AU606829C - Catheter and tissue-accessing method - Google Patents
Catheter and tissue-accessing methodInfo
- Publication number
- AU606829C AU606829C AU75143/87A AU7514387A AU606829C AU 606829 C AU606829 C AU 606829C AU 75143/87 A AU75143/87 A AU 75143/87A AU 7514387 A AU7514387 A AU 7514387A AU 606829 C AU606829 C AU 606829C
- Authority
- AU
- Australia
- Prior art keywords
- wire
- catheter
- distal
- segment
- along
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Ceased
Links
Description
CATHETER AND TISSUE-ACCESSING METHOD
1 . Field of the Invention The present invention relates to a catheter device for accessing a tissue target site via a small-lumen tortuous path within a target tissue.
2. Background of the Invention Catheters are being used increasingly as a means for delivering diagnostic or therapeutic agents to internal target sites that can be accessed through the circulatory system. For example, in angiography, catheters are designed to deliver a radio-opaque agent to a target site within a blood vessel, to allow radiographic viewing of the vessel and blood flow characteristics near the release site. For the treatment of localized disease, such as solid tumors, catheters allow a therapeutic agent to be delivered to the target site at a relatively high concentration, with minimum overall side effects. Methods for producing localized vasσ-occlusion in target tissue regions, by catheter injection of a vaso-occlusive agent, have also been described (co-owned U.S. patent application for "Hyperthermic Treatment of Tumors", Serial No. 751,605, filed July 2, 1985).
Often the target site which one wishes to access by catheter is buried within a soft tissue, such as brain or. liver, and can be reached only by a tortuous route through small vessels or ducts, —typically less than about 3 mm lumen diameter— in the. issue. The difficulty in ac-
cessing such regions is that the catheter must be quite flexible, in order to follow the tortuous path into the tissue, and at the same time, stiff enough to allow the distal end of the catheter to be manipulated from an external access site, which may be as much as a meter or more from the tissue site.
Heretofore, two general methods for accessing such tortuous-path regions have been devised. The first method employs a highly flexible catheter having an inflatable, but pre-punctured balloon at its distal end. In use, the balloon is partially inflated, and carried by blood flow into the target site. The balloon is continually inflated during placement to replenish fluid leaking from the bal¬ loon. A major limitation of this method is that the catheter will travel in the path of highest blood flow rate, so many target sites with low blood flow rates can¬ not be accessed.
In the second prior art method, a torqueable guide wire having a distal bend is guided, by alternately rotat- ing and advancing the wire, to the target site. With the wire in place, a thin-walled catheter is then advanced along the wire until the distal catheter end is positioned at the target site. Once the catheter is advanced, the guide wire may be withdrawn to allow fluid delivery through the catheter. An important advantage of this method is the ability to control the location of the catheter along a vascular pathway. However, prior art catheter/guide wire devices have limited ability to reach target sites along small-lumen tortuous paths, such as the within the vascular system leading to deep brain sites, making these sites largely inaccessible by prior art catheter devices.
Considering first the limitations of prior art guide wires-, these are typically formed of flexible, torqueable filament material, such as stainless steel, and have•
preferred diameters of between about 8-40 mils (thousandths of an inch) . The distal end of the wire may be provided with a bent tip which can be oriented, by means of guide structure at the proximal end, to guide the wire along a selected vascular path. Ideally, torque transmission should be controlled, such that a selected wire rotation at the wire's proximal end produces a cor¬ responding rotation of the distal end. Because of their greater flexibility, smaller diameter wires, e.g., having diameters of between about 8-18 mils, may be required for accessing small-vessel and/or tortuous-path regions. However, if the wire is too thin along its entire length, it may be difficult to transmit torque in a controlled manner along the entire wire length, and the wire may buckle, preventing withdrawal.
More recently, guide wires which have variable- thickness steps along the wire length have been proposed. Wires of this type have the advantage that the proximal end region, where greater torsional strength is required, have relatively large diameters, e.g., between about 20-40 mils, and the distal end region, where greater flexibility is required, have relatively small diameters. Typically, a wire of this type will have two or three different- diameter segments extending collectively over an ap- proximately 25-60 cm distal portion of the wire, and a short (typically, 1-3 cm) tapered transition zone across each step. The tapered zones are typically formed by centerless grinding in which the wire is placed between two counter-rotating grinding wheels whose confronting grinding surfaces are angled slightly to produce the desired taper over the width of the wheels.
Despite its advantage of combining high torque strength in the proximal region with good distal-region flexibility, the variable-step taper wire just described has several disadvantages. One of these is the tendency
of the wire to bend sharply in a step (transition) zone when a sharp turn in the vessel path is encountered, due to the differential bending modulus at the transition zone. If the catheter on the wire has already been advanced past the point of the bend, the catheter may deform at the wire bend, making further catheter advance along the wire difficult or impossible. If the wire is sharply bent at two spaced transition zones, it may be impossible to advance or withdraw the catheter over the wire. Further, torqueability in the wire is reduced at the region of a sharp bend, since torque tends to be transmitted through the angle of the bend, rather than along the axis of the wire.
Additionally, the transition zones in the discontinuous-taper wire are potential weak spots for torsional breaks, due to the high torsional differential across these zones. (The torsional force is related to the fourth power of the wire thickness). At best, torque transmission across the short, tapered step zones is in- efficient.
