Optical therapy devices, systems, kits and methods for providing therapy to a body cavity
An optical therapy device is disclosed. The optical therapy device provides therapeutic light therapy to a body cavity. The device includes a housing adapted to be hand held, a UV light source positioned in or on the housing, and an insertion member having a distal end configured to be inserted into the body cavity to illuminate tissue in the body cavity with light from the light source.
This application is a continuation-in-part application of Ser. No. 11/152,946, filed Jun. 14, 2005, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety and to which application priority is claimed under 35 USC § 120.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/646,818, filed Jan. 25, 2005 and U.S. Provisional Application 60/661,688 filed Mar. 14, 2005, which are incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONInfection of a patient takes many forms. Typically, acute bacterial infections are rather easily controlled using standard antibiotic therapies. Chronic infections, on the other hand, are often very difficult to control for several reasons: (1) the antimicrobial flora of chronically infected regions of the body often develop resistance to standard antibiotics due to multiple attempts to treat the flora with antimicrobial therapy; (2) the microbes often form biofilms to protect themselves against the protective mechanisms of the patient; and (3) many chronic infections occur around man-made implants which often serve as a nidus for microbes to proliferate as well as form biofilms. Examples of chronic infections include: vascular access catheter infections, chemotherapy port infections, peritoneal dialysis access catheter infections, vaginal yeast infections, ventriculo-peritoneal shunts, sinus tracts in patients with Crohn's disease, chronic bronchitis and COPD, helicobacter pylori infections of the stomach, aerobic and anaerobic infections of the small intestine and colon, and chronic ear infections, to name a few. There is also increasing evidence that atherosclerosis is caused by infections by micro-organisms such as Chlamydia.
Atopy refers to an inherited propensity to respond immunologically to many common, naturally occurring inhaled and ingested allergens with the continual production of IgE antibodies. Allergic rhinitis and asthma are the most common clinical manifestations of atopic disease affecting approximately 50 million people in the United States alone. There is a great deal of overlap among patients with atopic disease. For example, patients with atopic asthma have a greater likelihood of developing allergic rhinitis and dermatitis, and vice versa. Indeed, the pathophysiology for atopic diseases is generally the same whether or not the affected organ is the skin, the nose, the lungs, or the gastrointestinal tract.
Contact with an allergic particle (for example, pollen, cat dander, or food particle) reacts with an associated antibody on the mast cell, which leads to prompt mediator release and clinical symptoms. The IgE antibody response is perpetuated by T cells (antigen specific memory cells or other regulatory cells), which also have specificity for the allergens.
Kemeny, et al., in Intranasal Irradiation with the Xenon Chloride Ultraviolet B Laser Improves Allergic Rhinitis, 75 Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology 137-144 (2004) and Koreck, et al., in Rhinophototherapy: A New Therapeutic Tool for the Management of Allergic Rhinitis, Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (March 2005), describe a treatment for allergic rhinitis using the same theory espoused for the efficacy of ultraviolet light in atopic dermatitis. Their placebo-controlled study showed the efficacy of ultraviolet therapy to treat allergic, or atopic, rhinitis over the course of an allergy season.
The United States Centers for Disease Control (CDC) estimates that each year, nearly 2 million people in the United States acquire an infection while in a hospital, resulting in 90,000 deaths. More than 70 percent of the bacteria that cause these infections are resistant to at least one of the antibiotics commonly used to treat them. Between 1979 and 1987, it is estimated that only 0.02 percent of pneumococcus strains infecting a large number of patients surveyed by the CDC were penicillin-resistant. As of 1994 that percent was estimated to have increased to 6.6 percent, and may currently approach 25%, by some estimates. Thus, as resistance increases, the importance of developing new treatment modalities increases.
A variety of devices are known for delivering light therapy. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 1,616,722 to Vernon for Kromayer Light Attachment; U.S. Pat. No. 1,782,906 to Newman for Device for Treating the Stomach with Ultra-Violet Rays; U.S. Pat. No. 1,800,277 to Boerstler for Method for Producing Therapeutic Rays; U.S. Pat. No. 2,227,422 to Boerstler for Applicator for Use in Treatment with Therapeutic Rays; U.S. Pat. No. 4,998,930 to Lundahl for Intracavity Laser Phototherapy Method; U.S. Pat. No. 5,146,917 to Wagnieres for Fiber-Optic Apparatus for the Photodynamic Treatment of Tumors; U.S. Pat. No. 5,292,346 to Ceravolo for Bactericidal Therapeutic Throat Gun; U.S. Pat. No. 5,683,436 to Mendes for Treatment of Rhinitus by Biostimulative Illumination; U.S. Pat. No. 6,663,659 to McDaniel for Method and Apparatus for the Photomodulation of Cells; U.S. Pat. No. 6,764,501 to Ganz for Apparatus and Method for Treating Atherosclerotic Vascular Disease Through Light Sterilization; and U.S. Pat. No. 6,890,346 to Ganz for Apparatus and Method for Debilitating or Killing Microorganisms within the Body. Additionally, U.S. Patent Publ. 2002/0029071 to Whitehurst for Therapeutic Light Source and Method; U.S. Patent Publ. 2004/0030368 to Kemeny for Phototherapeutical Method and System for the Treatment of Inflammatory and Hyperproliferative Disorders of the Nasal Mucosa; and U.S. Patent Publ. 2005/0107853 to Krespi for Control of Rhinosinusitus-Related, and Other Microorganisms in the Sino-Nasal Tract. See, also PCT Publ. WO 03/013653 to Kemeny for Phototherapeutical Apparatus.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe invention relates to an optical therapy device for providing therapeutic light to a body cavity. An embodiment of the invention includes: a housing adapted to be hand-held; one or more light sources positioned in or on said housing adapted to deliver up to 50 mW of UV light; and an insertion member having a distal end configured to be inserted into the body cavity to illuminate tissue in the body cavity with light from the light source when the distal end of the insertion member is positioned in the body cavity.
Another embodiment of the invention includes: an insertion member having a distal end configured to be inserted into the body cavity; and a UV light source at the distal end of the insertion member, wherein the insertion member is adapted to illuminate tissue in the body cavity with UV light when the distal end of the insertion member is positioned in the body cavity.
Still another embodiment of the invention includes a patient interface for an optical therapy device for providing therapeutic light to a body cavity, comprising: an insertion member having a distal end configured to be positioned into a body cavity to illuminate target tissue in the body cavity with UV light from a UV light source when the distal end of the insertion member is positioned in the body cavity. The insertion member can be further adapted to have an alignment member adapted to align the insertion member within the cavity and a direction element adapted to direct light onto target tissue.
Yet another embodiment of the invention includes an optical therapy device for providing therapeutic light to a body cavity, comprising: an insertion member having a distal end configured to be inserted into the body cavity; a light source at the distal end of the insertion member and adapted to illuminate tissue in the body cavity when the distal end of the insertion member is positioned in the body cavity; the insertion member being further adapted to transfer heat proximally from the light source.
The optical therapy devices of the embodiments of the invention may include one or more light sources; such as light sources that are solid state or LEDs. Alternatively, the light sources may emit non-coherent light. In still other embodiments, the light sources may be UV light sources that emit non-coherent light in a range from 250 nm to 279 mm. In other embodiments, the UV light source may be limited in wavelength to 300 nm to 320 nm. In yet other embodiments, the UV light source in the range of 280 nm to 320 mm, while other embodiments may use a UV light source that is restricted to a wavelength range from 250 nm to 320 mm. In still other embodiments, the light source may be adapted to emit substantially only UV light.
The optical therapy devices of the embodiments of the invention can be adapted and configured to provide any of the light sources at the distal end of the insertion member. In some embodiments, the light sources are provided along the length of the insertion member or tube. In still other embodiments, the light sources are provided in the body or hand-piece. In yet other embodiments, light sources are provided at a plurality of locations within or along the device.
The optical therapy devices of the embodiments of the invention can be adapted and configured to provide a housing supporting the insertion member and a power source disposed in or on the housing, the power source being adapted to provide power to the light source.
The optical therapy device of the embodiments of the invention can be adapted and configured such that the insertion member is further adapted to transfer heat proximally when the light source is at the distal end of the insertion member. In other embodiments, the insertion member can be adapted to focus eight from the light source.
In other embodiments, the insertion member is further adapted to comprise an expandable member adapted and configured to expand within the body cavity. In some embodiments of the invention, a balloon is used. The balloon may be and optical conditioner that is at least partially transparent to UV light and at least partially covers one or more light sources. In other embodiments, the balloon may be configured to partially absorb light from one or more light sources. The expandable member can be adapted to be transparent to UV light. In other embodiments, the expandable member can be adapted to focus light from the light source. In some embodiments, the expandable member can be adapted to cool the device when expanded.
The insertion member can be configured, in some embodiments, to have a shape adapted to enter a body cavity. In some embodiments, the insertion member can be further adapted to emit light into more than one body cavity simultaneously. The insertion member can be adapted to bend light at an angle defined by the insertion member. In other embodiments, the insertion member is adapted to be flexible and to form a variable angle. The insertion member may be adapted to split into one or more elongate tubes. In still other embodiments, the insertion member is adapted to be rigid with a fixed angle. In still other embodiments, the insertion member is adapted to be partially transparent to UV light and to at least partially cover one or more light sources.
The optical therapy devices of the embodiments of the invention are suitable for use in a body cavity. Body cavities include, for example, the nasal cavity, a vestibule of the nasal cavity, the thoracic cavity, the abdominal cavity, lumen of a vessel, the gastrointestinal cavity, the pericardial cavity, and the heart, to name a few.
The optical therapy devices of the embodiments of the invention may further comprise a data collection unit connectable to a controller. In other embodiments, the controller may be adapted to connect a power source to the light source. The controller may be configured to individually control one or more of a plurality of light sources. Additionally, the controller may be configured to store the total amount of energy emitted by one or more of a plurality of light sources. In some embodiments, the controller can be configured to control which of the plurality of light sources is powered on or powered off based on the total energy emitted by the light source. Alternatively, the controller can be configured to control which of the light sources is powered on or powered off based on a structure of the body cavity. In yet another embodiment, the controller can be configured to control which of the plurality of light sources is powered on or powered off based on programming by an operator. A controller may be provided that is adapted to connect a power source to the light source. The controller can also be adapted to separately address each of the light sources provided.
The optical therapy devices of the embodiments of the invention may further comprise a recharger adapted to connect to a power source. In some embodiments, the device further comprises a power source disposed in or on the housing. The power source can be any suitable power source, including AC, DC, rechargeable, etc. Where a rechargeable power supply is provided, an embodiment of the invention can include a recharger adapted to recharge the power source.
Embodiments of the device can be configured such that the insertion member is adapted to transfer heat away from the body cavity. In some embodiments, the device includes a heat transfer device. Suitable heat transfer devices may include, for example, heat pipes, cooling modules, heat fins, heat conductors and cooling tubes. In some embodiments, the heat transfer device can be adapted to surround the light source. In other embodiments, the heat transfer device can be adapted to provide a thermal interface adapted to draw heat away from a heat sink. In still other embodiments, the heat transfer device can be adapted, or further adapted, to extend axially along the longitudinal axis of the hand piece.
INCORPORATION BY REFERENCEAll publications and patent applications mentioned in this specification are herein incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each individual publication or patent application was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGSThe novel features of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. A better understanding of the features and advantages of the present invention will be obtained by reference to the following detailed description that sets forth illustrative embodiments, in which the principles of the invention are utilized, and the accompanying drawings of which:
In the embodiments of the present invention, novel methods and devices to treat diseases utilizing optical therapies are disclosed. In addition to novel disease treatments and methods, embodiments of the present invention can be configured to optimize portability, and may be implemented with a variety of light sources. Additionally, specific desired illumination pattern(s) and spectral output control may be achieved in the various embodiments.
