The present invention relates to ultrasonic devices, and more particularly to ultrasonic devices adapted to deliver heat energy to one or more targeted locations.
Ultrasonic energy may be used to deliver heat energy to a target by focusing the ultrasonic vibrations such that they arrive at the target in a concentrated manner. Such techniques may be useful for delivering ultrasound treatments to human or other animal tissue, particularly treatments intended to treat fatty tissues underlying the skin for cosmetic reasons. Systems for delivering ultrasonic energy to mammalian tissue in order to heat the tissue typically include an ultrasonic transducer, a control system for controlling the ultrasonic transducer, and a fluid chamber coupled to the ultrasonic transducer. The fluid chamber is adapted to focus the ultrasonic energy created by the transducer so that the energy is delivered to the mammalian tissue in the right location and with the desired level of concentration. The fluid inside of the fluid chamber may be in contact with a driving member of the ultrasonic transducer so that the ultrasonic energy is transmitted from the driving member into the fluid, which then passes the ultrasonic energy onto a contact membrane, or other structure that is in physical contact with the human or other mammal.
In the past, the transmission of ultrasonic energy through the fluid contained within the fluid chamber has been degraded by the presence of any air bubbles, or other gas bubbles. Such bubbles tend to interfere with the transmission of ultrasonic energy from the transducer to the target, decreasing the efficiency of the transfer and/or changing the focusing of the ultrasonic energy. In some cases, the interference of the bubbles may be so detrimental that the ultrasonic energy delivery system has to be replaced, leading to waste and increased costs.
Accordingly, the present invention overcomes and/or reduces the disadvantages of bubbles associated with ultrasonic heat energy delivery systems. According to one aspect, one or more bubble traps are provided that capture, maintain, and/or assist in keeping bubbles in one or more locations outside of the direct ultrasonic energy transmission path through the fluid, thereby reducing or eliminating any interference the bubbles would otherwise create with the transmission of ultrasonic energy through the fluid. In other aspects, an ultrasonic energy delivering wand is provided that includes a bubble trap for storing bubbles out of the direct transmission path of the ultrasonic energy, and/or for capturing bubbles that may temporarily be in the direct transmission path. In yet other embodiments, a method may be provided for delivering ultrasonic energy in a manner that reduces interference from any bubbles present in an ultrasonic fluid medium through which the ultrasonic energy passes. The methods, apparatus, and systems of the present invention can be applied to any energy transmission media, whether fluid or otherwise, in which bubbles may form.
According to a first embodiment, an ultrasonic module for transmitting ultrasonic energy from a transducer to a target is provided. The module includes a first end for receiving ultrasonic energy from an ultrasonic transducer, and a second end for delivering ultrasonic energy to a target, a fluid chamber, and a bubble trap. The fluid chamber is positioned between the first and second ends and is adapted to contain an ultrasonic fluid. The bubble trap is adapted to hold bubbles formed in the ultrasonic fluid in a location outside of a direct ultrasonic energy transmission path defined between the first and the second ends.
The module may further include a seat defined at the first end for positioning an ultrasonically vibrating member, and a barrier surrounding the seat that obstructs bubbles in the bubble trap from escaping out of the bubble trap and into the transmission path. The barrier may prevent bubbles in the bubble trap from escaping out of the bubble trap and into the transmission path when the module is tipped from a vertical orientation to a tipped orientation, wherein the vertical orientation is defined by the first and second ends being vertically aligned, and the tipped orientation is defined by the first and second ends not being vertically aligned. In some embodiments, the tipped orientation may include angular deviations as great as ninety degrees from the vertical orientation such that bubbles are retained in the trap for all angular deviations up to at least ninety degrees from the vertical orientation.
The module may be configured to capture bubbles positioned in the transmission path whenever the module is tipped such that the first and second ends are not vertically aligned. The bubble trap may be positioned closer to the first end than to the second end. The fluid chamber may include a first section and a second section, wherein the first section includes a first inner dimension and the second section includes a second inner dimension that is smaller than the first inner dimension. The bubble trap may be defined in the first section. A barrier may be defined adjacent a junction of the first and second sections wherein the barrier obstructs bubbles from escaping out of the bubble trap and into the transmission path.