The problems of advancing a catheter along a guide wire in a small-lumen, tortuous tissue pathway are also due to limitations in prior art catheter construction. If the catheter is relatively rigid, it cannot track over the final distal portion of the wire in the tortuous path region, because catheter advancement buckles the wire in a narrow turn, or because catheter advancement pulls the wire out of the distal vessels. On the other hand, catheters having more flexible shafts, such as those used in balloon flow-directed devices, lack the column strength in .the catheter's proximal section to be advanced over the guide wire without buckling.
3. Summary of the Invention
It is therefore one general object of the invention to provide a catheter/guide wire device whose catheter and guide wire components are designed to overcome the above- discussed limitations in accessing tortuous path tissue sites.
A more specific object of the invention is to provide a catheter and catheter/guide wire device for accessing soft tissue target sites, such as deep brain sites, which have heretofore been inaccessible to catheters.
Still another object of the invention is to provide a method for delivery of an injectable fluid at a tissue site which can be accessed only by a tortuous vessel path, which may be defined by arteries, veins, or tissue ducts. The invention includes a catheter device designed for accessing a target site from a body access site along a vessel pathway which extends from an access site to the target tissue, and along a tortuous path at least about 10 cm long within the target tissue to the target site. The device includes, in one aspect, a flexible, torqueable wire having a length between about 50-300 cm from proximal to distal end, a maximum wire diameter of between about 8- 40 mils, and a region at least 10 cm in length having a continuously diminishing diameter on progressing toward the distal end of the wire.
The catheter in the device is designed to be threaded over the wire, with such placed within the vessel pathway. The catheter includes a relatively stiff proximal tube segment dimensioned to track the wire from the access site to the target tissue, and a relatively flexible distal tube segment constructed and' dimensioned to track the wire along the entire length of the tortuous path within the tissue, by means of an axially directed force applied to the distal segment through the proximal segment. Also in the preferred embodiment, the wire is provided with a
flexible coil extending along and encasing the tapered region of the wire, and the clearance between the coil- encased portion of the wire and the inner diameter of the catheter distal segment is between about 2-5. In a preferred embodiment, the guide wire is a flex¬ ible, torqueable wire having a length between about 50-300 cm from proximal to distal end, a maximum wire diameter of between about 8-40 mils, and a region at least 15 cm in length having a continuously diminishing diameter on progressing toward the distal end of the wire. Also in the preferred embodiment, the wire is provided with a flexible coil extending along and encasing at least a major portion of the tapered region of the wire, and the clearance between the coil-encased portion of the wire and the inner diameter of the catheter distal segment is between about 2-5.
The invention further encompasses the catheter and guide wire components of the invention. The catheter preferably has a coaxial tube construction in which the dista end portion of the proximal segment is formed of inner and outer coaxial tubes, one of which is relatively stiff and one of which is relatively flexible, and the distal segment is a distal extension of the relatively flexible tube. The relatively stiff tube may be formed of polypropylene or high-density polyethylene, and the relatively flexible tube, of low-density polyethylene or silicone.
The method of the invention is designed for accessing a target site from a body access site along a vessel pathway which extends from an access site to the target tissue, and along a tortuous path at least about 10 cm long within the target tissue to the target site. In practicing the method, a guide wire of the type defined above is threaded along the tortuous pathway in the target tissue*. After the wire is advanced, a catheter of the
type defined above is advanced along the wire. When the catheter has reached the target site, the wire is withdrawn, to allow delivery of fluid through the catheter to the target site. For example, the catheter may be used to produce localized vaso-occlusion at the target site, by injecting a collagen slurry into the site.
These and other objects and features of the invention will become more fully apparent when the following detailed description of the invention is read in conjunc- tion with the accompanying drawings.
Brief Description of the Drawings
Figure 1 shows a catheter divice constucted according to the present invention;
Figure 2 is an enlarged cross-sectional view taken along section line 2-2 in Figure 1;
Figure 3 is an enlarged side sectional view taken along line 3-3' in Figure 1; Figure 4 is an enlarged cross-sectional view taken along line 4-4 in Figure 1;
Figures 5-7 each shows, in exaggerated width dimen¬ sion, the continuously variable distal end region of a tapered wire constructed according to the invention, and whose taper is substantially linear (Figure.5), concave (Figure 6) and convex (Figure 7);
Figure 8 is an enlarged sectional view of an end region of a composite tapered guide wire constructed ac¬ cording to another embodiment -of the invention; Figure 9 illustrates a portion of a tortuous path in a soft tissue, and the method of guiding the catheter of the invention along this path;
Figure 10. is a sectional view of a region of the small-diameter vessel path shown in figure 9, illustrating how bends in the path can produce sharp bending in a
variable-step type guide wire, and buckling in a catheter which is threaded over the wire;
Figure 11 is an enlarged cross-sectional view taken generally along line 11-11 in Figure 10, showing distor- tion of the catheter at a wire bend;
Figure 12 is similar to Figure 10, but shows the bending which occurs in the continuously variable region of a guide wire constructed according to the present invention, and the condition of a catheter which is threaded over the wire; and
Figure 13 is an enlarged cross-sectional view taken generally along line 13-13 in Figure 12, showing distor¬ tion of the catheter at a wire bend.
Detailed Description of the Invention
I. Catheter Device
Figure 1 shows a catheter 10 device constructed ac¬ cording to a preferred embodiment of the invention. The device includes a catheter 12 which will be described particularly with respect to Figures 2-4 below, and a guide wire 14, whose constuction is detailed with respect to Figures 5-8. The device is designed for accessing a target site which can be reached only along a small-lumen tortuous vessel path within a target tissue, as will be discussed with reference to Figures 9-13.