The embodiments of the invention employ lighting technologies. Suitable lighting technologies, including solid state devices (e.g., light emitting diodes, electroluminescent inorganic materials, organic diodes, etc.), miniature halogen lamps, miniature mercury vapor and fluorescent lamps, offer the potential for less expensive and more flexible phototherapeutical units. As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, solid state technology has already revolutionized areas outside medicine and holds a great deal of promise inside the biomedical sciences.
Light emitting semiconductor devices (e.g., light emitting diodes or LEDs) offer many advantages in the biomedical sciences. For example, LEDs are generally less expensive than traditional light sources in terms of cost per lumen of light; are generally smaller, even when providing a similar amount of therapeutic power; offer well-defined and precise control over wavelength and power; and allow for control of the pattern of illumination by allowing the placement of discrete optical emitters over a complex surface area and by allowing for individual control of each emitter. LEDs also generally allow for easy integration with other microelectronic sensors (e.g., photodiodes) to achieve low cost integrated components; and generally permit placement of the light source close to the treatment site rather than relying on costly, inefficient, and unstable optical guidance systems and light sources to do so. Solid state technology also promises portability and patient convenience (which will likely enhance patient compliance with treatment protocols) because the lower cost and improved safety profile of the devices will allow for transfer of the therapies from the physician office and hospital to the patient's home.
Solid state lighting technology has recently advanced to the point where it is useful in the longer wavelength ultraviolet and even more recently in the short ultraviolet wavelengths. For example, S-ET (Columbia, S.C.) manufactures LED dies as well as fully packaged solid state LEDs that emit relatively non-coherent monochromatic ultraviolet radiation from 240 nm to 365 nm. Similarly, Nichia Corporation (Detroit, Mich.) supplies ultraviolet light emitting diodes which emit relatively monochromatic, non-coherent light in the range 365 nm to 400 nm. White light emitting diodes have been available for a relatively long time and at power densities which rival conventional lighting sources. For example, the LED Light Corporation (Carson City, Nev.) sells high powered white light LEDs with output from 390 nm to 600 nm. Cree Inc. (Durham, N.C.) also produces and sells LED chips in the long wave ultraviolet as well as the blue, amber and red portions of the electromagnetic spectra. While LEDs with light emission >365 nm have been optimized with respect to their output efficiency (optical power out versus input power) which can range from 1% to greater than 20%, LED dies with outputs from 240 nm to 365 nm have far less efficiency, which is well below 5% at the current time. In addition, the lifetime of LEDs in the 240-365 nm range is a lot lower (hundreds of hours) than LEDs greater than 365 nm (typically tens of thousands of hours). As a consequence of the decreased efficiency, heat transfer is a critical issue with ultraviolet LEDs in the 240-365 nm range. Similarly, the lifetime being short requires that efficiency be optimized by placing the light sources closer to the point of therapy which can compound the heat transfer issues. In addition, however, there are many other reasons to have the light source closer to the point of therapy; for example, the resulting device can be made light weight and portable and easier to apply to a patient. Furthermore, there are many reasons that LEDs specifically are a preferred light source for the close application of therapeutic light delivery to a patient; for example, the LEDs emit light from a small volume which allows for improved directionality of the therapeutic light and in addition, the LEDs can be integrated well with other electronic components such as imaging or data collection elements.
Although some embodiments of the present invention include solid state light sources, other embodiment include non-solid state technologies, such as low pressure lamps, with or without solid state light sources. The Jelight Corporation (Irvine, Calif.) provides customized low pressure mercury vapor lamps complete with phosphors which emit a relatively narrow spectrum depending on the phosphor used. For example, Jelight's 2021 product emits 5 mW in the 305 nm to 310 nm portion of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Halogen lighting technology can also be used to generate ultraviolet light, including light having wavelengths in the UVA (e.g., 320-400 nm), UVB (e.g., 280-320 nm), and white light (e.g., 400-700 nm) portions of the spectrum, as well as relatively narrow-band ultraviolet light (for example, when the lamp is provided with an appropriate filter and/or phosphors). For example, Gilway Technical Lamp (Woburn, Mass.) supplies quartz halogen lamps, which are enhanced for ultraviolet emission by virtue of the quartz (rather than ultraviolet absorbing glass) bulb covering the filament. Such lamps are generally inexpensive, small, generate minimal heat, and may therefore be incorporated with many of the embodiments of the present invention, as disclosed in greater detail below.
As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, a variety of suitable lighting sources can be employed in the embodiments disclosed herein, without departing from the scope of the invention.
Turning now to the embodiments of the invention, an optical therapy device 100 for providing therapeutic light to a body cavity in accordance with one embodiment of the present invention is illustrated in
As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, the body can also generally refer to the optical therapy device 100 without the light source 126 and without the power supply 110 or power cords 114 connected. The body of the optical therapy device in combination with the light source 126 can be held in one's hand or hands for an extended period of time (e.g., a therapeutic time) without undue effort or discomfort, due to the lightweight, portable design of the device.
In one embodiment, the insertion member or tube 106 includes a tip 118 at the distal end 116 of the tube 106. The tip 118 of the tube 106 is any of a variety of optically transparent or partially transparent structures. As will be appreciated, optically transparent components or materials can include components or materials that are transparent to wavelengths between about 200 nm and about 800 nm. In some cases, optically transparent can refer to more narrow ranges of transparency. For example, optically transparent to ultraviolet (UV) light can refer to transparency in the range from about 200 nm to 400 nm; while optically transparent to ultraviolet B (UVB) can refer to transparency in the range from about 280 nm to about 320 mm.
In one embodiment, the tip 118 includes a window, a diffusing lens, a focusing lens, an optical filter, or a combination of one or more of such tip types or other tip types which allow the spectral output to be conditioned. The lens can include, for example, a device that causes radiation or light to converge or diverge. The conditioner can be configured to modify the spectral output or the geometric illumination pattern of the device. In one embodiment, to provide a desired output spectrum, three types of tips can be used in series within the tube 106. For example, in one embodiment, a lens is used to diffuse (e.g., refract) certain wavelengths while filtering (e.g., transmitting certain wavelengths and absorbing others) certain wavelengths, and serving as a window (e.g., transmitting) certain wavelengths. In another embodiment, the light from the tube 106 is transferred through tip 118 through a series of internal reflections. In one embodiment, the tip 118 is made at least in part from a different material than that of the tube 106. The tip 118 of the tube 106 may be shaped or designed to disperse light as it exits the reflecting tube 106 and is transmitted to a patient.
The tube 106 can be configured as a reflecting tube and can be manufactured from any of a variety of materials, including plastic, stainless steel, nickel titanium, glass, quartz, aluminum, rubber, lucite, or any other suitable material known to those of skill in the art that may be adapted to be place inside of a patient's body. In some embodiments, the material of the tube is chosen to reflect certain wavelengths and/or absorb others. In some embodiments, the tube is configured to yield near or total internal reflection.
Additionally, the reflecting tube 106 can be configured such that it is hollow. Where the reflecting tube 106 is hollow, the inside wall 120 of the reflecting tube 106 can at least partially reflects light of a selected wavelength. Thus, the inside wall 120 may include a reflecting layer 122 applied over its entire surface although in other embodiments the inside wall 120 does not include a reflecting layer 122. In one embodiment, the reflective layer 122 includes a coating of a reflecting material such as, for example, aluminum, silica carbide, or other suitably reflective material.
The proximal end 108 of the tube 106 is coupled to the distal end 105 of the hand piece 102 by any of a variety of couplings 124 well known to those of skill in the art. For example, in one embodiment, the coupling 124 includes a press-fit connection, a threaded connection, a weld, a quick-connect, a screw, an adhesive, or any other suitable coupling as is known to those of skill in the art. Coupling 124 includes mechanical, optical, and electrical couplings, as well as combinations thereof.
In one embodiment, the coupling 124 is releasable so that the tube 106 may be decoupled or removed from the hand piece 102. Such coupling 124 may also be made from a disposable material. In another embodiment, the reflecting tube 106 is permanently attached to the hand piece 102. In such case, the coupling 124 is a permanent connection.
In one embodiment, the hand piece 102 of the body includes alight source 126. The light source may be any of a variety of high, low, or medium pressure light emitting devices such as for example, a bulb, an emitter, a light emitting diode (LED), a xenon lamp, a quartz halogen lamp, a standard halogen lamp, a tungsten filament lamp, or a double bore capillary tube, such as a mercury vapor lamp with or without a phosphor coating. The particular light source selected will vary depending upon the desired optical spectrum and the desired clinical results, as will be described in greater detail below. Although the light source 126 of
The light source 126 can be configured to include a phosphor-coated, low pressure mercury vapor lamp. In a related embodiment, the phosphor is placed distal to the mercury vapor lamp; for example, the phosphor is coated onto the reflecting tube 106 or is incorporated into the tip 118. Optical emitter 128 illuminates the light emitting portion of the light source 126. When light source 126 is a mercury vapor lamp, optical emitter 128 can be an inner capillary tube where the mercury plasma emits photons. Leads 132 extending from the light source 126, electrically couple the light source 126 with a control circuit 134. In one embodiment, the control circuit 134 is in electrical communication with a controller 136 and with power supply 110 via the power coupling 114.
Optical emitter 128 can also comprise a filament. Such filaments may be used when light source 126 is an incandescent or halogen lamp.
As will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, it may be desirable to control variables or control parameters associated with the output of the optical therapy device 100. Examples of such variables include power, timing, frequency, duty cycle, spectral output, and illumination pattern. In one embodiment, the control circuit 134 controls the delivery of power from the power supply 110 to the light source 126 according to the activation or status of the controller 136. For example, in one embodiment, the control circuit 134 includes a relay, or a transistor, and the controller 136 includes a button, or a switch. When the button or switch of the controller 136 is pressed or activated, power from the power supply 110 is able to flow through the control circuit 134 to the light source 126.
The variables can be controlled in response to, for example, at least one photoreflectance parameter, which, for example, may be measured or obtained at the distal end 116 of the therapy device 100. Other variables or control parameters include desired dosage, or a previous dosage. In some embodiments, the patient or treating physician can adjust the treatment time based on the prior history with the optical therapy device 100. In some embodiments, controller mechanisms, which can be integral to the optical therapy device 100, allow for control over dosage and illumination. In other embodiments, the controller tracks the total dose delivered to a patient over a period of time (e.g., seconds, minutes, hours, days, months, years) and can prohibit the device from delivering additional doses after the preset dosage is achieved.
Although the control circuit 134 is illustrated within the hand piece 102 of the optical therapy device 100, in another embodiment, the control circuit 134 is located within the power supply 110. Other configurations can be employed without departing from the scope of the invention. In such embodiments, the controller 136 communicates with the control circuit 134 through the power coupling 114. Control data, commands, or other information may be provided between the power supply 110 and the hand piece 102 as desired. In one embodiment, control circuit 134 stores information and data, and can be coupled with another computer or computing device.
In one embodiment, power from the power supply 110 flows to the control circuit 134 of the hand piece 102 through a power coupling 114. The power coupling 114 may be any of a variety of devices known to those of skill in the art suitable for providing electrical communication between two components. For example, in one embodiment, the power coupling 114 includes a wire, a radio frequency (RF) link, or a cable.
The light source 126 is generally adapted to emit light with at least some wavelengths in the ultraviolet spectrum, including the portions of the ultraviolet spectrum known to those of skill in the art as the UVA (or UV-A), UVA1, UVA2, the UVB (or UV-B) and the UVC (or UV-C) portions. In another embodiment of the current invention, light source 126 emits light in the visible spectrum in combination with ultraviolet light or by itself. Finally, in yet another embodiment, the light source 126 emits light within the infrared spectrum, in combination with white light and/or ultraviolet light, or by itself. Light source 126 may be adapted to emit light in more than one spectrum simultaneously (with various phosphors, for example) or a multiplicity of light sources may be provided to generate more than one spectrum simultaneously. For example, in one embodiment, the light source 126 emits light in the UVA, UVB, and visible spectra. Light emission at these spectra can be characterized as broad- or narrow-band emission. In one embodiment, narrow-band is over a band gap of about 10-20 nm and broad-band is over a band gap of about 20-50 nm.
