shown) because our inventive membrane or plate 1e allows for many more modes of vibration and allows for distribution of acoustical energy away-from and between transducers of the type 6d. Thus our approach allows us to treat large areas with smaller transducers or fewer transducers and lighter weight. Membrane or plate 1e of
In
The reader will also recognize that the apparatus 23 might include heating or cooling means for maintaining a body temperature or for driving a supportive, co-delivered or cooperating thermally-based therapy process. One convenient way of heating would be to heat a metallic waveguide 1e itself or heat a filler liquid or gel in a membrane-underlying acoustic standoff or spacer (not shown). Cooling could be done as by passing a coolant in contact with the waveguide 1e or cooling the liquid or gel contents of an acoustic standoff or spacer situated between waveguide 1e and thigh 11a. As for previous inventive embodiments, one may also drive a drug or medicament into the patient as by an intervening skin-patch or by putting the drug in a standoff liquid or gel or an underlying skin-wetting gel coating and allowing it to leak or perfuse inwards or be driven thermally and/or acoustically inwards into tissue.
The present inventors anticipate numerous permutations of the apparatus of
An apparatus of
Another potential means of attaching, or at least acoustically coupling the apparatus to the treatment subject, is by having suction-means pull the waveguide 1e (and/or coupling means) onto the tissue 11a or by having an inflatable member or inflatable-standoff push the waveguide 1e onto the tissue 11a or push itself into acoustic contact with an overlying waveguide 1e and underlying tissue 11a. Another approach is to have a garment which stretches elastically and when it is worn over the apparatus it provides the inward juxtaposition forces.
The present inventors prefer the apparatus of
The present inventors have described some preferred waveguide materials such as titanium shells, strips, wire-braids, Nitinol™ sheets or braids and polycarbonate (polymeric) sheets, strips or braids. We have also referred to a liquid-filled or gel-filled waveguide. A liquid filled-waveguide could, for example, comprise a water-filled annulus or torus which fits snugly or is inflated around the target limb. The transducer or transduction means such as 6d could be coupled into such a liquid or gel type waveguide in any desired manner including by placing one or more transducers inside the liquid or gel itself.
For any waveguide of the invention including that of
Also included in the scope of the invention is the custom fabrication or fitting of an apparatus or any part thereof-such as a custom fitted waveguide or acoustic standoff. One could utilize laser-scanning devices on the patient's body to determine the needed shape. This is similar to custom ski-boot fitting.
We have cited references pertaining to drugs and diets useful for obesity-reduction and/or weight loss. It is our intention that our inventive apparatus and method may utilize one or more such drugs, medicaments or diets in cooperative association with our apparatus and method and as part of said inventive apparatus and method. Such drugs, medicaments or diets may be administered or undergone before, during or after at least one such therapy or treatment session. Our references included genetic-based and stem-cell based drugs and therapies which we consider drugs herein. Note that our apparatus is employable for maladies other than fat-reduction and obesity and we explicitly include in the scope drugs, medicaments and diets for those. An example would be ultrasonic therapy for burned skin which also utilizes a surface ointment or drug—whether or not it also undergoes acoustically-assisted skin-penetration.
For application as an energy-conduit or waveguide such as conduit 1a we described a sheathed or unsheathed wire or rod, perhaps made of titanium as is known to be suitable for Omnisonic's type referenced devices. The conduit may have a single wire within or several wires and multiple such wires may be spaced as by additional low-impedance acoustically-reflective material. We also include in the scope the use of a liquid-filled acoustic waveguide. Such a waveguide would have an acoustically reflective sheath such as a metal of high acoustic impedance or an air-filled material of low acoustic impedance. As far as we know such a liquid filled waveguide is also novel—particularly for an acoustic therapy apparatus of the invention.