In some embodiments, both a first barrier and a second barrier may be provided. The first barrier may be defined near the first end and adapted to obstruct bubbles in the bubble trap from escaping out of the bubble trap and into the transmission path, and the second barrier may be defined between the first barrier and the second end, wherein the second barrier is also adapted to obstruct bubbles in the bubble trap from escaping out of the bubble trap and into the transmission path. The first barrier may be adapted to obstruct bubbles when the first end is positioned higher than the second end, and the second barrier may be adapted to obstruct bubbles when the second end is positioned higher than the first end.
The module may include a releasable fastening system for releasably securing the module to an ultrasonic transducer such that the module may be discarded without discarding the ultrasonic transducer. The module may also be attached to the ultrasonic transducer by way of a plurality of apertures adapted to receive a plurality of fasteners having a length sufficient to extend into a plurality of corresponding apertures defined in the ultrasonic transducer such that, when the fasteners are inserted into the apertures and the corresponding apertures, the module is secured to the ultrasonic transducer.
According to another embodiment, a hand-held ultrasonic wand for delivering heat energy to human tissue using ultrasonic energy is provided. The wand includes an ultrasonic transducer, a fluid chamber, and a bubble trap. The ultrasonic transducer is adapted to convert electrical energy into ultrasonic energy. The fluid chamber is coupled to the ultrasonic transducer and adapted to contain an ultrasonic fluid through which the ultrasonic energy is transmitted. The bubble trap is defined within the fluid chamber and is adapted to hold bubbles formed in the ultrasonic fluid in a location outside of a direct ultrasonic energy transmission path defined between the ultrasonic transducer and the first and second ends.
The wand may include a first barrier defined in the fluid chamber near the ultrasonic transducer that is adapted to obstruct bubbles in the bubble trap from escaping out of the bubble trap and into the transmission path, as well as a second barrier defined in the fluid chamber and spaced away from the second barrier wherein the second barrier also is adapted to obstruct bubbles in the bubble trap from escaping out of the bubble trap and into the transmission path. The first barrier may be adapted to obstruct bubbles when the wand is positioned above the human tissue, and the second barrier may be adapted to obstruct bubbles when the wand is positioned below the human tissue.
The wand may also include a releasable fastening system for releasably securing the fluid chamber to the ultrasonic transducer such that the fluid chamber may be discarded without discarding the ultrasonic transducer. A seat may be defined in the fluid chamber for receiving a driver of the ultrasonic transducer, and a contact membrane may be positioned at an end of the fluid driver in a location where it is adapted to contact human skin when delivering ultrasonic energy to the human tissue. The bubble trap may hold bubbles therein when the wand is tilted up to at least as much as ninety degrees from a vertical orientation, wherein the vertical orientation is defined by vertical alignment of the seat with the contact membrane. The wand may further be adapted to hold bubbles therein when the wand is rotated three-hundred and sixty degrees around a vertical axis while being tilted up to at least as much as ninety degrees from the vertical axis.
The wand may also be adapted to capture bubbles positioned in the transmission path whenever the wand is tipped such that the seat and the contact membrane are not vertically aligned. The fluid chamber may include a first section and a second section, wherein the first section is positioned adjacent the ultrasonic transducer, and the second section is positioned away from the ultrasonic transducer. The bubble trap may be defined in the first section. The first section may include a first inner dimension and the second section may include a second inner dimension that is smaller than the first inner dimension. The ultrasonic transducer may include a driver portion having a non-planar surface in contact with the ultrasonic fluid, wherein the non-planar surface urges the bubbles toward the bubble trap whenever the bubbles push against the non-planar surface of the driver portion.
According to yet another embodiment, a method for delivering ultrasonic energy to a target in order to create heat at the target is provided. The method includes generating ultrasonic vibrations in a driver portion of an ultrasonic transducer; transmitting the ultrasonic vibrations of the driver portion through a transmission path of an ultrasonic fluid that is in contact with the driver portion; and capturing bubbles in a location outside of the transmission path such that the bubbles do not interfere with the transmission of the ultrasonic vibrations through the fluid toward the target.