The spectrum delivered can be continuous. Continuous (or substantially continuous) emission is intended to have its ordinary meaning, and also to refer to generally smooth uniform optical output from about 320-400 nm for UVA, 280-320 nm for UVB, and below about 280 nm for UVC. In other embodiments, the light source 126 emits light in any two of the foregoing spectra and/or spectra portions. In addition, in some embodiments, some portions of the spectra are smooth and others are continuous.
For example, in one embodiment, the light source 126 emits light having a narrow-band wavelength of approximately 308 nm within the UVB portion of the UV spectrum. In another embodiment, the light source 126 emits light having a wavelength below approximately 300 nm. In other embodiments, the light source 126 emits light having a wavelength between about 254 nm and about 313 nm.
The optical therapy device 100 can be configured to include more than one light source 126, where each light source 126 has an output centered at a different wavelength. Each light source 126 can have an output that can be characterized as broad-band, narrow-band, or substantially single band. All light sources 126 can be the same characterization, or may have one or more different characterizations. For example, in one embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 includes three light sources 126: one that emits light in the UVA region of the UV spectrum, one that emits light in the UVB region of the UV spectrum, and one that emits light in the visible region of the optical spectrum.
The light sources may each emit light at a different energy or optical power level, or at the same level. The optical therapy device 100 may be configured to provide light from three light sources 126, each having a different relative output energy and/or relative energy density level (e.g., fluence). For example, in one embodiment, the optical energy emitted from the light source 126 that provides light in the UVA region of the UV spectrum is about 10%, 20%, 25%, 35%, between about 15% and about 35%, or at least about 20% of the optical energy and/or fluence provided by the optical therapy device 100. In one embodiment, the optical energy emitted from the light source 126 that provides light in the UVB region of the UV spectrum is about 1%, 3%, 5%, 8%, 10%, between about 1% and about 11%, or at least about 2% of the optical energy and/or fluence provided by the optical therapy device 100. In one embodiment, the optical energy emitted from the light source 126 that provides light in the visible region of the optical spectrum is about 50%, 60%, 75%, 85%, between about 60% and about 90%, or at least about 65% of the optical energy and/or fluence provided by the optical therapy device 100.
In one embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 includes a UVA light source 126, a UVB light source 126, and a visible light source 126, where the UVA light source 126 provides about 25%, the UVB light source provides about 5%, and the visible light source provides about 70% of the optical energy and/or fluence provided by the optical therapy device 100. For example, in one embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 provides a dose to the surface it is illuminating (e.g., the nasal mucosa) of about 2 J/cm2, where the UVA light source 126 provides about 0.5 J/cm2, the UVB light source 126 provides about 0.1 J/cm2, and the visible light source 126 provides about 1.4 J/cm2. In another embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 provides a dose of about 4 J/cm2, where the UVA light source 126 provides about 1 J/cm2, the UVB light source 126 provides about 0.2 J/cm2, and the visible light source 126 provides about 2.8 J/cm2. In another embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 provides a dose of about 6 J/cm2, where the UVA light source 126 provides about 1.5 J/cm2, the UVB light source 126 provides about 0.3 J/cm2, and the visible light source 126 provides about 4.2 J/cm2. In yet another embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 provides a dose of about 8 J/cm2, where the UVA light source 126 provides about 2 J/cm2, the UVB light source 126 provides about 0.4 J/cm2, and the visible light source 126 provides about 5.6 J/cm2. In some embodiments, the white light is omitted from the therapy leaving only the doses of the ultraviolet light. In some embodiments, the white light and the UVA are omitted leaving only the UVB doses. In other embodiments, the UVB and the white light are omitted leaving only the UVA dose. In other embodiments the UVB dosage is concentrated in the range from 305 m to 320 nm, sometimes referred to as UVB1. UVB1 can be used in place of UVB in any of the combinations and doses above. In other embodiments, UVA1 (e.g., 340-400 nm) is used in any of the embodiments above in place of UVA. In yet other embodiments, UVA2 (e.g., 320-340 nm) is used in the embodiments above in place of UVA. In some embodiments, blue light (e.g., 400-450 nm) or a combination of blue light and long wavelength UVA (e.g., 375-450 nm) is used to treat tissue. In some embodiments, the dose of blue light or combination UVA-blue light is about 20-100 times greater than UVB. In some embodiments, the fluence in the above measurements represents energy delivered to a body cavity. For example, when the body cavity is the nasal cavity, the area over which the light is delivered can be approximately 5-30 cm2; therefore the energy in each region of the optical spectrum leaving the optical therapy device is in some embodiments 5-30 times the energy reaching the surface of the body cavity.
In some embodiments, a ratio is defined between the wavelengths. In one embodiment, the ratio between the total UVA power and the total UVB power (the power ratio) is about 5:1. In other embodiments, the ratio is between 5 and 10:1. In other embodiments, the ratio is between 10 and 15:1. In some embodiments, UVB1 is substituted in the defined ratios. In any of the above ratios, visible light can be excluded or included. In some embodiments, the power ratio is further defined between UVA1 and UVB1; for example, the power ratio can be from 40:1 to 80:1 for a ration of UVA1 to UVB1.
Optical energy densities are generally derived from a power density applied over a period of time. Various energy densities are desired depending on the disorder being treated and may also depend on the light source used to achieve the optical output. For example, in some embodiments, the energy densities are achieved over a period of time of about 0.5 to 3 minutes, or from about 0.1 to 1 minute, or from about 2 to 5 minutes. In some embodiments, for example, when a laser light source is used, the time for achieving these energy density outputs may be from about 0.1 seconds to about 10 seconds. Certain components of the optical spectrum can be applied for different times, powers, or energies. In the case where multiple light sources are used, one or more light sources can be powered off after its energy density is provided or achieved.
Energy density or fluence or other dosage parameter, such as, for example, power, energy, illumination, or irradiance, may be measured at any of a variety of positions with respect to the tip 118 of the optical therapy device 100. For example, in one embodiment, fluence is measured substantially at the tip 118 of the optical therapy device 100. In this case, the dosage at the illumination surface is the fluence multiplied by the fluence area (for total power) and then divided by the illuminated surface area (e.g., in the nasal cavity, the surface area can range between 5 and 25 cm2). Therefore to achieve the desired dosage density, the fluence at the tip is approximately the dosage multiplied by illuminated surface area and then divided by the tip area. In another embodiment, the fluence is measured at a distance of about 0.5 cm, about 1 cm, or about 2 cm from the surface of the tip 118 of the optical therapy device 100.
The particular clinical application and/or body cavity being treated may determine the energy density or dosage requirements. If the lining of the cavity is particularly far away from the optical therapy device 100, a higher energy, fluence, or intensity may be chosen. In the case where the nasal cavity is being treated and rhinitis is the disease, the dosage from the tip 118 may be chosen appropriately. For example, it has been shown by in-vitro work that T-cells undergo apoptosis at energy densities of about 50-100 mJ/cm2 of combined UVA, UVB, and white light. The energy densities exiting from the tip of the optical therapy device used to achieve such energy densities as measured at the treatment site, may be 5-10 times this amount because of the optical therapy distance 100 from the treatment site during treatment.
The energy densities may be further increased from that achieved in-vitro because of intervening biologic materials that may absorb light. For example, the mucus, which is present on top of the nasal mucosa in all patients, may absorb light in the desired region of the spectrum. In this case, the fluence or output of the optical therapy device 100 at the tip 118 can be corrected for the extra absorption. Furthermore, the mucosa may absorb more or less light at different time points during an allergy season (for example) and therefore the fluence of the optical therapy device may be controlled at these times. In many embodiments, this control is provided by the optical therapy devices. Photoreflectance data from the mucosa can be used by the patient, the medical practitioner, or automatic feedback (e.g., from the tip 118) to a controller and/or data processor. Such data can be used to estimate the thickness of the mucus layer and adjust the output of the optical therapy device 100 accordingly. In addition, the practitioner can evaluate the mucosa visually with a rhinoscope and adjust the optical parameters accordingly; in another embodiment, tube 106 delivers an image from the region surrounding the distal tip 118.
The dosage may be measured at a planar or curved surface with respect to the tip 118 of the optical therapy device 100. For example, in one embodiment, the dosage is measured at a plane that is tangential to the surface of the tip 118 of the optical therapy device 100. In another embodiment, the dosage is measured at a plane that is a distance of about 0.5 cm, 1 cm, 2 cm, 3 cm or 5 cm from the surface of the tip 118 of the optical therapy device 100. In another embodiment, the dosage is measured at a partially spherical plane that is at least partially tangential to, or at a distance of about 0.5 cm, 1 cm, 2 cm, 3 cm or 5 cm from the surface of the tip 118 of the optical therapy device 100. The selection of planar or curved surface for dosage measurement, and the distance between the measurement plane and the optical therapy device 100 tip 118 may be selected based upon the particular geometry of tip 118 utilized.
In one embodiment, the output portion 130 of the light source 126 is positioned so that it resides within at least a portion of the tube 106. When the output portion 130 of the light source 126 is so positioned, light emitted from the light source 126 is transmitted directly into the tube 106. In this embodiment, the tube is a reflecting tube. In such a case, optical losses may be minimized, or reduced. In addition, by positioning the output portion 130 of the light source 126 inside of the tube 106, additional optical focusing elements, such as lenses or mirrors, may not be required; moreover, the geometry of the tube can be optimized, such that light conduction is optimized by for example, creating surfaces within the tube designed to reflect light through and along the tube to transport the light to the distal end of the tube. In addition, the tube can be created to optimize total internal reflection of the light from the light source.
In some embodiments, the optical reflectance tube 120 includes one or more optical fibers that capture and guide the light from the light source/s 126. When the light sources 126 are small semiconductor structures, the fibers can encapsulate the semiconductor structure and faithfully transmit substantially all of the light from the light source 126. More than one fiber can be used to direct the light from multiple light sources 126. For example, each fiber can transmit light from one light source 126. In other embodiments, the optical tube 106 is or includes a light guide such as a liquid light guide (e.g., such as those available from EXFO in Ontario, Calif.).
The tube 106 may taper from a large diameter at its proximal end 108 to a smaller diameter at its distal end 116, in which case the tube 106 has a larger diameter at its proximal end 108 than at its distal end 116. In another embodiment, the tube 106 may taper from a larger diameter at its distal end 116 to a smaller diameter at its proximal end 108. In such case, the tube 106 has a larger diameter at its distal end 116 than at its proximal end 108. In other embodiments, the insertion member or tube 106 is substantially cylindrical. In such case, the diameter of the tube 106 may be substantially constant along its entire length.
In one embodiment, the tube 106 is flexible so that its shape and orientation with respect to the housing or hand piece 102 may be adjusted. A flexible material, such as rubber, plastic, or metal may be used to construct the tube 106, and to provide flexibility thereto. In one embodiment, a goose-neck tube, or spiral wound coil is used to provide a flexible tube 106. In such embodiments, an outer sheath 142 may be provided with the tube 106 to isolate the flexible portion of the tube 106 from the body cavity, such as a patient's nasal cavity.
An outer sheath 142 can be made from any of a variety of biocompatible materials well-known in the art such as, but not limited to, PTFE, ePTFE, FEP, PVDF, or silicone elastomers. The outer sheath can be disposable so that a clean, sterilized sheath can be used for each newly treated patient. The outer sheath 142 can also have beneficial optical properties. For example, the outer sheath can diffuse or otherwise pattern the light entering it from the optical tube 106. The outer sheath can be made of more than one material. For example, in some embodiments, the portion of the sheath where the light exits (e.g., the lens) 140 can be produced from an optically transparent material such as silicone, fused silica, or quartz, and the biocompatible portion which surrounds tube 106 can be produced from a material which is more flexible or lubricious, such as PTFE, but which does not necessarily transmit ultraviolet light.