We include in the scope of the invention the use of imaging machines to view the patient's body or targeted tissues before, during, or after delivery of at least one such therapy or treatment. Radiology practitioners will be aware of useful tools for this purpose such as X-ray machines, fluoroscopy machines, MRI machines, CATSCAN machines, PET machines, SPECT machines and ultrasound imaging machines for example. Coming in the next few years also are terahertz imaging machines and optical-coherence-tomography or OCT imaging apparatus. One may, particularly for the delivery of the higher acoustical power mechanisms such as cavitation or necrosing, desire to do real-time imaging. Thus we include in the scope of the invention the placement of an immersion container of the invention within such an imaging tool (or vice versa) with precautions being taken to assure that one does not, for example, put magnetic materials inside an MRI machine. The reader should again note that some treatments or therapies providable by the inventive apparatus may involve tissue-heating, tissue-cavitating or acoustic-streaming inducing acoustic irradiation. The streaming mechanisms are frequently used for drug delivery.
We further include in the scope of the invention the use of exercise apparatus before, during, or after delivery of at least one therapy or treatment of the invention. In fact one may incorporate an exercise apparatus within (or within reach) of an immersion container or applicator of the invention.
We have also described at least a couple of invasive and semi-invasive surgeries such as stomach-stapling and vagal-nerve ablation for difficult obesity cases and we include the use of such surgeries in combination with our described treatment or therapy as well.
Either or both of an immersion apparatus or an immersion or non-immersion applicator may be utilized in an actual bathtub, shower or Jacuzzi® for example. In such applications we include in the scope of the invention any ultrasonic-cleaning benefit that may be derived from having the therapeutic ultrasound present.
The present inventors are also interested in the application of the inventive apparatus and method in home-use treatment or therapy devices which do not necessarily involve a bathtub or Jacuzzi®. We broadly define immersion to mean that a body of liquid, gel or other flowable or formable acoustic couplant or coolant at least conforms-to or surrounds a body member to be treated. So, as an example, one could have a thigh-worn apparatus which includes a waveguide apparatus of the invention. Such a snap-on apparatus could employ a body-shaped or body-shapeable waveguide or could employ a conforming water or gel standoff with a nonconforming transducer or transducer/waveguide mounted thereupon. In all cases of our inventive apparatus and method we have at least one waveguide/membrane member. In the case of the thigh-mounted slimming apparatus one could have a formable metallic sheet-like waveguide of titanium excited by at least one back-mounted or edge-mounted transducer. The formable or wrappable waveguide may or may not be spaced from the thigh tissue with a water or gel standoff spacer to afford further comfort, size-adaptability or require less formability of the titanium sheet waveguide. One might sell or offer a variety of sizes of any one or more of excitation transducers, waveguide-sheets or plates, or water/gel standoffs or couplers. Any one or more of these may also be arranged to be disposable as could be a gel for coupling the apparatus to the tissue.
A compact thigh-mounted, abdomen or belly-mounted conforming waveguide apparatus could even allow for the patient or treatment subject to walk, run, swim, exercise or sleep during treatment. One might place the power supply for the transduction means in a backpack or waste-belt for example. Obviously, such apparatus could also be used on a bedridden person or a person simply lying in bed or on a couch. The person could be entertaining themselves while undergoing therapy as by watching television, reading, or listening or watching music and/or audio.
Included in the scope of the invention is the apparatus having some software to control it and/or enable its use on a particular person. For example, given a network or other wired-connection, one could have a remote computer or person authorize or review potential treatment subjects for safety, for suitability or for therapy progress. The user may operate the apparatus himself/herself perhaps with a remote authorization based on a recommended or authorized therapy, based on a credit statement or based on an online payment.
One may also choose to integrate the use of vital-sign(s) monitoring devices such as blood-pressure or heart-rate sensors and instruments to assure that the patient is in good condition given where he/she is in his/her therapy. It is known from our cited references that FFAs (free fatty acids) are known to increase upon successful instigation of adipocyte-destruction or degradation or upon the encouragement of natural lipolysis mechanisms (Miwa references). We fully expect the non-inivasive or minimally invasive ability to measure FFAs in the future and recommend such a sensor be used with the apparatus at least in cases wherein potentially dangerous quantities of FFAs or other adipocyte-destruction byproducts (adipocyte connective tissue, adipocyte-surrounding blood vessels) are to be absorbed by the body. It will be obvious that the inventive apparatus could utilize the data from one or more such sensors to modulate, enable, disable, interrupt or control a therapy-preferably in a closed-loop algorithm which does not require the patient to make any such safety or dose (if applicable) decisions.
