THERMOPLASTIC MEDICAL DEVICE
An medical device such as a guidewire or a catheter having a flexible elongate component which comprises a thermoplastic rigid rod polymer, which component may comprise a bundle of threads, a sleeve, a coil, a co-extrusion, a strut, or other suitable component.
Latest BOSTON SCIENTIFIC SCIMED, INC. Patents:
- Medical device and method of delivering the medical device
- Pancreatic stent with drainage feature
- Ureteroscope device and method for using of such a device
- Devices, systems, and methods for occluding an anatomical passage
- Methods for coupling device components and related devices having such components
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/811,277, filed Mar. 25, 2004.
FIELDThe present invention generally relates to medical devices. More particularly, the present invention relates to catheters comprising an improved material.
BACKGROUNDMedical devices often require a confluence of characteristics not readily achievable in a single device. For instance, in medical devices such as guidewires and catheters, the device is often navigated distally through a tortuous vascular system. This requires high levels of pushability, torqueability, and flexibility while retaining a narrow cross-sectional area. It is also desired to have a device which minimizes the trauma to the surrounding vessels. One way to minimize this trauma is through a soft distal tip. Other characteristics that are often desirable include MRI compatibility and radiopacity. There is thus an ongoing need to provide alternative structures and designs for such medical devices.
SUMMARYOne example embodiment pertains an elongated medical device having an flexible elongated element formed from a thermoplastic rigid-rod polymer such as substituted poly(1,4-phenylene). The element may provide a significant portion of the medical devices mechanical characteristics such as torqueability, pushability, and flexibility.
Another example embodiment pertains to an a guidewire comprising a elongated member made from a thermoplastic rigid-rod polymer. The elongated member may be a core wire of the guidewire. The core wire may run from substantially the proximal portion of the guidewire to the distal portion of the guidewire. The core wire may have a generally circular cross-sectional shape or may have a rectangular or X-shaped cross-sectional shape. The guidewire may include a sheath made from the thermoplastic rigid-rod polymer or may include more than one sheath made from the thermoplastic rigid-rod polymer. The sheath may be an extruded sleeve or may be a braided sleeve. The braid may be a diamond braid or may be a crisscross braid. The guidewire may include a core having a plurality of fine threads of the polymer extending through a substantial length of the guidewire. The guidewire may have a first section having a solid core of the polymer and a second section having a plurality of fine threads of the polymer. The guidewire may have variable stiffness which may be provided by controlling the outer diameter of a polymer shaft.
Another example embodiment pertains to a catheter such as a guide catheter. The elongated member may be a sleeve made from the thermoplastic rigid-rod polymer. The sleeve may include two or more layers of the polymer. The sleeve may be braided, either in a diamond pattern or a crisscross pattern. The braided layer may be coated with another polymer and thereby impregnated with another polymer. The sleeve may also be woven. The sleeve may be a coiled polymer ribbon or may be a spring. The polymer of the sleeve may be blended or co-extruded with another polymer. The other polymer may be another thermoplastic. The blend or thickness of the layers of the coextrusion may vary along the length to provide different mechanical characteristics along desired portions.
Another example embodiment pertains to a balloon catheter such as an angioplasty or stent-delivery catheter having a balloon sleeve made from a thermoplastic rigid-rod polymer. The balloon sleeve may have a first layer that is the polymer and a second layer that is another polymer, such as a non-crosslinked nylon. The balloon may have a wall formed using variable coextrusion, with this polymer used where certain characteristics such as non-compliance are desired and another polymer where other characteristics are desired. The balloon wall may be formed from a weave or mesh of this polymer coated with or overlaying another polymer.
The above summary of some example embodiments is not intended to describe each disclosed embodiment or every implementation of the present invention. The figures and detailed description which follow more particularly exemplify these embodiments.
The invention may be more completely understood in consideration of the following detailed description of various embodiments of the invention in connection with the accompanying drawings in which:
While the invention is amenable to various modifications and alternative forms, specifics thereof have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the intention is not to limit the invention to the particular embodiments described. On the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLE EMBODIMENTSAs used in this specification and the appended claims, the singular forms “a”, “an”, and “the” may include plural referents unless the content clearly dictates otherwise. As used in this specification and the appended claims, the term “or” is generally employed in its sense including “and/or” unless the content clearly dictates otherwise.