In one embodiment, tube 106 is sized so it may be inserted into a cavity of a patient or user. For example, when the insertion member or tube 106 is inserted into the nasal cavity until its tip 118 reaches the turbinates, the sinuses, or the ostia to the sinuses. The tube 106 may be made of flexible materials so that it can bend, or be steered around corners, or conform to the shape of the cavity, as required.
The insertion member or tube 106 may be made from any one or a combination of materials as described above. For example, the tube 106 may be made from polymers. In such case, since many polymers absorb light in the ultraviolet portion of the spectrum, the inside wall 120 of the tube 106 may be coated with a reflective coating or layer 122, as described above. The outside of the tube 106 can also be coated with a polymer with the inner material being one of the materials noted above.
In one embodiment, the reflective layer 122 includes an electrolessly-deposited metal. For example, layer 122 may include nickel, nickel-phosphorous, cobalt, cobalt-phosphorous, nickel-cobalt-phosphorous and/or a noble metal. In other embodiments, the layer 122 includes a reflective polymeric coating. In other embodiments, the reflecting layer is a specialty thin film, such as silica carbide deposited in a chemical vapor deposition process.
In one embodiment, the tube 106 includes quartz, fused silica, aluminum, stainless steel, or any material which reflects a substantial amount of light in the ultraviolet region and/or visible region of the electromagnetic spectrum.
The optical therapy device 100 generally allows for the use of low pressure light sources 126 and can be manufactured at low cost using safe light sources 126. By utilizing a low pressure light source 126, the light source 126 may be manufactured at a small size so that it can fit within a hand-held hand piece 102 of the optical therapy device 100.
The controller 136 of the optical therapy device 100 is adapted to control the quantity (e.g., total energy) and intensity (e.g., power) of light emitted by the light source 126 and thereby exiting the tip 118 of the optical therapy device 100. For example, in one embodiment, the controller 136 determines and/or controls the power from the power supply 110. The controller 136 may be programmed and may include a timer so that only a pre-specified amount of light can be provided by the optical therapy device 100 at any given time, and such that a user cannot receive more than a predetermined dose in a specified short time period (e.g., over a period of one day) or a number of doses in a specified time period (e.g., over a period of months, for example). The controller 136 can also be configured to control the illumination pattern. For example, by turning one or more light sources powered on and powered off, the illumination pattern can be controlled. The controller 136 can further control the illumination pattern by moving (actively or passively) or otherwise altering the aperture or pattern of the tip 118. The controller 136 can also apply current to the light sources at a desired frequency or duty cycle.
In another embodiment, the controller 136 is adapted to deliver a large current or a current or voltage pulse to the light source 126 to “burn out” or destroy the light source 126 after a selected period of time. For example, after a predetermined “useful lifetime” of the optical therapy device 100 expires, a “burn out” current is provided and the optical therapy device 100 essentially ceases to function. At this time, the optical therapy device 100 is discarded. The controller 136 can also respond to or receive a control signal from one or more photodetectors placed in or on the tube 106 or the controller can respond to receive a control signal from one or more photodetector devices in an external calibration unit.
The power supply 110 of the optical therapy device 100 is adapted to receive power from an alternating current (AC) source, a direct current (DC) source, or both depending on the number and types of light sources. For example, in one embodiment, power supply 110 includes a battery, battery pack, rechargeable DC source, capacitor, or any other energy storage or generation (for example, a fuel cell or photovoltaic cell) device known to those of skill in the art. In some embodiments, an LED may utilize a DC power source whereas a mercury vapor lamp may utilize an AC power source. Thus, where a device is configured to use more than one light source, it may be necessary to provide more than one power source.
In one embodiment, the light source 126 includes a low pressure lamp with an output (measured at any of the locations described above) between about 100 μW/cm2 and about 5 mW/cm2. In one embodiment, the light source 126 generates ultraviolet light and it includes at least a small amount of mercury within a nitrogen atmosphere. As discussed above, the output portion 130 of the light source 126 may be any material translucent to ultraviolet light, such as, for example, but not limited to, quartz, silicone or fused silica. The output portion can direct the light in a uniform or non-uniform pattern.
When mercury vapor is used in connection with the light source 126, the light source 126 provides ultraviolet light having an output peak concentrated at 254 nm. The light source 126 can include a mercury vapor lamp having a spectral output which resides in longer wavelengths of the ultraviolet spectrum and in some embodiments extends into the visible spectrum. Suitable mercury vapor lamps include the type 2095 lamp manufactured by Gelight Corporation. Additionally, a phosphor or a combination of phosphors can be used, as is widely known to those skilled in the art. In one embodiment, phosphors are added to the light source 126, the output peaks from the light source 126 can be customized based upon the desired clinical application and action spectra for the disease process being treated.
Additionally, the light source 126 can include or be selected from light emitting diode (LED) such as the UV LED manufactured by S-ET Corporation (Columbia, S.C.), which can be produced to emit narrowband light at any wavelength from about 250 nm to 365 nm. More specific wavelength, such as a wavelength of 275 nm, can be used. In such cases, the UV LED may have a sapphire substrate with conductive layers of aluminum gallium nitrite. For example, in one embodiment, the UV LED has about 50% aluminum. By varying the concentration of aluminum, the wavelength peak can be adjusted. In some embodiments, the several LEDs are packaged together such that light output with multiple peaks in the ultraviolet range can be achieved. In some embodiments, the aluminum concentration is varied along a dimension of the chip such that a more continuous spectrum is achieved when current is passed through the chip. In addition, the UV LED packaging may include flip-chip geometry. In such case, the LED die is flipped upside down and bonded onto a thermally conducting sub-mount. The finished LED is a bottom-emitting device that may use a transparent buffer layer and substrate.
In such embodiments, the light is two-times brighter when the LEDs are in a flip-chip geometry. This is due to the fact that light emitted from the LED is not physically blocked by an opaque metal contact on the top of the LED. In addition, flip-chip sub-mount pulls heat away from the device when made from materials having high thermal conductivity. This improves efficiency levels with less energy being converted to heat and more energy being converted to light. The resulting device will have a lower weight, will be smaller, and will be resistant to vibrations and shock.
Power delivery to the LEDs can be modified to optimize the optical power of the LEDs. In such cases, the LEDs can be configured to switch on and off in order to prevent heat build up which would otherwise decreases the efficiency of the LEDs. For example, a temperature rise may decrease the potential optical power. Such switching can increase the power output several-fold. In other embodiments, the semiconductor structure takes the form of a laser diode module wherein the semiconductor package contains reflecting optics to turn the non-coherent light into coherent light.
Although the power supply 110 of the optical therapy device 100 is illustrated in
A sleeve 140 may be provided to at least partially cover the tube 106. In one embodiment, the sleeve 140 is disposable and in another embodiment, the sleeve is not disposable. In addition, as will be appreciated by those skilled in the art, disposable can also refer to the cost of production and sales price of a component, as well as the ability to use procedures to sterilize or otherwise clean a component between uses.
The sleeve is sterilizable and in other embodiments, the sleeve is not sterilizable. Sterilizing methods include, without limitation, ethylene oxide (ETO), autoclaving, soap and water, acetone, and alcohol. The sheath or the sleeve can be molded, thermoformed, machined or extruded. As will be appreciated, the sleeve or sheath can be composed of multiple materials. For example, the body of the sleeve is produced from a material such as aluminum or a plastic coated with aluminum and the end of the sleeve is an optically transparent material. The end of the sleeve can also have an open configuration where the light diverges as it leaves the sleeve. The sleeve can also be solid and produced from the same or different materials. In this embodiment, the inner material will transmit light without absorbing the light. These configurations generally allow optical energy, or light, generated by the light source 126 to travel through the tube 106 and exit both the tip 118 of the tube 106 and the tip 140 of the sleeve. In such embodiments, light energy is emitted from the optical therapy device 100 and absorbed by the tissue within the body cavity (e.g., nasal cavity of the patient's nose).
The optical emitter 128 of the light source 126 is generally in electrical communication with leads 132. The optical emitter 128 can be adapted to extend in a direction that transverses an axis of the light source 126. As will be appreciated, the optical emitter 128 schematically represents only one embodiment of the light emitting portion of the hand piece 102 and light source 126. Optical emitter 128 (e.g., the light emitting portion of the light source 126) can be made from any of a variety of materials known to those of skill in the art; in cases where the optical emitter 128 represents a wire-filament type light source, the optical emitter 128 can include tungsten.
In embodiments where the light source 126 includes a gas-filled tube, such gases may include xenon, helium, argon, mercury, or mercury vapor, or a combination thereof, in order to produce a desired spectral output.
Although the optical emitter 128 of the light source 126 is shown at the distal end 124 of the hand piece 102, in other embodiments, the optical emitter 128 is positioned closer to the proximal end 112 of the hand piece 102. By moving the optical emitter 128 proximal with respect to the tip 118 of the tube 106, heat generated by the light source 126 may be at least partially separated from the tube 106, thereby lessening thermal communication with the patient's tissues.
Heat generated by the light source 126 may be removed from the optical therapy device 100 by any of a variety of methods and devices known to those of skill in the art. For example, in one embodiment, heat is directed away from the hand piece 102 by convection or conduction. In other embodiments, active cooling devices, such as thermo-electric coolers or fans may be employed. Alternatively, or in addition, passive cooling structures, such as heat fins, heat conductors and/or cooling tubes may be used to remove heat from the optical therapy device 100.
In one embodiment, the light source 126 includes a solid state light emitter (e.g., an LED or laser diode module) and the light source 126 is positioned at or near the distal end 116 of the tube 106 instead of within the hand piece 102.
In another embodiment, the light source 126 includes a solid state emitter and a mercury vapor lamp (or other analog-type light source that emits ultraviolet light as described above). Such combinations may be useful to provide light of multiple wavelengths or intensities that correspond to select spectral peaks. Multiple solid state emitters may be employed to achieve the same or similar results. Additionally, a visible light solid state emitter is combined with a mercury vapor or halogen lamp to enhance wavelengths in the visible light region can be used. Alternatively, an array of solid state emitters may be arranged on an integrated circuit layout to produce spectral output that can be continuous or semi-continuous depending upon the wavelength, number and bandwidth of each emitter.
The tube 106 may include a soft coating on its outside surface 138. A soft coating, such as a polymer, rubber, or fluid-filled jacket, provides a comfortable interface between the outside surface 138 of the reflecting tube 106 and the patient's nose. In addition, the reflecting tube 106 may include one or more filters along its length. A filter can be positioned within the reflecting tube 106 near its proximal end 112 or near its distal end 116. The filter may function as a lens if cut into an appropriate shape and placed at the distal end 116 of the reflecting tube 106. One such optical filter well known to those of skill in the art is manufactured by Schott and includes glass optimized for absorption at certain wavelengths.
The light source 126 typically is about 10% to about 15% efficient. The light source or combinations of light sources 126 can be configured to generate about 10 mW to about 100 mW of optical power. The light source can be configured to dissipate between about 10 W to about 20 W of power in order to generate about 10 mW to about 100 mW of optical power. Excess heat is typically dissipated so that the optical therapy device 100 does not overheat, and/or so that the patient does not experience discomfort during its use.
Heat transfer control may become increasingly important when the optical therapy device 100 includes a light source 126 that is located near the distal end 116 of the tube 106 (e.g., heat may be closer to the patient's tissue). For example, where the light source 126 is a mercury vapor light source, heat is generated near the output portion 130 where the mercury plasma is generated. Since, in this embodiment, most of the light generated is non-blackbody radiation, very little heat is generated as photons propagate towards the distal end 116 of the tube 106 and enter the tissue of the patient. Therefore, in such embodiments, heat transfer mechanisms are generally confined to the output portion 130 of the light source 126, close to where the light is generated.