A. Catheter
With reference-first to Figures.2-4, catheter 12 has a relatively stiff proximal segment 16- which makes up between about 70%-95% of the total tube length, and a relatively flexible distal segment 18 which makes up the remaining approximately 5%-30% of the tube length. With reference particularly to Figure 2, the proximal segment is composed of inner and outer coaxial tubes 20, 22 which
are tight-fitting with respect to each other. The stiff¬ ness in the proximal segment is provided predominantly by tube 20. The inner, stiffer tube is preferably polypropylene or high-density polyethylene tubing having a final wall thickness (in the assembled catheter) of between about 2-4 mils. The outer, more flexible tube is preferably low-density polyethylene or silicone tubing, also having a preferred wall thickness of between about 2- 4 mils. As defined herein, high- and low-density poly- ethylene have the usual trade meaning which is applied to the density grade of polyethylenes which are commonly used in extrusion.
It will be recognized that other tubing materials whose wall thickness can be adjusted to give comparable tubing flexibilities will be suitable, with the constraint that that the combined wall thickness of the two tubes should be less than about 10 mils, and that the number of tubing layers of constant or varying flexibility forming the segments, or portions thereof, can be varied to achieve desired flexibility properties in the tube. *_t is also recognized that since the outer tube makes a relatively minor contribution to the total stiffness of the proximal segment, the wall thickness of the outer tube will generally be less than about 5 mils. With reference to Figure 2, the inner diameter of the proximal segment is dimensioned, with respect to the guide wire, to provide sufficient wire clearance to allow the catheter to be moved easily over the wire in an axial direction, during catheter placement at the target site. The guide wire itself must have a relatively small diameter, to permit its guided movement along a tortuous path in a target tissue. The constrcution of the guide wire will be detailed below. It is noted here only that the guide wire may have a continuously varying taper along its distal end region, and that this tapered region (or
distal portion thereof) may be encased in a flexible coil which imparts a substantially constant outer diameter to the tapered region or portion of the wire.
The inner diameter of the catheter, particularly in its distal segment, is preferably between 2-5 mils larger than the guidewire for which the catheter is designed. Where the wire has a tapered distal region, the distal end of the catheter may itself be tapered to preserve this spacing within certain limits of axial movement of the wire within the catheter. Similarly, where the guide wire is untapered, or has a tapered portion which is covered by a substantially constant-diameter flexible coil (as shown in the figure) , the distal end segment of the catheter would have a substantially constant inner diameter. Thus, for example, a catheter designed for use with constant- diameter guide wire whose outer diameter is 18 mil guidewire has a preferred inner diameter of 20-25 mils, and more preferably 21-22 mils. The preferred 2-5 mil total clearance between the wire and inner wall of the segment reduces the tendency of the segment to buckle under compressional strain, since the wire provides column support against tube bending and crimping. Although the inner diameter of the stiffer proximal segment may also be 2-5 mils larger than the diameter of the guidewire, and thus provide column support in the distal segment, a larger diameter proximal segment would provide for greater fluid flow through the catheter, in delivering fluid to the target site. In this embodiment, the proximal and distal segments would meet at a step, which would prefer- ably be tapered to provide improved fluid flow.
The optimal length of the proximal segment will vary according to the distance between the tissue region which is to be accessed by the catheter and the external body site at which the catheter is introduced. For example, where the catheter is introduced at a femoral site, and
the target site is in the neck or head region, a relatively long proximal segment of up to 150 cm may be required. Catheters having substantially shorter lengths of about 50-70 cm would, or course, be suitable for ap- plications in which the target tissue can be reached directly from a nearby external access site, such as a brachial artery for a target site in the head and neck.
With reference now to Figure 3, it is seen that the proximal segment of the catheter is formed by a distal extension of tube 22 beyond the distal end of tube 20. As indicated above, the proximal segment is formed of relatively flexible tubing, such as low-density poly¬ ethylene or silicone, and has a preferred final thickness of between about 2-4 mils. The inner diameter of distal segment is preferably 2-5 mils, and more preferably 3-4 mils larger than the associated guide wire. As noted above, this clearance acts to prevent buckling in the seg¬ ment, by providing inner columnar support within the seg¬ ment. At the same time, at least about a 2-5 mil clear- ance is necessary to accommodate tube distortion which occurs on tracking over a bend in the wire. That is, the 2-5 mil clearance prevents the tube from pinching against the wire in the region of the bend. (The bent tube as¬ sumes an oval cross-sectional shape which draws the sides of the tube toward the wire in the plane of the bend.) A particular catheter embodiment which will be described herein is designed for use with an 18 mil guide wire with a tapered distal end encased in a uniform- diameter coil. The catheter is formed of a polypropylene inner tubing having a final wall thickness (in the finished catheter construction) of about 3 mils, and a low-density polyethylene outer tubing also having a final wall thickness also about 3 mils. The inner diameter of the catheter is between about 21-22 mils along its entire
length, and the proximal and distal segments have lengths of about 100 and 10 cm, respectively.
Completing the description of the catheter, the free end of the proximal segment is attached to a fitting 24, such a standard syringe fitting, for use in connecting a syringe to the catheter for fluid injection. At the distal end of the catheter, a radio-opaque band 25 (Figure 9), such as a gold or platinum band, serves as a marker for following the position of the catheter radiographi- cally.