The drugs and medicaments which we have referenced may alternatively be delivered by placing them in an inventive immersion liquid or within an acoustically excited (or not) liquid emanating from an inventive applicator. They may also be placed in a skin-patch or in a liquid or gel standoff from which they are driven into tissue by the therapy ultrasound or pass into tissue by thermal or simple concentration-gradient reasons. To do so we can provide a permeable or hole-pocketed gel or liquid container—or even an underlying skin-patch. Such a skin-patch may also function as our acoustic spacer or standoff and may come with medicaments already provided therein or thereon. We include in the scope the idea of operating such a transducer(s) in two separate modes simultaneously, sequentially or in an interleaved manner, one mode to deliver acoustic tissue-therapy and another mode to drive the drug inwards and/or activate the drug in-vivo or in-vitro. Thus the therapy ultrasound apparatus may also serve to activate or enable the work of the drug once it reaches its target depth. One mode may also suffice for both purposes.
Several techniques exist to utilize ultrasound, heat, electrical potential or other energies or fields to drive medicaments or drugs through tissue-such as through the skin from the skin-surface. U.S. Pat. No. 6,527,716 to Eppstein, US20020156414A1 to Redding and WO0002620 to Zhang provide a good set of references on this technology. We note that since we have ultrasound and heating/cooling capability available in many of our embodiments it would be a simple matter to utilize any of those energies, fields or gradients to urge a drug or medicament into the tissue-perhaps directly under our applicator head for example. Again, the drug might be provided as part of an acoustic coupler or standoff such that it leaks or leaches into the skin through a membrane making up the standoff. It might also be provided as a skin-patch or treated skin-area under our applicator or may alternatively be applied away from our applicator area as by an independent means taught in the above three prior art patents. Another possibility would be to have an immersed sonicated patient be immersed and exposed in water which has a drug or medicament mixed in with it such that by the combination of exposed immersion and immersed sonication the patient has the drug driven into or diffused into his/her skin and body by at least one of those exposures and/or sonications. We have also previously mentioned that even a handheld applicator or a strap-on treatment apparatus could deliver a drug in a similar manner. Note that it is the use of such drug-delivery techniques in combination with our apparatus that we claim and not just the subcase wherein, for example, an electroporation device, a drug-filled standoff device or a drug skin-patch is integrated directly in our own applicator.
We have cited several prior art mechanisms for the specific addressing of adipocytes. We note that the reported frequencies and acoustic power-levels naturally vary depending on whether one wishes to heat or cavitate or alternatively, stimulate lipolysis at very low acoustic power levels. The same applies to whether or not the ultrasound is pulsed or continuous wave for example. It will be seen that most of the adipocytes-depleting or destroying art cited describes frequencies of operation in the range of a few kilohertz to 200 kilohertz with one or two as high as 1.0-1.5 megahertz. The Miwa reference also teaches staying below known mechanical indexes indicative of cavitation and thermal indexes indicative of tissue necrosis if low power ultrasound is being used merely to stimulate natural lipolysis processes as opposed to cavitationally or thermally destroying adipocytes-related structures. Thus, depending on which of the referenced mechanisms one chooses to implement with our inventive apparatus, one may choose one or more of the following: a) an energy or energy-density above a cavitation or cavitation-index threshold, b) an energy or energy-density above a thermal-index or thermal-damage threshold, c) an energy or energy-density known to damage or disrupt any portion of an adipocyte's or surrounding connecting tissue or blood vessels, d) an energy or energy-density known to disrupt an adipocyte's membrane or an adipocyte's phospholipids layer or to cause the release or activation of a lipolysis related hormone or enzyme, e) an energy or energy-density at or below a regulatory limit set for diagnostic ultrasound, f) an energy or energy-density known to indirectly disrupt adipocytes via causing damage to their surrounding connective tissues and/or microscopic blood vessels, g) an energy or energy-density which requires cooling of a tissue surface in order to prevent the ultrasound energy from thermally damaging the tissue surface, h) an energy or energy-density which is utilized to support the movement of a supporting drug through the patients tissue or body or i) an energy or energy-density that promotes therapeutic tissue heating to accelerate lipolysis, metabolism or the action of a beneficial drug.