The method may further include retaining bubbles in the location outside of the transmission path when the ultrasonic transducer is tilted as much as at least ninety degrees from a vertical orientation. In another embodiment, the method may also include retaining bubbles in the location outside of the transmission path when the ultrasonic transducer is tilted as much as at least ninety degrees from a first vertical orientation, wherein the first vertical orientation is defined with the transducer positioned above the fluid; and also retaining bubbles in the location outside of the transmission path when the ultrasonic transducer is tilted as much as at least ninety degrees from a second vertical orientation, wherein the second vertical orientation is defined with the fluid being positioned above the transducer.
The method may also include storing the fluid in a fluid chamber that may be released from the transducer to allow a different fluid chamber to be attached to the transducer. The method may alternatively include storing the fluid in a fluid chamber that is permanently affixed to the transducer.
In any of the foregoing embodiments of the module, wand, and/or method, the target may be human tissue and the fluid and/or fluid chamber may be adapted to focus the ultrasonic energy in order to generate heat within the human tissue. A contact membrane may also be added to the fluid chamber that is adapted to contact the patient's skin when delivering ultrasonic energy to the tissue. The ultrasonic fluid may be an acoustic gel.
Before the various embodiments of the invention are explained in detail below, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the details of operation or to the details of construction and the arrangement of the components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The invention may be implemented in various other embodiments and is capable of being practiced or being carried out in alternative ways not expressly disclosed herein. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein are for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. The use of “including” and “comprising” and variations thereof is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items and equivalents thereof. Further, enumeration may be used in the description of various embodiments. Unless otherwise expressly stated, the use of enumeration should not be construed as limiting the invention to any specific order or number of components. Nor should the use of enumeration be construed as excluding from the scope of the invention any additional steps or components that might be combined with or into the enumerated steps or components.
An ultrasonic delivery system 20 according to one embodiment is shown in
Controller 24 includes the electrical circuitry necessary for controlling wand 22 and delivering ultrasonic energy to target area 32. In some embodiments, controller 24 may be external to wand 22, such as is shown in
Transducer 26 is adapted to convert electrical energy into ultrasonic vibrations that may be focused and delivered to the target area 32. Transducer 26 may utilize any known or conventional techniques for converting electrical energy to ultrasonic energy. In one embodiment, transducer 26 may include piezoelectric material that physically changes shape when an electrical voltage is applied thereto. By applying an appropriately varying voltage to the piezoelectric material, the material may be driven to vibrate with ultrasonic frequency. The ultrasonic vibrations created by transducer 26 are delivered to module 28, which focuses the ultrasonic energy and delivers it to the target area 32.
Wand 22 is adapted to be used in any desired orientation. That is, wand 22 may direct ultrasonic energy to target area 32 when wand 22 is positioned above the target area 32 (as shown in
Fluid chamber 40 includes a first section 56 and a second section 58 (
Driver 46 may be made of piezoelectric material such that an appropriately varying voltage applied thereto causes it to vibrate at an ultrasonic frequency, or it may be made of another material that is caused to ultrasonically vibrate due to its physical contact with another vibrating structure within transducer 26. Regardless of the construction of transducer 26, when wand 22 is activated, the head portion of the transducer will cause driver 46 to vibrate at an ultrasonic frequency.
The vibration of driver portion 46 causes a corresponding vibration of an ultrasonic fluid that is contained within fluid chamber 40. The ultrasonic fluid may be any known or conventional fluid used for transmitting ultrasonic vibrations. The ultrasonic fluid may include fluids with high viscosity, as well as fluids with low viscosity, and also fluids exhibiting viscoelastic properties. In one embodiment, the fluid may be an ultrasonic gel. Some examples of fluids that may be used include water or glycerin, although it will be understood by those skilled in the art that other fluids may be used, and that this list of acceptable fluids is only a non-limiting list of examples. The term “fluid” and/or “ultrasonic fluid” as used herein will refer to not only liquids (which may have any range of viscosity), but also to any transmission media in which bubbles may form, including, but not limited to, colloids, emulsions, substances exhibiting mesophases, and other states of matter.