The catheter can be formed by extruding an inner tub¬ ing of the appropriate material and wall thickness, ac¬ cording to conventional methods. The extruded tubing is then encased by conventional methods, such as heat shrink- ing, in an outer tubing which has a distal end portion which extends beyond the inner tube. The resulting catheter can be trimmed at one or both ends to produce the desired length proximal and distal segments. The catheter can also be formed by co-extrusion, according to known techniques. Here the two tubing materials are coextruded to form the proximal segment, with only the more flexible tubing material being extruded during the final (or initial) extrusion phase when the distal segment is being formed. In still another method, a relatively stiff tube suitable for the proximal segment of the catheter is placed tightly over a mandrel, and the mandrel and tube then coated, for example, by dipping or spraying with a polymer material, such as silicone which is suitable for forming the flexible distal segment. Alternatively, the catheter can be formed by methods in which the flexible distal tube is an extension of the inner, rather than outer, of the coaxial tubes forming the proximal segment.
In addition, it will be recognized that the coaxial arrangement of the catheter tubes, which provides a convenient way to link the relatively stiff tube in the
proximal segment to the relatively flexible tube in the distal segment, does not require that the two tubes overlap along the entire proximal segment. That is, the area of overlap needed to join the two segments could be a relatively short portion of the proximal segment.
Alternatively, if the materials forming the two catheter segments are heat or solvent fusable, the two segments can be joined end-to-end without tube overlapping.
Following tube construction, the proximal end of the coaxial tube is attached to fitting 24. Band 25 is at¬ tached by conventional methods to the end region of the distal segment.
The two-segment catheter construction can be modified, where desired, for accessing specific types of target areas. For example, to access a target site along a tortuous path which is as much as 25-30 cm in length, the catheter may advantageously include one or more inter¬ mediate segments having flexibilities which are intermedi¬ ate between those of the proximal and distal ends of the catheter. The purpose of the intermediate segment(s) is to provide greater column strength in the distal portion of the catheter which is moved along the tortuous path, but greater flexibility than is provided by the proximal segment of the catheter. In this embodiment, both the distal and intermediate segments are both between about 5- 15 cm long, and together comprise between about 10%-40% of the total catheter length. The catheter segments can be formed, by extension of the above constructional principles, of three, two, and one tubing layers, respectively. Since the intermediate segment is used in tracking the wire along its tortuous path, it is considered, for purposes of the present invention, as part of the distal segment. ■ That is, the distal segment can be thought of as including a proximal portion (the intermedi-
ate segment) and a distal portion (the most flexible end segment) .
In the embodiment above, variable flexibility was built into the portion of the catheter used in following the guide wire along a tortuous path. In another embodiment of a multi-segment catheter, the variable flex¬ ibility is in the proximal portion of the catheter used in reaching, but not entering the tortuous-path tissue site. This embodiment may be useful for example, where the distance between the external access site and the target tissue is so great that problems in tube buckling may be encountered in advancing the distal segment toward and into the target tissue. This embodiment too is preferably formed as a multi-layer construction, in which succes- sively more rigid tube segments are built up of succes¬ sively more layers.
In yet another embodiment, the flexibility along the catheter, or selected portions thereof is made continuously variable- rather than step-wise variable as above. As an example, the distal segment may be continuously more flexible on proceeding toward the free end of the segment. This feature would be advantageous in a relatively long distal segment, especially where the greatest amount of flexibility is required deep within a target tissue.
B. Guide Wire
Wire 14 is used for guiding the thin-wall catheter to the target site via a tissue vasculature or duct, and more specifically via a small-diameter tortuous vessel path at ieast about 20 cm.in length, and typically 20-40 cm. The guide wire is a flexible torqueable guide wire having a total length between about 50-300 cm, and a maximum diameter of the wire between about 8-40 mils (thousandths of an inch). According to.an important feature of the-
invention, the wire includes a region 26 of continuously diminishing diameter or taper, and which has a total length of at least about 20 cm and up to 50 cm or more, for movement through the small-diameter vessel path. The tapered region is typically located at the distal end region of the wire, as illustrated in Figure 1, but may also be flanked at either end by constant-diameter seg¬ ments of the wire.
Figure 5 shows an expanded view of the tapered end region of the guide wire, and an associated end-region wire coil 32. As seen, the tapered region contains a continuous and linearly diminishing diameter extending from an upstream region indicated by arrow 28 and the distal tip of the wire. The portion proximal to region 26 is typically between about 50-150 cm long and terminates, at the proximal end of the wire, in a knob or removable handle 30 (Figure 1) which can be used" to torque the wire manually to guide the wire to the tissue site, as will be considered below. As indicated, the wire has a maximum diameter, upstream of the taper, of between about 8-40 mils, and typically between about 8-16 mils, and tapers to a minimum diameter typically between about 1-5 mils, and preferably between about 1-10 mils, at the distal tip. The total reduction in diameter, over the length of the tapered region, is typically between about 5-25 mils. It will be appreciated that the scale of the drawing greatly exagger¬ ates changes in the wire thickness.