The following detailed description should be read with reference to the drawings in which similar elements in different drawings are numbered the same. The drawings, which are not necessarily to scale, depict illustrative embodiments and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
The terms torqueability, pushability and flexibility are herein defined as follows. Torqueability is the ability to transmit a rotational force from a proximal portion to a distal portion. Torqueability may be advantageous if a guidewire is shaped to conform to specific vasculature, and the guidewire needs to be specifically oriented to take full advantage of its shape. Pushability is the ability to transmit a longitudinal force from a proximal portion to a distal portion so that the longitudinal displacement of the distal portion is approximately the same as the longitudinal displacement of the proximal portion. In contrast, a device that does not exhibit a high degree of pushability would displace laterally near the proximal portion, creating bends or curves in the device. Flexibility is the ability of a device to bend without breaking or elastic deformation.
Guidewire 2 may be formed by extruding core member 4 and extruding sheath 6 over core member 4. Sheath 6 may be lubricious and may include therapeutic agents. For example, sheath 6 may include PTFE or may include a drug infused hydrogel. Alternatively, core member 4 may be formed by coextruding the thermoplastic rigid rod polymer with another compatible polymer. The coextrusion process may be controlled to extrude variable amounts of the thermoplastic rigid rod polymer and the other polymer to produce a variable stiffness core member. Of course, other embodiments are contemplated. For example, core member 4 may be formed from coextruding a first blend 12 and a second blend 14, each blend including a thermoplastic rigid rod polymer.
Any of the medical devices described herein may be provided with a coating on a surface of the device. Such coatings may be provided for various purposes including, but not limited to, carrying a therapeutic agent for localized delivery to a target area within the body; providing a lubricious surface to facilitate introduction of the medical device into the patient during an interventional procedure; improving the biocompatibility of the medical device with the surrounding environment; or, for a combination of such or other purposes. Among coatings that have been proposed for implantable or insertable medical devices are polymeric materials such as hydrogels.
Hydrogels are typically hydrophilic polymeric materials that have the ability to absorb large amounts, up to many times the weight of the hydrogel itself, of water or other polar molecules. Hydrogels have been disclosed as coatings for implantable or insertable medical devices or as materials for constructing the device itself in, for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,316,522; 6,261,630; 6,184,266; 6,176,849; 6,096,108; 6,060,534; 5,702,754; 5,693,034; and, 5,304,121, each of which is assigned to Boston Scientific Corporation or SciMed Life Systems, Inc. and is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference. Hydrogels, such as those described in the foregoing exemplary U.S. patents, can be based on synthetic or naturally occurring materials, or a composite thereof; can be biodegradable or substantially non-biodegradable; and, can be modified or derivatized in numerous ways to render the hydrogel more suitable for a desired purpose. For example, the hydrogel can be modified by chemically cross-linking with, for example, a polyfunctional cross-linking agent that is reactive with functional groups covalently bonded to the polymer structure. The hydrogel polymer can also be ionically cross-linked with, for example, polyvalent metal ions. Many hydrogel polymers mentioned herein can be both chemically and ionically cross-linked. Therefore, chemically and ionically cross-linkable hydrogel polymers are not necessarily mutually exclusive groups of hydrogel polymers.
Cross-linking of a hydrogel polymer can be advantageous, for example, to provide a more rigid material. Cross-linking may also be conducted, for example, to render the hydrogel less soluble in a particular environment or to modify the ability of the hydrogel polymer to absorb water or to modify the manner in which water or other molecules, compounds or groups are associated with the hydrogel polymer Examples of hydrogel polymers that can be adapted to render a medical device lubricious surface, without limitation, polyacrylates; poly(acrylic acid); poly(methacrylic acid); polyacrylamides; poly(N-alkylacrylamides); polyalkylene oxides; poly(ethylene oxide); poly(propylene)oxide; poly(vinyl alcohol); polyvinyl aromatics; poly(vinylpyrrolidone); poly(ethyleneimine); polyethylene amine; polyacrylonitrile; polyvinyl sulfonic acid; polyamides; poly(L-lysine); hydrophilic polyurethanes; maleic anhydride polymers; proteins; collagen; cellulosic polymers; methyl cellulose; carboxymethyl cellulose; dextran; carboxymethyl dextran; modified dextran; alginates; alginic acid; pectinic acid; hyaluronic acid; chitin; pullulan; gelatin; gellan; xanthan; carboxymethyl starch; chondroitin sulfate; guar; starch; and copolymers, mixtures and derivatives thereof.