The ultrasonic vibrations created in the ultrasonic fluid travel away from driver portion 46, which is positioned at receiving end 48 of module 28, toward a contact membrane 52 that may be positioned at the extreme end of delivery end 50. Contact membrane 52 may be any conventional material that is adapted to contact the patient's skin and to transfer the ultrasonic vibrations to the target area within the patient. Examples of some suitable materials that may be used for contact membrane 52 include polycarbonate, polyetherimide or polypropylene, although it will be understood by those skilled in the art that other materials may also be used.
The transmission of ultrasonic energy from driver portion 46 to contact membrane 52 follows a direct transmission path 54 that is highlighted in
The ultrasonic waves created in the ultrasonic fluid initially pass through an interior region of first section 56 before continuing on through second section 58. While it is expected that the ultrasonic vibrations created by driver portion 46 will also travel outside of transmission path 54, transmission path 54 defines the direct transmission path between driver portion 46 and contact membrane 52. It is within this direct transmission path 54 that any bubbles are desirably removed. Bubbles positioned outside of this transmission path 54 will have minimal, if any, effect on the transmission of ultrasonic energy to target area 32.
As was noted, bubble trap 60 is defined generally in first section 56 of base 36. More specifically, bubble trap 60 is defined around the outside perimeter of transmission path 54 such that bubbles inside of bubble trap 60 do not cause any significant interference with the flow of ultrasonic energy down transmission path 54. While the precise shape of bubble trap 60 may vary from one embodiment to another, in the examples shown in
First and second barriers 62 and 64 serve to obstruct bubbles contained within trap 60 from migrating into transmission path 54. This obstruction is carried out by a combination of gravity and the shape of first and second barriers 62 and 64. In some situations, it is expected that wand 22 will be oriented such that transducer 26 will be positioned either wholly or partially above module 28 (such as shown in
Beginning with the orientation shown in
If the bubble impacts either exterior edge 68 of driver portion 46 or flat surface 70 of first barrier 62, the bubble may tend to stop and remain in that position provided two conditions are met. First, the wand 22 cannot be tilted, and second, there can be no fluid movement within fluid chamber 40. Because both of these conditions are unlikely to occur for any extended period of time (due to a person moving and/or tilting wand 22 during use), any bubbles positioned adjacent exterior edge 68 of driver portion 46 or flat surface 70 of first barrier 62 will eventually migrate in one direction or another toward bubble trap 60. Once the bubble has migrated past barrier 62, it will become trapped in trap 60. More specifically, once the bubble moves past barrier 62, the tendency of the bubble to move upwardly (i.e. opposite the force of gravity) will cause the bubble to move into contact with top surface 66 of trap 60.
Once a bubble is in the top portion of trap 60 (i.e. near top surface 66), it will be prevented from migrating out of the trap by either a side wall 72 of barrier 62 or an outer wall 74 of trap 60 (
When module 28 is rotated ninety degrees (clockwise with respect to
Thus, if module 28 is tipped or rotated in a clockwise fashion (with respect to
It should be further pointed out that, even in some situations where wand 22 is tipped more than ninety degrees in a clockwise fashion (with reference to
When module 28 is rotated in a clockwise direction (
To the extent the counterclockwise rotation of module 28 (as shown in
It will be understood by those skilled in the art that the precise shape of side wall 72 and outer wall 74 may be changed from that illustrated. For example, the shape of side wall 72 could be changed so that it was concavely shaped (as viewed in
It will further be understood by those skilled in the art that the shape of exterior edge 68 of driver portion 46 could be changed from the planar shape illustrated in
Barrier 64 will now be described with reference to FIGS. 2 and 4-6. As noted, barrier 64 operates in substantially the same manner as barrier 62. The primary difference is that barrier 64 prevents bubbles from escaping trap 60 when module 28 is delivering ultrasonic energy upwardly (e.g. FIGS. 2 and 4-6), while barrier 62 prevents bubbles from escaping trap 60 when module 28 is delivering ultrasonic energy downwardly (e.g.