Coil 32 is a soft, flexible coil which can be formed conventionally, e.g., as a winding of thin platinum wire. The coil is typically about 1-20 cm in length and prefer¬ ably encases at least the distal half of the tapered region in the wire, terminating adjacent the end of the wire itself. The coil may have a fixed-dimension inner diameter, as shown, or a tapered diameter in the guide
wire. Attachment of the coil to the wire is preferably by three solder or weld joints, including a proximal joint 33a, a rounded distal joint 33b, and an intermediate joint 33c which is preferably about 1-3 cm from the distal end of the wire and coil. The intermediate joint serves to transmit torque in the wire to the coil, to cause the end region of the coil (and wire) to bend slightly at the solder joint, to allow the wire to be guided in a selected direction in a vessel network, by torquing the proximal end of the wire.
In addition to providing a mechanism for wire bending near the wire tip, the coil also gives the covered region of the wire increased column strength (in the axial direc¬ tion) , and reduces the chance of irreversible bending in the tip of the wire. At the same time, the combined flex¬ ibility of the wire and coil is compatible with a series of sharp bends, as the wire is moved through a tortuous tissue pathway. The rounded joint at the end of the wire acts to shield vessel walls from the sharp end of the wire.
Figure 6 shows the tapered distal end region 34 of a guide wire 35 constructed according to another embodiment of the invention. The continuously diminishing diameter region is characterized by a taper which,is slightly convex with respect to a linear taper (shown in dotted lines in the figure) . This embodiment provides greater flexibility, but less strength and torque in the proximal portion of the tapered region than does the linear-taper wire of Figure 5. Although not shown, the wire may be equipped with a fixed-diameter or tapered flexible coil, such as coil 32 described with respect to Figure 5.
Figure 4 shows the tapered distal end region 36 of a guide wire 37 constructed according to another embodiment of the invention. The continuously diminishing diameter region is characterized' by a taper which s- somewhat
concave with respect with the linear taper (also indicated here by dotted lines). This embodiment provides greater strength and torqueability, but less flexibility in the proximal portion of the tapered region than the linear- taper wire of Figure 5. As above, this wire may be equipped with a flexible coil.
Additional types of non-linear tapers are also contemplated by the invention. For example, the continuously tapered region of the wire may include both convex and concave tapers, typically in a configuration in which the proximal portion of the tapered region has a convex taper, and the remaining distal portion, concave taper. The concave tapered portion may be covered by a flexible coil for added column strength and resistance to irreversible bending.
The guide wire may be formed from flexible metal wire having a length typically between about 50-300 cm and a selected diameter between about 8-40 mils. Stainless steel wire of this type are commercially available, such as from Wytech and National Standard.
The tapered region of the metal wire may be formed by wire grinding, drawing, or etching techniques. Wire grinding is preferably carried out using a conventional grinding apparatus in which a rotating workpiece (the wire) is moved axially on a shiftable carriage past a grinding wheel, with the radial distance between the edge of the grinding wheel and the center of the wire axis be¬ ing continuously varied (reduced) as the workpiece is advanced axially, to produce a continuously variable depth of cut. The mechanism used to vary the radial distance between the wire and grinding wheel may be a mechanical cam device which operatively couples the motion of the carriage to the frame of the grinding machine on which the grinding wheel.is mounted. Alternatively, the mechanism may be an- electronicallv controlled device whose movement
toward and away from the grinding wheel is determined by the axial position of the workpiece. The grinding ap¬ paratus is modified for use in fine-wire grinding as fol¬ lows: The machine has a small-diameter chuck for holding the wire for rotation and axial movement, and includes structure to stabilize the rotating wire.
The advantages of the grinding method are accurate control over the depth of cut along the wire, and the ability to produce the continuous taper at any region along the length of the wire.
Etching techniques for etching stainless steel substrates are known. In forming the guide wire of the invention, the region or regions to be tapered are submerged in an chemical etching bath. The wire is gradually withdrawn from the bath at a rate which exposes submerged portions of the wire to greater etching and therefore greater reduction in wire diameter. The rate of wire removal can be adjusted to produce linear, concave, or convex tapers. The etching method has the advantage, that many wires can be processed in single batch. Also, complex machining and or wire processing devices are avoided.
Wire drawing, in which a heated wire is drawn under tension to a desired diameter, can also be used to produce long regions of continuous taper in the wire. In this method, the selected region of wire is heated, for example within a firing oven, and drawn out at a preselected ten¬ sion when a selected wire temperature is reached. By careful monitoring of wire temperature and temperature uniformity in the heated wire region, and rate of wire drawing, accurate continuous taper can be produced.
Other wire materials which have suitable flexibility and. torqueability may also be used in forming the tapered guide wire. Studies by the invent rs indicate that small- diameter glass wires (rods or tubes) have flexibility and
torqueability properties which are suitable for guide wire use, at wire diameters of between about 8-40 mils. In fact, fiberglass wires have the advantage of good torque transmission, even when the wire is extensively looped or bent.
Extended regions of continuous taper in a fiberglass wire can be produced by drawing techniques, such as those described above for metal wires. The tapered wire may be covered with a polymer sheath or the like to increase bending strength and to reduce the hazard of broken wire ends in a tissue accessing application.
Figure 8 shows a tapered composite wire 38 formed according to another embodiment of the invention. The wire is constructed by laying down an bundle of long parallel fibers, such as carbon fibers 39, in a small- diameter array. The bundle is then infused with a suit¬ able resin, such as epoxy, to form the composite wire. The infusion may be carried out in a small-diameter wire mold. In this method the fibers in the fiber bundle in the tapered region of the wire terminate at various points along the length of the region, giving progressively fewer fibers on progressing toward the smaller diameter end of the taper, as indicated in Figure 8. Alternatively, a constant diameter rod with a uniform bundle of fibers may be machined, as described above, to form the continuously diminishing region of the wire.