In one embodiment, a fan is used to transfer heat or to remove heat from the optical therapy device 100. The fan may be configured to surround at least a portion of the output portion 130 of the light source 126 or the entire light source 126 itself. Thus, the fan may surround the light source 126, or a portion thereof, in an annular fashion, and can direct heat away from the light source 126 and away from the patient via convection.
Alternatively, a heat tube is placed around the light source 126 and the heat tube directs heat away from the patient towards the proximal end 112 of the hand piece 102. At the proximal end 112 of the optical therapy device 100, heat may be released into the environment. The heat tube can be configured to terminate in a structure optimized for heat transfer into the surrounding environment, for example, cooling fins. Alternatively, or in combination, in another embodiment, a fan is provided at the proximal end 112 of the optical therapy device 100 and at the proximal end of the heat tube. The fan provides active convection to carry heat away from the optical therapy device 100.
A controller 136 can also be provided that is adapted to control the power output from the power supply 110 so that the light source 126 is activated for a predetermined time period. The controller 136 may include a switching mechanism that is controlled external to the device. Such external control may be implemented by any of a variety of mechanisms, such as, for example, a radio frequency communicator. The controller 136 helps avoid misuse or overuse of the optical therapy device 100. The controller 136 may also allow optimization to be carried out by the physician prescribing the device. In another embodiment, the controller 136 provides for preset dose quantity and frequency. These parameters can be set by the patient's physician, controller, a nurse, caregiver, patient, or other individual, or may be set according to prescription set forth by clinician.
The optical therapy device 100 can be adapted to include software (not shown) to control the dosage of optical energy to a patient. Thus, the energy, power, intensity, and/or fluence of the optical output may be adjusted. Thereafter, adjustments and settings may be saved within or loaded onto the optical therapy device 100 to correspond to the requirements of a particular patient, or clinical result.
The treatment dose can be configured to include timing controls. Timing controls may include the amount of time the light source 126 of the optical therapy device 100 may be activated for a treatment. Timing controls include pulsing parameters, such as pulse width, timing of optical pulses, or relative sequence of pulses of light emitted from one or multiple light sources 126. Thus, the light source 126 can be adapted to provide continuous (non-pulsed) optical output, and the timing controls include the duration of treatment, the time between treatments, and the number of treatments allowed in a specified time period, for example, one day.
As described with respect to
The optical therapy device 100 may be used to treat or diagnose any of a variety of diseases. In one embodiment, the optical therapy device 100, is used to modulate immune or inflammatory activity at an epithelial or mucosal surface. Different immune and/or inflammatory reactions may be treated with combinations of ultraviolet and/or white light. In one embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 is used to treat allergic rhinitis, chronic allergic sinusitis, hay fever, as well as other immune-mediated mucosal diseases. In addition, the optical therapy device 100 may be used to treat any symptom associated with such conditions, such as sneezing, rhinorrhea, palate itching, ocular itching, congestion, and/or nasal itching. Kemeny et. al. describe the use of local ultraviolet light to treat allergic rhinitis in US Patent Publication Nos. 20040030368 and 20040204747. Ultraviolet light allows for the treatment of disorders such as allergic rhinitis without having to resort to systemically absorbed drugs with their related systemic side effects. Intranasal light therapy (rhinophototherapy) is also potentially an improvement over intranasal steroids because the light can instantly penetrate instantly through the mucosa in the spot where the light is directed, resulting in apoptosis of inflammatory cells. Intranasal steroids do not penetrate immediately into the nasal mucosa and furthermore, when they are applied to the nasal cavity, the steroid dose is difficult to consistently apply because some of the dose is swallowed and some is washed away in the mucus flow. Phototherapy, and specifically ultraviolet light therapy, has the ability to penetrate through the mucosa instantaneously and effect cellular changes. In some embodiments, the optical therapy device also diagnoses disease in combination with therapeutic delivery or alone without therapy.
In other embodiments, the optical therapy device 100 is used to directly treat microbial pathogens or non-pathogens, such as fungi, parasites, bacteria, viruses that colonize, infect, or otherwise inhabit epithelial and/or mucosal surfaces. For example, patients with chronic sinusitis frequently have fungal colonization or a frank infectious process leading to the disease process. One clinical advantage of utilizing ultraviolet light to eradicate infections is that it avoids problems associated with antibiotic resistance. Antibiotic resistance is becoming an increasingly difficult problem to contend with in the medical clinic. In particular, patients with sinusitis generally undergo multiple courses of antibiotic therapy, which is typically ineffective. Antibiotic therapy is typically ineffective because the chronic nature of the sinuses in chronic sinusitis leads to production of a biofilm, which by its nature can prevent antibiotics from reaching the sinuses. Adjunctive phototherapy is another weapon in the armamentarium against microbes.
In some disease states, patients are allergic to allergens shed by microbes, such as in allergic fungal sinusitis. Microbes, and in particular fungi, are particularly sensitive to light with wavelengths ranging from 250 nm to 290 nm. At these wavelengths, the light directly affects the cellular macromolecules and can, for example, crosslink and/or dimerize DNA. Although the 250-290 nm wavelength light may be useful to injure or destroy pathogens, light having higher wavelengths (e.g., 300-450 nm) can also lead to cellular injury, albeit at higher optical powers. Ultraviolet light in the range 150-250 nm can also be used to destroy pathogens.
When combined with other chemicals or pharmaceuticals (e.g., moieties), light of different wavelengths can be used to treat pathogens. Such therapy, generally referred to as photodynamic therapy, allows almost any wavelength of light to be used to cause a biologic effect. This is because the light is absorbed by the moiety, which causes a toxic effect. The moiety can be chosen based upon its absorption characteristics, the light wavelength, or molecular specificity.
In some cases, the moiety or chemical entity resides in or around an epithelialized surface. For example, ultraviolet light can induce oxygen to become ozone, which can spontaneously release a toxic oxygen radical. The toxic oxygen radical can injure or destroy the pathogens.
Another FDA approved and widely used photodynamic therapy is 5-aminolevulinic acid which is a photosensitizer with an absorption maximum at 630 nm and which generates oxygen free radicals upon light exposure. More recently, photodynamic moieties have become increasingly complex and can include nanoparticles, such as those described by Loo, et al. in Nanoshell-Enabled Photonics-Based Imaging and Therapy of Cancer, 3(1) Technol Cancer Res Treat 33-40 (February 2004). Nanoparticle-based therapy systems allow for wavelength tuning so that the wavelength of maximal absorption can be customized to the application. Nanoparticles also allow for surface modifications so that the particle can target a specific tissue and then when the light focuses on that particular region, the specifically targeted nanoparticle will absorb the specific wavelength of light; therefore, regional specificity as well as wavelength specificity can be achieved with one particle. It is possible that the moieties resonate in response to specific frequencies (e.g., on-off frequency as opposed to electromagnetic frequency) in addition to wavelengths so that certain particles are activated when the optical therapy device deliver light of specific wavelength and with a specific on-off frequency.
When it is desired to treat microbes at epithelial or mucosal surfaces, such as the sinuses, an optical therapy device 100, including a mercury vapor lamp light source 126, may be utilized. Such a light source 126 generally emits light primarily at a 254 nm wavelength, which can destroy bacteria, fungi, viruses, and even fungal spores (discussed above). In other embodiments, an array (e.g., one or more) of light emitting diodes (LEDs) or laser diode modules is used. The array emits light (typically in the ultraviolet C and short wavelength ultraviolet B regimes) at one or more wavelengths selected to destroy polynucleotides (e.g., DNA and/or RNA), cell membranes, and/or proteins of the pathogens. In other embodiments, LEDs are used in photodynamic therapy and activate the moiety to exert its biologic effect.
An optical therapy system 200 is illustrated in
Computer coupling 206 may include any wired or wireless computing connection, including a Bluetooth™, infrared (e.g., IR), radiofrequency (e.g., RF), or IEEE 802.11 (a)-, (b)-, or (g)-standard connection. Control unit 202 and computer 204 may form a network within which multiple computers 204 or computing devices, or control units 202 may be included.
In one embodiment, control unit 202 is connected to a power supply via a power cord 208. Control unit 202 also generally includes a display 210, a keypad 212, controls 214, and a cradle 216. Display 210 may include a screen or other output device, such as indicators, lights, LEDs, or a printer. The display 210 can be a touch screen that includes touch controls to control the parameters of the optical therapy device 100. Controls 214 include any of a variety of input devices, including knobs, levers, switches, dials, buttons, etc. Cradle 216 can be adapted to receive the hand piece 102 of the optical therapy device 100 when not in use. Such a cradle 216 may furthermore be configured to provide electrical power (e.g., a rechargeable battery) to the hand piece of the optical therapy device 100 and/or control signals. Power coupling 114 may not be provided, or may be provided via the cradle 216 through electrical contacts. The cradle 216 can be adapted to include an optical detector, such as a photodiode, which can provide an indication of the output or strength of the optical light source 126 and can provide for calibration of the optical therapy device 100 over time.
An optical therapy device 100, in accordance with another embodiment of the present invention, is illustrated in
Although the multiple light sources 126 of
An optical therapy device 100 in accordance with yet another embodiment of the present invention, is illustrated in
The cooling sleeve may be made from any of a variety of thermally conductive materials, including aluminum, copper, steel, stainless steel, etc. In addition, the cooling sleeve may be filled with a thermally conductive material or a cooling material such as water, alcohol, Freon®, Dowtherm™ A (a eutectic mixture of biphenyl ether and diphenyl oxide, used for heat transfer), etc. For higher temperature lamps, the cooling fluid could include sodium, silver, and others materials as are generally well-known in the art. In one embodiment, heat diffuser 502 includes cooling fins to increase its surface area. Increased surface area of the heat diffuser 502 provides efficient cooling for the light source 126 of the optical therapy device 100. The thermal interface 504 and/or heat sink 502 may be made from any of a variety of thermally conductive materials, including metals, such as aluminum, copper, steel, stainless steel, etc. The rounded surface of the thermal interface 504 protects the user and his or her hand from sharp or jagged edges of the heat sink 502. The thermal interface 504 can further be perforated to allow for convective flow from the heat sink 502.
Cooling sleeve can be configured from a series of cooling pipes, or heat pipes 500, as is well-known in the art, such as those illustrated in
A cross-sectional view of optical therapy device 100, taken along line 4B-4B, is illustrated in
In another embodiment, such as illustrated in
An optical therapy device 100 in accordance with another embodiment of the present invention is illustrated in
In addition to the light source components and configurations discussed above, an optical guidance system may be used to transmit or guide the light generated by the light source 126 located in the hand piece 102 to the distal tip.
Since the majority of heat generated by the light source 126 is generated at the light source's distal end, heat pipes 500 are used to remove the heat therefrom. Thus, for example, when the light source 126 includes a double-bore mercury vapor lamp, optical emitter 128 is a double-bore quartz capillary tube. Mercury vapor lamps typically generate heat at their cathode and anode, which are generally located at the ends of the inner capillary tube. Therefore, in some embodiments, heat is generated primarily at the ends of the inner capillary tube. When light source 126 consists of LEDs, optical emitter 128 is the chip array or package used to create light, such as solid state light. Heat generated at the circuitry may be carried away from the distal end 116 by heat pipes 500. In the case when light source 126 is an LED or a combination of LEDs, the heat generation from the conversion from electricity to light is minimal, or less significant; however, significant heat can be generated in the circuitry—especially when several LEDs are used in combination. For example, 10 mW of LED power in the UV spectrum at less than 1% efficiency can generate several Watts of heat. Heat pipes (e.g. Thermacore International, Lancaster, Pa.) can transfer up to 10 Watts of heat at less than a 5 degree temperature change between two ends (e.g. one end in a body cavity and the other in the hand of a patient) located at 15 cm apart where the pipe is made of copper and its diameter is between 5 and 7 mm in diameter. In such and other cases, heat pipes 500 including heat conduction rods produced from materials that have good thermal conductivity, such as aluminum, copper, steel, stainless steel, etc., may be used.
