The present invention relates generally to medical sealing devices and methods for sealing a percutaneous puncture in a wall of a vessel in a patient. The invention relates particularly to a sealing device comprising at least one sealing element, which is adapted to be positioned against the vessel wall for sealing the puncture hole therein, and an elongated member extending in a tissue canal leading from the patient's skin to the puncture hole in the vessel wall, which elongated member comprises a haemostatic material.
Several different types of devices and systems for sealing an opening or puncture in the wall of a blood vessel, duct or other lumen of a living being are known. So is, for example, a sealing device comprising a closure means adapted to be positioned against an inner surface of a vessel wall disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,744,364. This sealing device comprises further a retraction means, which is attached to the closure means and extends in an incision canal leading from a patient's skin to the puncture hole in the vessel wall. The retraction means, which can be in the form of a filament, holds the closure means in engagement with an inner surface of the vessel wall to thereby seal the puncture hole.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,620,461 shows another sealing device comprising a sealing element adapted to be positioned at an inner surface of a vessel wall, a thread-like member attached to the sealing element, and an arresting element, which can move along the thread-like member into engagement with an outer surface of the vessel wall.
A common feature of the sealing devices disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,744,364 and 5,620,461, respectively, is that the actual sealing of a puncture hole in a vessel wall is accomplished from the inside of the vessel. Other sealing devices wherein the sealing mainly is accomplished from the inside of a vessel are disclosed in US patent 6,508,828 as well as in U.S. applications Ser. Nos. 09/836,529 and 10/280,086, which all are assigned to the present assignee.
In U.S. Pat. No. 5,282,827 a principally different solution is presented in that the sealing instead is performed at the outside of a vessel wall. Here, a sealing device comprises an anchor adapted to be positioned at an inner surface of a vessel wall, a compressed collagen plug, and a filament connecting the anchor and the collagen plug. In use, the collagen plug is expelled from a carrier and is moved into engagement with the outside of the vessel wall, while the filament is left in a tract leading to the puncture hole.
Other devices, such as the devices disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,342,393 and EP-474,752-B2, respectively, rely on the combination of an inner member and an outer member to seal a puncture hole in a vessel wall. In this case, the sealing is achieved by clamping together the inner and other members, with the vessel wall being disposed therebetween.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,325,789 proposes another method for sealing a puncture hole in a vessel wall. According to this invention, a charge of haemostatic material, which can include collagen, fibrin glue or thrombin, is placed in a tissue canal leading to the puncture hole in the vessel wall. In contrast to, for example, the device disclosed in the above-mentioned U.S. Pat. No. 5,282,827, the haemostatic material performs all the sealing, without the assistance of any anchoring member being positioned within the vessel.
The common object of the devices and methods according to the documents listed above is to prevent bleeding through a puncture hole in a wall of a blood vessel. No measures are, however, taken to prevent or reduce the bleeding that can appear in an incision canal leading to the puncture hole. Consequently, there is a need in the art for an improved device for sealing a puncture hole in the wall of a blood vessel, the puncture hole being the result of a percutaneous operation that has created an incision canal extending from the skin of a patient to the puncture hole.
An object of the present invention is to provide an improved device for sealing a puncture hole in a wall of a blood vessel, the improvement being that the device not only seals the puncture hole itself, such that the primary bleeding is stopped, but also prevents that a secondary bleeding appears in an incision canal leading from the skin of a patient to the puncture hole in the blood vessel wall.
Generally, a sealing device according to the present invention belongs to a class of closure devices wherein a sealing device comprises at least one sealing element adapted to be positioned against a wall of a vessel to seal a puncture hole therein, and an elongated member, which is attached to the sealing element and which, after the sealing element has been positioned against the vessel wall, extends in an incision canal leading to the puncture hole. According to the invention, the elongated member includes a haemostatic material that stops or at least minimizes bleeding that occurs in the incision canal itself.
In one embodiment of the invention, the elongated member is a suture or filament, which has been coated or otherwise provided with a haemostatic material. The haemostatic material can be in the form of a clotting agent, such a thrombin, which promotes blood clotting in the incision canal to thereby prevent so-called oozing in the incision canal.