II. Operation
The method of inserting the catheter into a tissue region which is reached by a tortuous path will be described now with reference to Figure 9. The figure shows a region of soft tissue 40, such as brain tissue, containing a target site 42 which is to be accessed by the catheter. Initially, the guide wire, such as wire 14, is fed from a vascular access region adjacent the target tis-
sue into a tissue-supply vessel 44 which extends into the tissue. In the present example, the tortuous path to the target site involves vessel 44, a vessel 46 which branches off vessel 44 at more than a right angle, and branch ves- sel 48 and 50, which each branch off the preceeding vessel as shown. The path shown involves (a) a number of bends, some of which may be 90 degrees or more, (b) small ves¬ sels, typically with lumen diameters of less than about 3 mm, and (c) a total path length within the target tissue of at least about 5 cm, typically between about 10-15 cm, and as much as 25 cm.
A path having these characteristics is defined herein as a tortuous path, and is also characterized as being accessible by a guidewire 18 mil or smaller of the type described above, but being too delicate and/or tortu¬ ous for accessing by a significantly larger-diameter guidewire.
In operation, the catheter device is threaded as a unit from an external access site throug the vasculature to a region adjacent, but not into the tortuous, path region of the target tissue. This is done, in the usual case where the catheter must pass through the cardiac aorta, by first placing a relatively large diameter guid¬ ing catheter (e.g., about 40 mils inner diameter) from the access site through the aorta and toward the target site. The present catheter and guidewire are then threaded through the guiding catheter past the aorta, where large- vessel diameters and high blood flow volumes make it dif¬ ficult or impossible to control the movement and position of the catheter. Once beyond the guiding catheter, the present catheter and guide wire can be advanced as a unit toward the target site. In general, the path from the access site to the region adjacent the tissue is easily accessible, in that sharp bends, small-lumen vessels, and or soft tissue- structure are not encountered.
Typically, when the tortuous path tissue region is reached, and particularly where sharp bends in the path are encountered, the wire is advanced ahead of the catheter. This is done by advancing the wire axially within the catheter and at the same time torquing the wire to orient the bent tip of the wire in the direction of desired wire movement. After the wire has been so advanced, the catheter is then advanced over the wire until the catheter end is close to the wire end and this procedure is repeated until the wire and catheter have been fully advanced through the small-diameter tissue ves¬ sel region to the target tissue site. Alternatively, the wire and catheter can be advanced as a unit through the small-vessel region. However, this approach allows less maneuverability since the flexibility of the wire is reduced when it is ensheathed by the catheter, and is therefore likely to be used only in advancing the wire and catheter along sections of the path which do not contain sharp bends. Several features of catheter device contribute to the ability to guide the catheter to reach soft tissue sites which have heretofore been inaccessible because of the small diameters and sharp bends in the vessel pathways leading to the site. The advantages inherent in the novel guide wire construction can be appreciated with reference to Figures 10-13, which are enlarged views of the tissue region indicated by dash-dot line in Figure 9. Figure 10 illustrates wire and catheter deformations which can occur when a catheter device having a variable-step guide wire 58 of the type known in the prior art and a catheter 60 is guided through a small-diameter tortuous path tissue region. The portion of the wire shown here has two variable-step regions— a first region 60, and a second region 61. The truncation in vessel 46 indicates that the
two tapered regions may in fact be separated by a relatively long segment of constant-diameter wire.
As seen in the figure, when a sharp bend in the path occurs at the distal end of a taper, the wire tends to 5 bend most sharply at the distal end of the taper, where the wire assumes a smaller, constant-diameter thickness. If the bend in the wire at this taper interface is suf¬ ficiently sharp, as tends to occur at a sharp bend in the vessel path, the thin-wall catheter may buckle, as shown
10 in the figure. It can be appreciated with reference to Figures 10 and 11 that sharp catheter bending deforms the cross section of the catheter (indicated at 50) in a way that substantially limits sliding movement of wire within the catheter. This is especially true for wire movement
15 in a downstream direction, because of the increased diameter of the wire at the taper (seen head on in Figure 11) . In addition, the sharp turn in the wire decreases torque efficiency, and increases the risk that the wire will break on torquing, especially because of the torquing
20 strain which tends to occur at the distal end of each taper region.
The problem of catheter buckling is further compounded if two variable-step regions of the guide wire coincide with two sharp turns in the vessel path, as il-
25 lustrated in Figure 10. Here catheter buckling at two spaced location makes sliding movement within the catheter virtually impossible, either in a downstream or upstream direction. This situation will occur whenever the spacing between two turns in a tortuous tissue path coincides with
30 the distance between two step regions in the guide wire, and is frequently encountered in catheter placement operations involving small-vessel regions. When the problem does occur, the radiologist performing the catheter procedure must either attempt to advance the wire
"35 and catheter as a unit toward the selected tissue site, or
withdraw the wire and catheter and attempt to place the catheter with a guide wire having a different step-region spacing.