Paramagnetic materials such as paramagnetic ions and paramagnetic particles may be incorporated into a medical device such as those described above. The paramagnetic materials may be incorporated into one or more of the polymers of the medical device. Paramagnetic materials are typically those that have a strong magnetic moment relative to detectable protons in water or other molecules, compounds or groups in the vicinity of the paramagnetic materials. Elements with atomic numbers 21-29, 42, 44, and 58-70, such as chromium (III), manganese (II), iron (III), iron (II), cobalt (II), copper (II), nickel (II), praesodymium (III), neodymium (III), samarium (III), ytterbium (III), gadolinium (III), terbium (III), dysprosium (III), holmium (III) and erbium (III) are examples of paramagnetic elements that may be suitable. The addition of paramagnetic materials may enhance MRI visualization of the medical device, for example.
A thermoplastic rigid rod polymer is a meltable polymer having constitutional or configurational units that form a generally linear chain that is rigid. Thermoplastic rigid rod polymers therefore may have increased strength compared with other thermoplastics. Thermoplastic rigid rod polymers may also have improved processing characteristics and good compatibility with other polymers compared with other polymers of similar strength. Thermoplastic rigid rod polymers may be cross-linked by cooling down from an extrusion process. Most other polymers require a radiation or chemical process to cross-link. Thus, a medical device made from a thermoplastic rigid rod polymer in combination with another polymer may have a cross-linked portion, which may increase strength, and a non-cross-linked portion, which may increase softness, flexibility or other suitable attribute. Therefore a device incorporating a thermoplastic rigid rod polymer may provide a combination of physical properties not available with a different polymer. Some of these polymers may be available commercially under the PARMAX name from Mississippi Polymer Technologies.
It should be understood that this disclosure is, in many respects, only illustrative. Numerous advantages of the invention covered by this document have been set forth in the foregoing description. Changes may be made in details, particularly in matters of shape, size and arrangement of parts without exceeding the scope of the invention. Those of skill in the art will readily appreciate that other embodiments may be made and used which fall within the scope of the claims attached hereto. The invention's scope is, of course, defined in the language in which the appended claims are expressed.
Claims
1. A guidewire, comprising:
- an atraumatic distal tip;
- a distal end;
- a proximal end;
- an elongate core made from a thermoplastic rigid rod polymer, the core extending from the atraumatic distal tip to the proximal end; and
- a polymeric sheath disposed over the core.
2. The guidewire of claim 1, wherein the elongate core comprises a plurality of long, flexible elements disposed in parallel.
3. The guidewire of claim 2, wherein the plurality of long, flexible elements is made from a first polymer which is a substituted poly(1,4-phenylene).
4. The guidewire of claim 3, wherein the first polymer comprises a plurality of benzoyl substituted 1,4-phenylene units.
5. The guidewire of claim 2, wherein the elongate core is a core wire.
6. The guidewire of claim 5, wherein the core wire extends from a position proximate the proximal end of the guidewire to a position proximate the distal end of the guidewire.
7. The guidewire of claim 5, wherein a substantial length of the core wire has a circular cross sectional shape.
8. The guidewire of claim 5, wherein a substantial length of the core wire has a rectangular cross sectional shape.
9. The guidewire of claim 5, wherein a substantial length of the core wire has a cruciate cross sectional shape.
10. The guidewire of claim 1, further comprising a sleeve disposed on the polymeric sheath, the sleeve made from the thermoplastic rigid rod polymer.
11. The guidewire of claim 10, wherein the sleeve is an extruded tube.
12. The guidewire of claim 10, wherein the sleeve is a coil.
13. The guidewire of claim 10, wherein the sleeve is formed from a wound flat tape.
14. The guidewire of claim 10, wherein the sleeve is a mesh.
15. The guidewire of claim 10, wherein the sleeve is a weave.
16. The guidewire of claim 1, wherein the guidewire further comprises a hydrogel coating.
17. The guidewire of claim 16, wherein the hydrogel coating includes a therapeutic agent.
18. The guidewire of claim 1, further comprising a paramagnetic material.
19. The guidewire of claim 18, wherein the paramagnetic material is gadolinium (III).
20. The guidewire of claim 1, wherein the thermoplastic rigid rod polymer is cross-linked.
Type: Application
Filed: Oct 17, 2011
Publication Date: Feb 9, 2012
Applicant: BOSTON SCIENTIFIC SCIMED, INC. (Maple Grove, MN)
Inventors: Shen-Ping Zhong (Shrewsbury, MA), Yem Chin (Burlington, MA), Paul Scopton (Winchester, MA)
Application Number: 13/274,487
International Classification: A61M 25/09 (20060101);