A haemostatic material in the elongated member will also be valuable in those cases where the sealing device does not function properly, something that may happen when the sealing element has not been correctly positioned against a blood vessel wall, or when the sealing device malfunctions for some other reason, such that blood from the vessel leaks into the incision canal. Another object of the present invention is therefore to provide a sealing device for sealing a percutaneous puncture that has created an incision canal extending from a patient's skin, through tissue disposed between the skin and a vessel, and through a wall of the vessel, comprising at least one sealing element adapted to be positioned against the vessel wall to thereby seal the puncture hole therein, and an elongated member, which is connected to the sealing element and which is adapted to extend in the incision canal, the elongated member comprising a haemostatic material that promotes the sealing of the incision canal.
As stated above, the present invention provides an improved sealing device comprising at least one sealing element, which is adapted to be positioned against a wall of a blood vessel to stop bleeding through a puncture hole in the blood vessel, and an elongated member, which is connected to the sealing element and adapted to be positioned in a tissue canal going through a patient's skin, through tissue overlaying a vessel, and through a wall of the vessel. The basic configuration of such a sealing device can be similar to various sealing devices known in the art, as long as the sealing device comprises at least one sealing element and an elongated member adapted to extend in a tissue canal. Examples of different embodiments of the present sealing device will be given below in conjunction with
In
A third embodiment of a sealing device 21 according to the invention is illustrated in
For those types of sealing devices that include a second element which is adapted to be positioned at an outer surface of a vessel wall, it is conceivable that also this second element comprises a haemostatic material, which promotes sealing of the puncture hole in the vessel wall. This feature has explicitly been mentioned for the sealing element 22 of
Above, several different embodiments of those elements of a sealing device that seal a puncture hole in a vessel wall have been described in conjunction with
In
Another example of how an elongated member in the form of a multifilament can be provided with a haemostatic material is illustrated in
Instead of coating each filament of a multifilament with a haemostatic material, the whole multifilament can be coated with a layer of haemostatic material. An example of such an embodiment is shown in
Here it should be apparent that an elongated member according to the present invention can assume various shapes, and the haemostatic material can be incorporated in a number of ways. It is, for example, conceivable that an elongated member is impregnated or soaked with a suitable haemostatic material, or the haemostatic material can be contained in a separate elongated capsule that may constitute the core of the elongated member. Further, the elongated member can be provided as a flexible stem extending from an inner (or outer) seal, and the elongated member can be made from any materials, such as biodegradable materials, known in the art, as long as such materials can be provided with a haemostatic component.
The cross-sectional diameter of the elongated member, being a suture, filament, multifilament or a flexible stem, is small in comparison to the diameter of the inner (or outer) sealing element 2, 12, 14, 22, 24, 32, 34 taken in the plane perpendicular to the drawing papers. By small is herein meant less than 25% and preferably less than 10%. The sealing element may have a variety of physical geometrical shapes in the plane perpendicular to the plane of the illustrated drawings. They could e.g. have a circular, elliptical or rectangular shape. Herein is meant by “diameter” the longest distance across the sealing element.
One typical sealing element may have an elliptical shape with the axes 10 mm and 5 mm and a typical diameter of an elongated member may be in the range of 0,2-2 mm. If the elongated member is a suture it has a diameter of approximately 0,3 mm.
According to the present invention, an elongated member can be provided with a variety of different haemostatic materials and substances. Some of these materials and substances performs to the haemostasis by mechanically stop bleeding into an incision canal, i.e. these materials swell in contact with a body fluid such that an elongated member being provided with such a material occupies the available space within the incision canal and thereby prevents blood or other fluids from entering into the incision canal. Other haemostatic agents promote the clotting of the blood, while still other haemostatic agents cause vasoconstriction. Non-limiting examples of haemostatic agents that can be used in an elongated member according to the invention are: collagen, chitin and chitosan, thrombin, gelatine, oxidized regenerated cellulose, aprotinin, tranexamic acid, aminocaproic acid, desmopressin, vitamin K, factor VIIa, factor VIII, vasopressin, and conjugated oestrogen, or combinations thereof.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to specific embodiments, also shown in the appended drawings, it will be apparent for those skilled in the art that many variations and modifications can be done within the scope of the invention as described in the specification and defined with reference to the following claims. In particular, it can be noted that the present invention is applicable on other vessels than blood vessels, and that the invention is not limited to any special kind of haemostatic material, substance or agent.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0301976-7 | Jul 2003 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE04/00938 | 6/15/2004 | WO | 12/30/2005 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60484310 | Jul 2003 | US |