Figure 12 shows a catheter placement operation through the same tissue region, using catheter device 12
<? having a continuously variable guide wire 14. Since the wire does not contain transitions zones with appreciable changes in bending modulus, the sharp angle bending which can occur in the transitions zones of variable-step wires seen in Figure 10 are avoided. That is, the sharpest angles which are permitted in the present guide wire are substantially the same as are permitted in the constant- diameter regions of a variable-step wire. Accordingly, the cross-sectional distortion in the catheter and the tendency to buckle are significantly reduced, as indicated in Figures 12 and 13. Furthermore, even where the catheter does become somewhat pinched (elliptical) in a bend region, the change in wire diameter is only very slight in moving upstream, allowing the wire to be advanced readily through the wire in a catheter-placement operation. It will be appreciated that the above considerations relating to wire bending would also apply if the distal end portion of the tapered region is covered by a flexible coil such as coil 32. Figure 12 also shows a taper in the flexible distal end segment 18 of catheter 12.
Torque transmission in the continuously tapered wire is also enhanced, both because sharp bends in the wire and torque losses across variable-step tape zone zones are minimized. This allows better maneuverability of the wire and also reduces the risk of the wire breaking at a sharp- turn transition zone.
In addition to the above advantages provided by the guide wire, three features inherent in the catheter contribute to the ability to advance the catheter along
the guide wire in a small-diameter tortuous pathway. The first is the flexibility of the distal segment, which al¬ lows the catheter to follow or track the bend without a significant increase in the force required to advance the catheter. That is, the flexible distal segment catheter is able to move relatively freely over the bend in the wire in the direction of catheter advance. The second feature is the relatively short length (e.g., 5-15 cm) of the flexible distal segment, and more particularly, the distance along the distal segment from the end of the proximal segment to the bend in the guidewire. The shorter length means greater column strength (strength in resisting axial stress), with reduced tendency to buckle. As described above, with significantly longer path lengths, the distal segment may include one or more distal portions of intermediate stiffness to provide greater column strength in the catheter along its distal end region. The third feature is the small clearance between the guide wire and inner wall of the distal segment, which acts to provide columnar support for the catheter segment, as indicated above. As noted above, the 2-5 mil clearance is sufficient to accommodate the distortion in the distal segment which occurs at bends in the guide wire, without causing appreciable frictional contact between the tube and guidewire, as the tube tracks over the bend. Buckling in the relatively long proximal segment is prevented by the stiffness in the segment combined with the column sup¬ port provided by the guide wire.
After the catheter has been moved to the target site, the guide wire is withdrawn to allow a fluid material to be injected into the site. The injected material may include: (1) radio-opaque agents, for viewing blood vessel anatomy and blood flow characteristics in the target region, (2) vaso-occlusive agents, such as a suspension of collagen fibers, which can be used to produce small.-artery
vaso-occlusion in the tissue region region supplied by the target vessel; and (3) pharmacological agents, such as anti-tumor drugs, which are effective against identified disease states at the target site. From the foregoing, it can be appreciated how various objects and features of the invention are met. The novel catheter device includes a guide wire whose tapered distal end allows for good manueverability and torque transmis¬ sion in a small-diameter tortuous pathway, without sharp wire bending. Accordingly, problems of catheter buckling and inability to advance or withdraw the wire through the catheter are minimized. The catheter construction described herein allows for tracking along a tortuous path over a guide wire without buckling by virtue of (1) the relatively flexible distal portion which tracks over the wire along the tortuous path, (2) the relatively stiff proximal portion which extends over a major portion of the catheter length, and (3) the guidewire clearance within the catheter which provides column support, particularly within the distal segment,, while still accommodating distortion in the segment in the region of bending.
It is now possible, with this combination of advantages, to access target sites along small-diameter tortuous pathways in soft tissue, such as deep brain sites, which have heretofore been inaccessible to catheters. This allows for the delivery of diagnostic, therapeutic or vaso-occlusive agents to deep tissue sites, without need for invasive surgery, and with more precise tissue target. The catheter and guide wire components of the catheter device are both readily constructed by the various methods described above.
While preferred embodiments of the invention have been described herein, it will be recognized that a
variety of changes and modifications can be made without departing from the invention.
Claims (20)
1. A catheter device designed for accessing a target site from a body access site along a vessel pathway which extends from an access site to the target tissue, and along a tortuous path at least about 10 cm long within the target tissue to the target site, comprising a flexible, torqueable wire having a length between about 50-300 cm from proximal to distal end, a maximum wire diameter of between about 8-40 mils, and a region at least 10 cm in length having a continuously diminishing diameter on progressing toward the distal end of the wire; and a catheter designed to be threaded over the wire, with such placed within the vascular pathway.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein the catheter includes a relatively stiff proximal tube segment dimensioned to track the wire from the access site to the target tissue, and a relatively flexible distal tube seg¬ ment constructed and dimensioned to track the wire along the entire length of the tortuous path within the tissue, by means of an axially directed force applied to the distal segment through the proximal segment.
3. The device of claim 2, wherein the wire includes a flexible coil extending along and encasing the tapered region of the wire, and the clearance between the coil- encased portion of the wire and the inner diameter of the catheter distal segment is between about 2-5 mils.
4. A catheter device designed for accessing a target site from a body access site along a vascular pathway which extends from an access site to the target tissue, and along a tortuous path at least about 10 cm long within the target tissue to the target site, comprising a guide wire adapted to be guided from the body ac¬ cess site to the target site within the target tissue, and catheter having a relatively stiff proximal tube seg¬ ment dimensioned to track the wire from the access site to the target tissue, and a relatively flexible distal tube segment constructed and dimensioned to track the wire along the entire length of the tortuous path within the tissue, by means of an axially directed force applied to the distal segment through the proximal segment.