Heat pipes 500 generally run parallel to the light source 126 along the axial length of the optical therapy device 100. Heat is transmitted, or is conducted, through the heat pipes 500 to the heat sink, as discussed in greater detail above. In other embodiments, heat pipes 500 are circumferentially wrapped around the light source 126 or tube 106.
Heat is carried from the light source 126 through the heat pipes 500 to the heat sink 502 located at the proximal end 112 of the hand piece 102. In one embodiment, heat is dissipated from the housing or hand piece 102 through a heat sink 502 (which may include cooling fins), after which the heat exits hand piece 102 via a thermal interface 504.
A cross-sectional view of optical therapy device 100 taken along line 7B-7B is illustrated in
Because LEDs are efficient light generators and because they emit a relatively narrow band of light, they generate very little heat and can therefore be positioned at the distal end of the probe 107 and can be placed directly into a patient's or user's body cavity. Because of the size of the mLEDs and uLEDs and their minimal heat creation, they can be placed directly into the body cavity of interest without an optical guidance system and with minimal heat transfer requirement from the device. Thus, an optical guidance system may not be required for the ultraviolet light portion of the action spectrum of the optical therapy device 100.
Such components and designs considerably simplify the device 100 in terms of the logistics of the therapy and ultimately the cost of the device 100, particularly to the physician. The optical portion (e.g., the LED chipset) can even be placed at the end of a catheter, endoscope, or laparoscope and inserted into the body cavity of interest. In this case, the probe portion between the handle 102 and the light source 126 can be a long flexible catheter, endoscope, or laparoscope, etc. The probe portion in this embodiment is merely a structural element to allow control of the light source 126 at the distal end of the device and deliver power to the distal end of the device. The LED chipset at the end of the device 100 provides the efficient light generation relative to heat output and can minimize unwanted wavelengths in the spectrum. In some embodiments, the LEDs chipset at the end of the catheters, endoscopes, and laparoscopes deliver only white for the purpose of visualization. In other embodiments, the LEDs deliver therapeutic optical energy to a body region as discussed in many of the embodiments above. Persons of skill in the art would be familiar with the structure and design of catheters. See, e.g., More detailed information on the configurations of catheters is contained in U.S. Pat. No. 6,355,027 to Le et al. for Flexible Microcatheter; U.S. Pat. No. 6,733,487 to Keith et al. for Balloon Catheter with Distal Guide Wire Lumen.
The spectral output of the device 100 of
It is also possible to mount the surface mounted wLEDs directly on the same chip platform as the mLEDs (e.g., at the level D-D in
Such a device is also more portable and practical for a medical practitioner or patient because the ultraviolet generating light source is directly inside the body cavity or is positioned directly on, in or adjacent the body surface. This arrangement of LEDs also can obviate the need for a complex heat transfer system within the optical therapy device or in a table top box as in U.S. Publication Nos. 2004/0204747 and 2004/0030368 to Kemeny et al. Although,
In some embodiments, the mLEDs and uLEDs can be placed at the end of a flexible device (e.g., a catheter, endoscope, ureteroscope, hysterocope, laryngoscope, bronchoscope) to enter body cavities or body lumens and deliver ultraviolet light without guiding the light from one place to another. For example, the mLEDs and uLEDs can be placed at the end of a catheter or an endoscope to treat the lumen of an internal organ. In some embodiments, the LEDs are placed inside a balloon inside a body cavity. In these embodiments, the mLEDs can include wavelengths in the visible to infrared, or from the ultraviolet to visible, or combinations of wavelengths from the ultraviolet to the infrared. Other scopes, including, but not limited to, colonoscopes, thoracoscopes, and/or laparoscopes, can also be used, depending upon the location of the target site to be accessed. Additional information pertaining to manufacture, operation and design of various types of scopes would be known to those skilled in the art and is available in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,478,730 entitled Zoom Laparoscope (Bala et al.); U.S. Pat. No. 6,387,044 entitled Laparascope Apparatus (Tachibana et al.); U.S. Pat. No. 6,494,897 entitled Method and System for Performing Thoracoscopic Cardiac Bypass Surgery (Sterman et al.); U.S. Pat. No. 6,964,662 entitled Endoscopic Forceps Instrument (Kidooka); U.S. Pat. No. 6,967,673 entitled Electronic Endoscope System with Color-Balance Alteration Process (Ozawa et al.).
There are any number of disease states which can be treated with devices where LEDs are placed at the point of therapeutic application and on devices which can be delivered into body cavities, surfaces, and/or lumens. One example is treatment of infected indwelling catheters and implants. For example, indwelling vascular catheters often become infected and have to be removed at a very high cost to the patients and health care system. A system of mUV LEDs or uLEDs which emit light in the wavelength range of about 250 nm to about 400 nm at the region of infection would eradicate infection within the catheters and obviate or delay the need to remove the catheters and replace them.
In the illustrated embodiment, the optical therapy device 734 is externally coupled to the medical instrument 732. Clips 740 can be used in one embodiment to attach the optical system 734 to the medical instrument 732; however, any attachment device (for example, a sheath which slides on the medical instrument 732) can be used to couple the optical therapy device 734 to the medical instrument 732. Other examples include a band, ring, annulus, o-ring, snap, wire, cord, string, adhesive, tape, weld, lock, pin and/or tie can be used for coupling. The clips 740 allow the medical instrument 732 and optical system 734 of the optical therapy device 730 to be manipulated and controlled together and/or in tandem When the optical therapy device is used in nasal phototherapy, the diameter of the medical instrument 732 and the optical therapy system 734 will typically not exceed about 1 cm, though the diameter of the instrument and therapy device combination in some embodiments may not exceed 8 mm and in other embodiments, will not exceed 6 mm, and is still other embodiments, will not exceed 3 mm. Where the device is applied to the patient's nasal cavity, the body or insertion member can be configured such that it is not longer than about 20 cm, 30 cm, or about 50 cm. Thus, with this configuration, the therapy device is sized and configured for portability such that it fits compactly within a suitcase or bag.
The optical therapy device 734 can include a link 742 that extends from the proximal end 744 of the optical therapy device 734 to its distal end 746 (which is also the distal end 738 of the medical instrument 732). The link 742 can conduct electrical and/or optical energy from a source 743 at the optical therapy device's proximal end 744 to the tip 736 located at the optical therapy device's distal end 746.
The source 743 can include a light source or an electrical energy source. When the source 743 is a light source located at the proximal end 744 of the optical therapy device 734, the link 742 conducts optical energy from the source 743 to the tip 736. The optical energy is then emitted from the tip 736 to tissue inside of the patient's body. When the source 743 is an electrical energy source located at the proximal end 744 of the optical therapy device 730, the link 742 conducts electrical energy from the source to a light source at the tip 736. The link 742 can include an optical guide, such as an optical guide tube, a light pipe, an articulating arm, a fiber optic, a fiber optic bundle and/or any other device capable of conducting optical energy. Additionally, the link 742 can include an electrical conduit, such as a wire, cable, or conductor, which can be shielded and/or insulated.
In some cases the source 743 is an electrical energy source located at the proximal end 744 of the optical therapy device 734, and a light source is located at the distal end 746, at the tip 736. In such cases, the link 742 includes at least one conductor extending from the electrical energy source to the light source. The light source can include ultraviolet light emitting diodes (UV LEDs), white LEDs, infrared LEDs (IR LEDs), any other light source known to those of skill in the art, including those described in greater detail above, and/or a combination of any of the above.
In other cases, the source 743 is a light source at the proximal end 744 of the optical therapy device 734 and the link 742 includes an optical cable, such as a fiber optic bundle. In such cases, light is carried by the link 742 from the light source to the tip 746 at the distal end 746 of the optical therapy device 734. In any case, the tip 736 can include a spectral conditioner to modify the shape, pattern, dispersion, focus, geometry, output, scatter, etc. of the light source output.
In yet other cases, the optical therapy device 734 includes a light source and an electrical energy source, and both are located at or near the distal end 746, for example, in the tip 736. In such cases, the optical therapy device 734 might not include a link 742 and/or clips 740 and there may only be one clip at the distal end of the medical instrument 730. One embodiment of such an optical therapy device 734 is described below with respect to
As illustrated in
Although the medical instrument 732 in the embodiment of
The optical therapy device 734 can be adapted to couple to a flexible medical instrument 732 (as illustrated in
The mount 754 can be made from any of a variety of materials, including stainless steel, plastic, rubber, metal or a combination of materials. The mount 754 has a diameter of about 10 mm, but can have a diameter of about 5 mm cm or about 1 mm depending on the application.
The light elements 754 can be electrically powered light emitting devices, such as lamps or LEDs, including UV LEDs, white LEDs, and/or IR LEDs. The light elements 754 can also be the distal ends of fiber optic cables or light guide cables coupled to a light source at their proximal ends. Any number of light elements 754 can be provided with the optical therapy device 752. In some cases, 6, 12, 18, 24, or 30 light elements 754 are provided.
The mount 754 can have any desired shape or configuration. In the illustrated embodiment, the mount 754 has an annular shape, forming a ring of light elements 754 about its distal end. However, the mount 754 can also be elliptical, circular, square, or have an irregular or flexible form, for example, to conform to the space into which it is to be inserted. In some cases, the mount 754 is merely a single light element 754 holder that attaches to the distal end of a medical device. Any number of such mounts 754 can be provided.
When the optical therapy device 752 is attached to the distal end of a medical instrument 764 (as shown in the cross sectional view of
The angle 758 can be selected so the light beams emitted from each of the light elements 756 of the optical therapy device 752 converge at a focal point 766 located along the longitudinal axis 762 a predetermined distance 768 from the distal end of the optical therapy device 752. In some cases, angles 758 of the light elements 756 are not all the same, and the focal point 766 is not located along the longitudinal axis 762 of the optical therapy device 752. In some embodiments, the light emitted from the light elements 756 do not converge and each light element 756 is directed in a different direction. Nonetheless, the light elements 756 in this embodiment, emit light in a direction controlled by the underlying topography of the distal end of the optical therapy device 752. Such light delivery is efficiently delivered to the body cavity in this embodiment without the need for a more complex and expensive ultraviolet light delivery and lensing system
The optical therapy device 752 can be permanently, semi-permanently, or removably attached to the distal end of an elongate body 764 of a medical instrument 764. Any of a variety of mechanisms well known to those of skill in the art can be used to couple the optical therapy device 752 to the medical instrument 764, including threads, friction, a pin, adhesive, a weld, a compression fit, a snap fit, or any other suitable mechanism.
The optical therapy device 752 can be mounted flush with the distal end of the medical instrument 764, or it can extend distally past the distal end of the medical instrument 764 (as shown in
In the optical therapy device 100 illustrated in
In some embodiments, tip 902 can be flexible and may include a hinge (not shown) and/or a flexible material so that angle 900 can be adjusted by the practitioner. A light source 126 or combinations of light sources 126 can be placed anywhere along tube 106 as described above. The light source 126 can also reside in hand piece 102, as described above. Tube 106 can also contain an optical fiber bundle or it can be hollow and configured to reflect light, as discussed above. Furthermore, depending on the light source 126 selected, the tube 106 can be configured to transfer heat from the light source 126, as described above.
Similarly, as illustrated in
The distal length 904 of the distal segment 902 may be varied as clinically required, as illustrated in
An optical therapy device 100 in accordance with yet another embodiment of the present invention is illustrated in
The compression balloon 906 can be configured from an optically transparent material; for example, a material which is transparent to ultraviolet light. Examples of transparent materials include certain formulations of PVDF as can be found in Japanese Patent No 01241557 to Akira et al. (Bando Chem Ind Ltd) for Pellicle Film; certain fluoropolymers such as fluorinated ethylene propylene (FEP) produced by Zeus Inc; certain derivatives of Teflon (e.g., Teflon®-AF produced by DuPont); certain formulation of silicone; and/or certain elastomeric formulations of silicone dioxide. The balloon may be compliant or non-compliant and may have single, double or multiple lumens.