Any of the inventive apparatus may beneficially be operated using or having one of the following acting in supportive cooperation: a) a treatment timer, b) a timer which interrupts treatment upon completion, c) a treatment software or firmware program or algorithm, d) a treatment selected from an available selection of treatment programs or algorithms, e) an emergency-off button or switch, f) a safety interlock which recognizes a treatment subject's distress, g) a computer or internet network-connection over which at least some data, information or status passes or can pass, h) a disposable which is required to activate the apparatus—such as for filling a gel into a gel standoff, i) a password or patient-identifying piece of information being required for use, j) a treatment which is one of an authorized or purchased set of multiple treatments, k) a doctor's prescription for a cooperatively used drug or medicament or for a specific apparatus therapy, l) an anti-obesity surgery, m) an exercise program whose exercise activity takes place at any location and is not necessarily collocated (or fully integrated) and used while being treated by the apparatus, or an exercising means which may or may not power the treatment apparatus.
Any apparatus of the invention, particularly if it utilizes a liquid or flowable acoustic or thermal medium for any one or more of the taught purposes, may have such a liquid one or more of filtered, used once and disposed of, diluted, mixed, sanitized, treated for bacteria or fungi, recirculated or provided as a disposable. In any of these cases the liquid may be doped with a drug or medicament and said drug or medicament delivery means may be used together-with or cointegrated with the apparatus as part of the overall apparatus and method. A preferred disposable of the invention is a liquid or gel-filled standoff which is predoped with a drug or medicament to a needed concentration which aids the therapy process as the drug soaks into or is driven into the tissue through or across the standoff with or without the help of any heat or ultrasound presented by the apparatus.
As a final means of providing body-shape adaptability we note that one might utilize an acoustically transmissive material which is thermoformable by the heat of the body or by apparatus-generated heat. Such a material could, for example, be a thermoformable open-celled foam which becomes saturated with water for the required low attenuation
We include in the scope the treatment subject paying for his treatment or apparatus in any one or more of the following ways: a) a home-use unit is purchased or rented, b) a clinical visit is paid for, c) an internet-enabled payment system is used, and/or d) a prepaid credit-bearing card or memory-including dongle is used.
The use of cooling has been cited by the above prior art for purposes of crystallizing and killing the fat-contents of adipocytes. It is explained in reference US23220674A1 to Anderson, that the act of thermal crystallization itself is what destroys the fat molecules in the adipocytes. We herein extend the possible mechanisms of cooling approaches as follows. We believe that cooling, even before crystallization, hardens and stiffens the fat-contents as well as the adipocytes cell membranes. Given a vibrational excitation it follows that it would be easier to mechanically disrupt a stiffer less-deformable cell with such excitations. We therefore anticipate that cooling-induced stiffening makes cells more damage-prone to mechanical excitations. It should follow that mechanical agitation caused by phenomenon such as local cavitation or local acoustic compressive- or shear-waves would stand a better chance of causing physical damage to such stiffened entities. Thus we include in the scope of the invention the new damage mechanism of “damaging stiffened biological structures”. The mechanism should work regardless of whether such cooling-stiffening is cell-selective. We can assume from Anderson that at least the fat molecules will be selectively stiffened before they actually crystallize. A potential advantage of this technique is that one does not need to proceed down to crystallization temperatures but only down to a stiffening temperature. Included in the scope of the invention is the taking advantage of any existing stiffening selectivity among different biological entities as well as utilizing targeted ultrasound or vibrations to obtain a desired spatial selectivity. It will be recognized by the reader that this general mechanism might also be utilized to degrade or destroy diseased biological matter of any type.
We also note that it has recently been reported by the Washington University School of Medicine that it removed about 20 pounds of fat from each of 15 obese women and then tracked their heart-disease risk and insulin resistance over time. Contrary to the expectations of many, there was no improvement—only their appearance improved. What this result tends to say is that the fat which most hurts one's health is the deep-seated or visceral fat not usually addressed by superficial liposuction techniques. Given this finding we believe that our invention herein is capable of attacking deep-seated visceral fat with the same choice of mechanisms already listed. Liposuction techniques cannot address this deep fat.
The present application claims priority from provisional application Ser. No. 60/623,535, filed Oct. 28, 2004.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60623535 | Oct 2004 | US |