It will be understood that the examples of tipping described herein are not the only types of tipping in which bubbles are retained within trap 60. That is, module 28 may be tipped in other orientations beyond the purely orthogonal directions shown in
As shown more clearly in
Cover 38 and base 36 of module 28 may be made from any suitable material. Examples of such suitable materials include polycarbonate, polyetherimide or polypropylene, although it will be understood by those skilled in the art that these examples are not limiting, and that other materials may be used. Cover 38 may be secured to base 36 in any suitable manner. This may involve ultrasonic welding, RF welding, the use of adhesives, or any other techniques that are suitable for creating a fluid-impermeable seal between base 36 and cover 38. In some embodiments, it may be suitable to replace base 36 and cover 38 with a one-piece unit that defines fluid chamber 40 and that includes a sealable aperture for injecting the interior with the ultrasonic fluid. Still other variations are possible.
Modified ultrasonic module 128 differs from module 28 in that it includes a modified second section 158 having a delivery end bubble trap 94 positioned adjacent contact membrane 52. The delivery end bubble trap 94 is designed to help remove bubbles from the ultrasonic transmission path 54 that form in, or migrate to, a close proximity of contact membrane 52. In the embodiment shown in
The space provided for bubbles by delivery end bubble trap 94 is better shown in
Ultrasonic module 228 includes a modified second section 258 having a delivery end bubble trap 294 positioned adjacent contact membrane 52. Delivery end bubble trap 294 differs from bubble trap 94 of module 128 in two primary ways. First, delivery end bubble trap 294 includes a curved wall 296 instead of an angled and generally straight sidewall 92. Second, delivery end bubble trap 294 extends circumferentially around the entire transmission path 54, as can best be seen in
It will be understood by those skilled in the art that bubble traps 94 and/or 294 can be used in still other embodiments where there are no additional bubble traps. That is, in some additional embodiments, module 128 or 228 can be modified so as to exclude bubble trap 60 and only rely on bubble traps 94 and/or 294. It will further be understood by those skilled in the art that the angled walls 92 of module 128 could be replaced with curved walls, such as curved walls 296 of module 228, or other types of curved walls. Similarly, the curved walls 296 of module 228 could be replaced with angled walls, such as angled walls 92 of module 128, or with other types of straight or angled walls. Finally, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the shape of bubble traps 92 and/or 294 can be varied in other manners from those shown in
Various other alterations and changes can be made to the foregoing embodiments without departing from the spirit and broader aspects of the invention as defined in the appended claims, which are to be interpreted in accordance with the principles of patent law including the doctrine of equivalents. This disclosure is presented for illustrative purposes and should not be interpreted as an exhaustive description of all embodiments of the invention or to limit the scope of the claims to the specific elements illustrated or described in connection with these embodiments. For example, and without limitation, any individual element(s) of the described invention may be replaced by alternative elements that provide substantially similar functionality or otherwise provide adequate operation. This includes, for example, presently known alternative elements, such as those that might be currently known to one skilled in the art, and alternative elements that may be developed in the future, such as those that one skilled in the art might, upon development, recognize as an alternative. Further, the disclosed embodiments include a plurality of features that are described in concert and that might cooperatively provide a collection of benefits. The present invention is not limited to only those embodiments that include all of these features or that provide all of the stated benefits, except to the extent otherwise expressly set forth in the issued claims. Any reference to claim elements in the singular, for example, using the articles “a,” “an,” “the” or “said,” is not to be construed as limiting the element to the singular. Still further, any references to “first” and “second,” or other numerical designations, should not be construed as excluding additional elements that may be added beyond those specifically identified by number.
This application claims priority to U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/657,316 filed Jun. 8, 2012 by Bradley J. Pippel and entitled Ultrasonic Head Trap, the complete disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61657316 | Jun 2012 | US |