The compression balloon 906 may be inflated by passing a fluid, liquid, gas, or a combination through an inflation lumen 908 from the hand piece 102 to the compression balloon 906. The compression balloon 906 may be deflated in a similar matter.
The reflecting tube 106 of the optical therapy device 100 may include more than one distal segment 902 such as is illustrated in
In another embodiment, the distal segments 902 are flexible so that the relative spacing 903 between the distal segments 902 may be adjusted to accommodate the anatomy of particular patients. Incorporating more than one distal segment 902 can be highly beneficial in the clinical setting since the total amount of time the patient spends receiving the optical therapy may be reduced. This results in improved patient compliance because of the decreased treatment times.
In one embodiment, the distal segments 902 are parallel to one another although in other embodiments, they are not. In one embodiment, each distal segment is oriented at an angle with respect to the axis of the reflecting tube 106. For example, in one embodiment, distal segment 902 projects at an angle between about 1 and 15 degrees with respect to the axis of the reflecting tube 106.
In the distal segments 902, flexibility may be achieved by forming the distal segment 902 from a flexible material. For example, the distal segment 902 may be manufactured from a polymer coated in rubber or a thin metal sleeve coated in rubber or other flexible coating. In other embodiments, the optical therapy device 100 (such as the optical therapy device illustrated in
An optical therapy device 100, in accordance with another embodiment of the present invention, is illustrated in
In one embodiment, the rotational member 910 is shaped to focus the light from the light source 126 to the aperture 912 of the rotational member 910. The rotational member 910 is, in one embodiment, substantially non-transmissive and substantially reflects all of the light emitted by the light source 126 to the aperture 912. By rotating within the nose, the rotational member 910 is able to provide the light from the light source 126 through the aperture 912 to the soft tissue of the inside of the nose or other body cavity in a circumferential manner.
In one embodiment, adjustment angle 916 may be adjusted between an angle of about 0 and about 60 degrees with respect to the reflecting tube 106. In another embodiment, the adjustment angle is between about 10 and 30 degrees.
The inside surface of the adjustable light guides 914 are generally reflective or covered with a reflective material so that light emitted from the light source 126 reflects off the adjustable light guides onto the tissue on the insider surface of the nose. The outside surface of the adjustable light guide is generally covered with a nonabrasive material or coating that is comfortable to a user when inserted inside or his or her nose.
An optical therapy device 100, in accordance with yet another embodiment of the present invention, is illustrated in
The apertures 916 may be between 0.1 and 1 mm in diameter, or may be between 0.5 and 2 mm in diameter. The apertures 916 may be spaced between 0.5 to 1.0 mm, or between 1 to 3 mm from one another. In one embodiment, the distal end 116 of the tube 106 includes at least four apertures. In another embodiment, tube 106 includes between two and ten apertures. In another embodiment, tube 106 includes greater than ten apertures. Apertures 916 allow light emitted from light source 126 to escape from the insider of the tube 106 and enter the patient's nose. In this embodiment, light is emitted through the apertures 916 of the reflecting tube 106 in a longitudinal fashion (e.g., along the length of the tube) rather than at a distal end alone.
Another embodiment of a method of using the devices disclosed herein is used to treat transplanted organs. Current treatment for organ rejection is hospitalization and administration of pharmaceuticals directed to the destruction of T cells. OKT3 is a monoclonal antibody directed toward CD3 positive cells, a subset of T cells. T cells orchestrate the acute and sub-acute rejection processes seen in organ rejection. Antibodies which destroy the T cells can quell the rejection process. As noted above, ultraviolet light can specifically affect T cell viability and can therefore be used to treat organ rejection.
In another embodiment (not shown), an indwelling vascular graft is placed in the aorta or peripheral vessels or is used in dialysis. Similar to the case of indwelling vascular catheters, indwelling vascular conduits often become infected and lead to substantial morbidity and mortality in patients. A catheter based system to deliver ultraviolet light sterilizing therapy to treat infected indwelling grafts would be highly beneficial and may obviate or delay the need to remove these implants. Implanted vascular conduits such as dialysis grafts also become occluded secondary to a process called restenosis or intimal hyperplasia. This is a similar process to that seen in smaller vessels such as coronary arteries when a device such as a stent is placed. Because of the anti-proliferative properties of UV light (see Perree, et al., UVB-Activated Psoralen Reduces Luminal Narrowing After Balloon Dilation Because of Inhibition of Constrictive Remodeling, 75(1) Photochem. Photobiol. 68-75), a device carrying LEDs can be used at the region of the lesion to treat the lesion and prevent the process of restenosis or intimal hyperplasia.
The mLED device 500 appears (on the outside) the same as LED device 500 of
The total optical power provided by the LED devices 500 of
An LED chip 504 can be a cluster of multiple chips (otherwise referred to as a chipset) located on a platform 506, as shown in
The LED chip or chips 504 can include about 1-5 LED chips, about 5-10 LED chips, about 11-20 chips, or greater than about 20 chips. The electrical power to each chip can be controlled independently by one or more of the leads 511 of
Thus, it is possible to integrate such packaged LED chips (e.g., mLEDs) into a medical device to perform phototherapy to treat diseases (as discussed above and below) with a defined or pre-selected set of wavelengths and power outputs from an LED package 502. The single and multi-chip packages 502 shown in
The package size of the wLEDs may be in the range of about 3 mm to about 4 mm, about 2.5 to about 5 mm, or about 2 to about 6 mm. The size of a wLED package is often smaller than that of a uLED package. In addition, at least three fully packaged wLEDs can fit into an area of about 1-2 cm in diameter. White light may therefore be less expensive in terms of size and cost. In addition, white light is often more easily transmitted through optical guidance systems.
In other embodiments, LED chips are packaged as surface mounts (SMTs) (such as those available from Nichia Corporation, Southfield, Mich.), which may be produced in sizes as small as about 1-3 mm, about 2-5 mm, about 0.5-3.5 mm, or smaller than about 3 mm diameter and having white light power outputs from about 1 mW to about 100 mW. Surface mounts can be placed directly in the LED package 502 (package within a larger package) shown in
In one embodiment, an ultraviolet LED, or uLED, is used without an optical guidance system. The uLED may be placed at the end of a probe that is inserted into a body cavity. An internal body cavity includes the nasal cavity, sinuses, tracheobronchial tree and any of the cavities mentioned above; also included, are cavities, such as the chest, and organs, such as the heart or lungs. The term probe is intended to have its ordinary meaning, and in addition can mean any device, including any of the devices 100 described herein. The probe may emit one wavelength of ultraviolet light (e.g., one narrow band, such as may be emitted by an uLED) or it can emit several wavelengths (e.g., peaks) of ultraviolet light (e.g., such as emitted by the MLED described above). The probe can also combine several wavelength peaks from the white light spectrum or it can combine a phosphor-based white light LED system as described above to produce almost any pattern of spectrum. The probe can also be used to cure adhesive compositions inside the body.
In this embodiment, the probe (and light) are brought very close to the treatment area, which has many beneficial effects in treating disease. The probe being close to the treatment area also creates a very beneficial economic effect in the sense that light therapy is generated at the point of use rather than being generated away from the point of use and then transported to the point of use. Often times, the light-transport mechanism is highly inefficient and costly particularly in the shorter wavelength (e.g. ultraviolet) regimes. Light generation at the point of use also facilitates providing a device that is disposable after one or several uses.
Although the optical therapy device 100 is illustrated and described herein as used for treating a patient's nose 300, the optical therapy device 100 may be adapted to treat any of a variety of cavities, surfaces, portions, or organs of the human or animal body. For example, in one embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 is adapted to treat the skin, or to be inserted into and treat tissue within the mouth, ear, vagina, stomach, esophagus, small intestine, bladder, renal pelvis, rectum and/or colon. For example, the optical therapy device 100 may be used to reduce inflammation within any mucosa of the body.
Furthermore, the optical therapy device 100 may be inserted into a body cavity to treat the walls of an organ without entering the lumens of the organ or the organ itself. Such is the case, for example, when the optical therapy device 100 is placed inside the chest cavity to treat the lungs, heart, or the esophagus. Such is also the case when the optical therapy device 100 is placed inside of the abdominal cavity to treat the intestines, stomach, liver, or pancreas. The optical therapy device can be adapted for insertion through a laparoscope, hysteroscope, thoracoscope, endoscope, otoscope, bronchoscope, cystoscope, or cardioscope.
In one such embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 is used to treat the clinical disease state of diastolic heart failure. In diastolic heart failure, collagen deposition in between or in place of (as is the case of ischemic cardiomyopathy) the myocardial fibers lead to a decreased compliance of the myocardium and a failure of the myocardium to relax properly during diastole. Ultraviolet light therapy, specifically ultraviolet A (UVA) light therapy, can activate the native collagenase system in human skin and lead to an increased compliance in diseases such as scleroderma, as discussed in greater detail above. A similar collagenase system is present within the myocardium and if activated, can decrease the compliance of the myocardium with a similar mechanism as in the skin.
In one embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 is adapted to treat inflammation and/or infection of the gastrointestinal tract caused by any of a variety of conditions, such as, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis (inflammatory bowel diseases), C. difficile colitis, and/or esophagitis. In some embodiments, the optical therapy device 100 can ameliorate the internal consequences of T-cell-mediated diseases, such as autoimmune and collagen vascular diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosis, etc. In yet another embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 is adapted to be inserted into the vagina to treat any of a variety of conditions, including yeast infection, vaginitis, vaginosis, candidiasis, parasites, bacteria, and even an unwanted pregnancy. The optical therapy device 100 may be inserted within the ear, and deliver light to the external or internal auditory canals to reduce inflammation and/or infection therein. In yet another embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 may be provided to the bladder, kidney, ureter, and/or urethra to treat and/or reduce inflammation. The optical therapy device 100 may also be used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, or to reduce or eliminate herpetic lesions (e.g., cold sores) by decreasing viral shedding time and/or time to healing.
In yet another embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 is adapted for veterinary use. For example, in one embodiment, the optical therapy device 100 is adapted to be inserted inside the nose of an equine, such as a racehorse, to treat rhinitis, reduce inflammation, or treat any of the diseases of conditions described herein. Other animals may benefit from treatment with the optical therapy device 100, including domestic animals, such as dogs, cats, and rabbits, as well as exotic animals, such as cheetah, gorilla and panda.
Light is emitted from the distal end 708 of the elongate body 706 and a cavity expander or expander 710 is coupled to the distal end 708 of the elongate body 706. The expander 710 can include any suitable expanding and/or anchoring device, including a balloon, an anchor, a solid structure, a spring, a coil, a ball, a ring, an annulus, a ridge, or any other expanding and/or anchoring device known to those of skill in the art. In the illustrated embodiment, the expander 710 is an inflatable balloon. The terms expander and balloon may be used interchangeably in the description of the illustrated embodiment. Furthermore, although expander is used herein and has its ordinary meaning, the function of the expander is to position the phototherapy light in the nasal cavity so as to prevent therapeutic light from reaching some portions of the nasal cavity while preventing the therapeutic light from reaching other portions of the nasal cavity. The expander is one type of positioner; similarly, a nasal expander is a type of nasal positioner. Other methods and devices for positioning the phototherapeutic device in the nasal cavity exist and they may not require actual expansion. For example, the distal end of the phototherapeutic device can be shaped or angled for placement into the vestibule (see below), beyond the region of the limen, to illuminate the non-vestibular portion of the nasal cavity. The distal end can also contain an imaging element such as a CMOS or CCD chip or chipset which can assist in visualizing the anterior nasal cavity, preventing therapeutic light from reaching unintended regions. In the embodiment above where LED chips are placed at the distal end of the optical therapy device, the imaging chip can be included in the chipset. Alternatively, when the light sources are placed outside the nasal cavity, the imaging chips can be included in the optical therapy device for positioning.