5. The device of claim 4, wherein the guide wire is a flexible, torqueable wire having a length between about 50-300 cm from proximal to distal end, a maximum wire diameter of between about 8-40 mils, and a region at least 10 cm in length having a continuously diminishing diameter on progressing toward the distal end of the wire.
6. The device of cla*im 5, wherein the wire includes a flexible coil extending along and encasing the tapered region of the wire, and the clearance between the coil- encased portion of the wire and the inner diameter of the catheter distal segment is between about 2-5 mils.
7. A catheter for use with a guide wire which can be guided from an external body access site to an internal tissue, and into the tissue along a tortuous path of at least about 10 cm through vessels of less than about 3 mm lumen inner diameter, said catheter comprising a relatively stiff proximal tube segment dimensioned to track the wire from the access site to a region adjacent the internal tissue, and a relatively flexible distal tube segment constructed and dimensioned to track the wire along the .entire length of the tortuous path within the internal tissue, by means of an axially directed force applied to the distal segment through the proximal segment.
8. The catheter of claim 7, wherein the distal seg¬ ment has an inner diameter which provides a clearance of between about 2-5 mils with the guide wire.
9. The catheter of claim 7, wherein the distal end portion of the proximal segment is formed of inner and outer coaxial tubes, one of which is relatively stiff and one of which is relatively flexible, and the distal seg¬ ment is a distal extension of the relatively flexible tube.
10. The catheter of claim 7, wherein the relatively stiff tube is formed of polypropylene or high-density polyethylene, and the relatively flexible tube is formed of low-density polyethylene or silicone.
11. The catheter of claim 7, wherein the distal tube segment has a thickness of between about 2-4 mils.
12. The catheter of claim 7, wherein for use in ac- cessing a site within the brain, wherein the proximal seg¬ ment has a total length of between about 60-150 cm, and the distal segment has a total length of between about 10- 15 cm.
13. A catheter guide wire designed for accessing a target site from a body access site along a vascular pathway which extends from an access site to the target tissue, and along a tortuous path at least about 10 cm •long within the target tissue to the target site, compris- ing a flexible, torqueable wire, having a length between about 50-300 cm from proximal to distal end, a maximum wire diameter of between about 8-40 mils, and a region at least 10 cm in length having a continuously diminishing diameter on progressing toward the distal end of the wire.
14. The wire of claim 13, wherein the distal end has a thickness of between about 1-5 mils.
15. The wire of claim 13, which further includes a flexible coil extending along and encasing a major portion of the tapered region of the wire.
16. A method of accessing a target site from a body access site along a vascular pathway which extends from an access site to the target tissue, and along a tortuous path at least about 10 cm long within the target tissue to the target site, said method comprising threading through the path, a flexible, torqueable wire having a length between about 50-300 cm from proximal to distal end, a maximum wire diameter of between about 8- 40 mils, and a regi-on at least 10 cm in length having a continuously diminishing diameter on progressing toward the distal end of the wire; as the wire is advanced along the path, advancing a catheter over the wire, and when the catheter is advanced to the body site, withdrawing the wire.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the catheter has a relatively stiff proximal tube segment dimensioned to track the wire from the access site to the target tissue, and a relatively flexible distal tube segment constructed and dimensioned to track the wire along the entire length of the tortuous path within the tissue, by means of an axially directed force applied to the distal segment - through the proximal segment.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein the wire includes a flexible coil extending along and encasing the tapered region of the wire, and the clearance between, the coil-encased portion of the wire and the inner diameter of the catheter distal segment is between about 2-5 mils.
19. The method of claim 16, wherein the guide wire and catheter are advanced as a unit to a position adjacent the target tissue, and the guide wire is advance ahead of the catheter along the tortuous path within the tissue.
20. The method of claim 16, for use in producing localized vaso-occlusion, which further includes injecting collagen through the catheter after removal of the guide wire from the catheter.
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US869597 | 1986-06-02 | ||
US06869597 US4739768B2 (en) | 1986-06-02 | 1986-06-02 | Catheter for guide-wire tracking |
Publications (3)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
AU7514387A AU7514387A (en) | 1988-01-11 |
AU606829B2 AU606829B2 (en) | 1991-02-14 |
AU606829C true AU606829C (en) | 1994-09-08 |
Family
ID=
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
EP0309471B1 (en) | Catheter | |
US4955862A (en) | Catheter and catheter/guide wire device | |
US4884579A (en) | Catheter guide wire | |
CA1195576A (en) | Blood vessel catheter for medicine delivery and method of manufacture | |
US20050215942A1 (en) | Small vessel ultrasound catheter | |
EP1007131B1 (en) | Catheter with three regions of different flexibilities and method of manufacture | |
EP0998323B1 (en) | Medical infusion wire | |
US4545390A (en) | Steerable guide wire for balloon dilatation procedure | |
US5497785A (en) | Catheter advancing guidewire and method for making same | |
JPH07503883A (en) | Catheter with atraumatic drug delivery tip | |
WO1993002733A1 (en) | Variable stiffness catheter | |
WO1992014508A1 (en) | Torsionally stable guidewire | |
EP0253687A2 (en) | Doppler tip wire guide | |
AU606829C (en) | Catheter and tissue-accessing method | |
EP1120127B1 (en) | Catheter made of a multifilar row of wires | |
JP2921895B2 (en) | catheter | |
EP1120128B1 (en) | A catheter system |