The light emitted from the distal end 708 of the elongate body 706 is generated from a light source coupled to the elongate body. The light source can be proximal with respect to the housing such as handle 704, it can be within the handle 704, it can be within the elongate body 706, it can be at the distal end 708 of the elongate body 706, or anywhere else in communication with the elongate body 706 as described in any of the optical therapy devices embodiments described above. The light coming from the light source, therefore, can be generated within the nasal cavity 702 or can be generated outside of the nasal cavity 702. In the illustrated embodiment, light is transmitted from the distal end 708 of the elongate body 706 through the expander 710 to tissue inside the nasal cavity 702.
The expander 710 can include an inflatable, enlargeable, expandable and/or fillable balloon. In some cases, the elongate body 708 includes an inflation channel 712. The inflation channel 712 can be used to transfer gas or fluid into and out of the balloon to inflate or deflate, respectively. In some cases, the inflation channel 712 is a lumen or fluid transmission line located within the elongate body 706. In other cases, the inflation channel 712 is a tube or fluid transmission line that is at least partially externally located with respect to the elongate body 706.
Water, air, saline, a hydrogel, any material with sufficient viscosity to cause the balloon to conform to the anterior portion of the nasal cavity 702, and/or any combination of the above can be used to inflate the expander 710. In one embodiment, the expander 710 is made from silicone and is filled with water.
In some embodiments, the expander is not fillable and includes a compliant or semi-compliant material which can be reduced to a non-expanded state, placed in the nasal cavity, and then expanded to its expanded state. The expander 710 in this embodiment can be formed from a soft semi-compliant material such as foam, hydrogel, or any other such material known to those of skill in the art.
The expander 710 can be positioned at the distal end 708 of the elongate body 706 such that it extends proximally and distally with respect to the distal end 708. In some embodiments, such as that in
The nasal cavity 702 can be divided into a vestibular portion 714 which is separated from the remaining nasal cavity 716 (non-vestibular portion) at the limen 718 (Lang, J., Clinical Anatomy of the Nose, Nasal Cavity, and Paranasal Sinuses, pp. 31-55, 1989). The limen 718 marks the beginning of the respiratory epithelium, the vestibular portion being composed of squamous epithelium similar to the skin. The limen 718 separates the vestibular portion 714 from the non-vestibular portion of the nasal cavity.
The optical therapy device 700 is inserted into the nasal cavity 702 such that the expander 710 resides at least within the vestibular portion 714. When the expander 710 is inflated, or if not inflatable, when otherwise positioned and inserted into the nasal cavity 702, the expander 710 can wedge open the vestibular portion 714 of the nasal cavity 702, which does not have respiratory mucosa. In some embodiments, the expander 710 does not expand and is positioned within the nasal cavity 702 such that the therapeutic light reaches one portion the nasal cavity but shields another portion from the therapeutic light. For example, in one embodiment, light reaches the turbinates 719 but not the vestibular surface where there is no respiratory epithelium and which will have a very different response to the therapeutic light. The expander 710 can be filled or inflated prior to placement in the nose or after insertion into the nasal cavity 702.
The expander 710 of the optical therapy device 700 can hold the optical therapy device 700 in place while phototherapy is delivered to the nasal cavity 702 from the optical therapy device 700. Since the expander 710 is usually produced from a flexible or compliant material, such as a balloon, the optical therapy device 700 is able to pivot and change its orientation in the nasal cavity 702. In addition, the expander 710 allows the optical therapy device 700 distal end 708 to be manipulated within the nasal cavity 702 without mechanically irritating the sensitive soft tissue located at the region of the vestibule.
Further to the device depicted in
The atraumatic tip 726 can be made from a material which is optically transparent to the light emitted from the optical therapy device 700. In addition, the atraumatic tip 726 can be designed to scatter, focus, or otherwise condition the light exiting the optical therapy device 700 distal end, as desired. The atraumatic tip can have a smooth and/or soft surface so that it does not irritate the inside wall of the nasal cavity 702 when inserted and manipulated therein.
The expander 710 can be made from a completely opaque material so that it blocks light emitted from the optical therapy device from being absorbed by the epithelium of the nasal cavity 702 at the region where the expander 710 contacts the nasal tissue. As in the embodiment of
The expander 710 of the optical therapy device 700 is inflated so that it enters at least one of the paranasal sinuses 726 as well. In addition, the expander 710 provides a mechanical protection or insulation layer between the distal end of the optical therapy device 700 and the inside surface of the sinuses 726. The expander or balloon 710 is positioned to grip the sinus 726 ostium. The optical therapy device 700 can then be pivoted and/or manipulated with respect to the balloon 710 to direct light to different portions of the sinuses 726 while the expander wedges the device in the sinus, holding the device in place within the sinus. As discussed above, the expander is a positioner in some embodiments and does not have to expand tissue. The requirements for positioning may be different in the sinuses and therefore the distal tip of the device may include a drill (for example), anchor, chisel, dilator, mallet, or dilator in place of or in addition to a balloon.
The expander 710 can have opaque and transparent portions, as described above with respect to
The expander 770 is inserted into the nasal cavity 702 and positioned so that it is comfortable for the patient and protects the region of the nasal vestibule. As above, the expander 770 does not have to actually expand tissue but can act to position the device without expanding. The expander or positioner 770 is typically made from a soft elasomeric material, such as rubber, polymer, ePTFE, a hydrogel, or any other soft comfortable material. The expander 770 can have elastic properties so that it can expand to conform to the inside shape of the anterior portion of the nasal cavity 702. The inside surface of the expander 770 conforms to the outside surface of the optical therapy device 774. When attached (e.g., friction coupled), the expander 770 can block or filter light emitted from the optical therapy device 774 from being absorbed by the tissue in the vestibular portion of the nasal cavity 702. In addition, the expander 770 can act as a pivot about which the distal portion of the optical therapy device 774 can be manipulated, rotated, translated, and/or moved. As in the expanders and positioners described above, the expander protects the tissue of the nasal cavity 702 from the therapeutic light and mechanical irritation from the distal end of the optical therapy device 774.
In another embodiment, the vestibular region of the nasal cavity is protected from the therapeutic light by placing a light absorbing substance on the surface of the vestibule of the nasal cavity. One example is a sunscreen but any substance which is opaque to white light and/or ultraviolet light can be used to protect the vestibular region of the nasal cavity from the therapeutic light. The light absorbing substance can be applied with a medical instrument, can be applied with the optical therapy device itself, or can be applied with a nasal spray, syringe applicator, or a finger. In one embodiment, the light absorbing substance is applied to the optical therapy device and therefore is applied as the device is used.
Any of the above devices can be further applied to polymer curing applications internally or externally to a patient. The devices can also be used in any context with phosphors which change the effective wavelength of light. The devices can also be used as the light activating component of a photodynamic therapy, which also changes the effective wavelength desired by the optical device.
Any of the above devices can also be used in spectroscopic applications where light (specific wavelength and/or on-off frequency) is applied to a tissue and then an optical parameter from the tissue is measured in response to the light application. The sensor to detect the optical parameter can be incorporated into the optical therapy device or can be a separate instrument.
Red blood cells and platelets generally flow in the blood vessel's flow through lumen 430. The optical therapy device 100 is generally configured such that it has a lumen in its center for blood flow therethrough. The surface of the optical therapy device 100 is directed toward the outside of the vessel 432 wherein the white blood cells and the T cells flow over the surface of the device. With this device 100 positioned as illustrated in the cross-sectional view of
Kits can also be provided that are comprised of a components. For example, The optical therapy device 100 disclosed above can be provided with a plurality of sized tips, removable sheaths, etc. Thus, allowing a practitioner to reuse the device where clinically appropriate multiple times while adapting the device for use with a particular patient.
While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes, and substitutions will now occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the invention. It should be understood that various alternatives to the embodiments of the invention described herein may be employed in practicing the invention. It is intended that the following claims define the scope of the invention and that methods and structures within the scope of these claims and their equivalents be covered thereby.
Claims
1. An optical therapy device for providing therapeutic light to a body cavity, comprising:
- a housing adapted to be hand-held;
- one or more light sources positioned in or on said housing adapted to deliver up to 50 mW of UV light; and
- an insertion member having a distal end configured to be inserted into the body cavity to illuminate tissue in the body cavity with light from the light source when the distal end of the insertion member is positioned in the body cavity.
2. The optical therapy device of claim 1 wherein the light source is solid state.
3. The optical therapy device of claim 1 wherein the light source emits non-coherent light in a range from 250 nm to 279 nm.
4. The optical therapy device of claim 1 wherein the light source is adapted to provide substantially only UV light.
5. The optical therapy device of claim 1 wherein the light source is positioned at the distal end of the insertion member.
6. The optical therapy device of claim 1 wherein the insertion member is further adapted to transfer heat proximally when the light source is positioned at the distal end of the insertion member.
7. The optical therapy device of claim 1 wherein the body cavity is a nasal cavity.
8. The optical therapy device of claim 1 further comprising a power source disposed in or on the housing.
9. An optical therapy device for providing therapeutic light to a body cavity, comprising:
- an insertion member having a distal end configured to be inserted into the body cavity; and
- a UV light source at the distal end of the insertion member, wherein the insertion member is adapted to illuminate tissue in the body cavity with UV light when the distal end of the insertion member is positioned in the body cavity.
10. The optical therapy device of claim 9 wherein the light source is solid state.
11. The optical therapy device of claim 9 wherein the body cavity is a nasal cavity.
12. The optical therapy device of claim 9 wherein the insertion member comprises an expandable member adapted to expand within the body cavity.
13. The optical therapy device of claim 12 wherein the expandable member is adapted to be transparent to UV light.
14. The optical therapy device of claim 9 wherein the insertion member is further adapted to emit light into more than one body cavity simultaneously.
15. The optical therapy device of claim 9 wherein the insertion member is adapted to transfer heat away from the body cavity.
16. The optical therapy device of claim 9 wherein the light source comprises a plurality of LEDs.
17. The optical therapy device of claim 9 further comprising a controller adapted to connect a power source to the light source.
18. The optical therapy device of claim 17 wherein the light source comprises a plurality of light sources and the controller is adapted to separately address each of the light sources.
19. The optical therapy device of claim 9 further comprising a housing supporting the insertion member and a power source disposed in or on the housing, the power source being adapted to provide power to the light source.
20. A patient interface for an optical therapy device for providing therapeutic light to a body cavity, comprising:
- an insertion member having a distal end configured to be positioned within a body cavity to illuminate target tissue in the body cavity with UV light from a UV light source when the distal end of the insertion member is positioned in the body cavity, the insertion member having an alignment member adapted to align the insertion member within the cavity and a direction element adapted to direct light onto target tissue
21. The optical therapy device of claim 20 wherein the insertion member is adapted to bend light at an angle defined by the insertion member.
22. The optical therapy device of claim 20 wherein the insertion member is adapted to be flexible and to form a variable angle.
23. The optical therapy device of claim 20 wherein the insertion member is adapted to split into one or more elongate tubes.
24. The optical therapy device of claim 20 wherein the insertion member is adapted to be rigid with a fixed angle.
25. The optical therapy device of claim 21 wherein the insertion member is adapted to be at least partially transparent to UV light and at least partially covers one or more light sources.
26. The optical therapy device of claim 20 wherein the insertion \ member is adapted to partially absorb light from one or more light sources.
27. The optical therapy device of claim 20 wherein the insertion member is adapted to focus the light from the light source.
28. An optical therapy device for providing therapeutic light to a body cavity, comprising:
- an insertion member having a distal end configured to be inserted into the body cavity;
- a light source at the distal end of the insertion member and adapted to illuminate tissue in the body cavity when the distal end of the insertion member is positioned in the body cavity;
- the insertion member being further adapted to transfer heat proximally from the light source.
Type: Application
Filed: Jan 25, 2006
Publication Date: Aug 31, 2006
Inventors: Michael Gertner (Menlo Park, CA), Erica Rogers (Redwood City, CA)
Application Number: 11/340,824
International Classification: A61H 33/00 (20060101);