MULTI-ELECTRODE ABLATOR TIP HAVING DUAL-MODE, OMNI-DIRECTIONAL FEEDBACK CAPABILITIES
Electrode assemblies include segmented electrodes disposed on a catheter. The segmented electrodes can be constructed at the tip of the catheter. Tip electrodes can be constructed from an electrically insulative substrate comprising an inner lumen, an external tip surface, and a plurality of channels extending from the inner lumen to the external tip surface, a plurality of segmented electrodes, and a plurality of spot electrodes. Each of the plurality of segmented electrodes and each of the plurality of spot electrodes can be laterally separated from each other by an electrically non-conductive substrate portion and each of the spot electrodes and each of the segmented electrodes can be electrically coupled to at least one wire or conductor trace.
This application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/355,201, filed 18 Nov. 2016 (the '201 application), which claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application No. 62/258,281, filed 20 Nov. 2015 (the '281 application). The '201 application, and '281 application are both hereby incorporated by reference as though fully set forth herein.
BACKGROUNDa. Field
The instant disclosure relates to ablation tips that have feedback capability. In one embodiment, the instant disclosure relates to ablation tips that provide dual-mode, omni-directional feedback so that lesion, mapping and/or force assessments can be made regardless of the orientation of the tip.
b. Background Art
Electrophysiology catheters are used in a variety of diagnostic and/or therapeutic medical procedures to diagnose and/or correct conditions such as atrial arrhythmias, including for example, ectopic atrial tachycardia, atrial fibrillation, and atrial flutter. Arrhythmias can create a variety of conditions including irregular heart rates, loss of synchronous atrioventricular contractions and stasis of blood flow in a chamber of a heart which can lead to a variety of symptomatic and asymptomatic ailments and even death.
A medical procedure in which an electrophysiology catheter is used includes a first diagnostic catheter deployed through a patient's vasculature to a patient's heart or a chamber or vein thereof. An electrophysiology catheter that carries one or more electrodes can be used for cardiac mapping or diagnosis, ablation and/or other therapy delivery modes, or both. Once at the intended site, treatment can include, for example, radio frequency (RF) ablation, cryoablation, laser ablation, chemical ablation, high-intensity focused ultrasound-based ablation, electroporation ablation or microwave ablation. An electrophysiology catheter imparts ablative energy to cardiac tissue to create one or more lesions in the cardiac tissue and oftentimes, a contiguous, and transmural lesion. This lesion disrupts undesirable cardiac activation pathways and thereby limits, corrals, or prevents errant conduction signals that can form or sustain arrhythmias.
BRIEF SUMMARYThe instant disclosure, in at least one embodiment, relates to a tip electrode of a catheter comprising an electrically-insulative substrate.
In one embodiment, tip electrode can comprise an electrically insulative substrate comprising an inner lumen, an external tip surface, and a plurality of channels extending from the inner lumen to the external tip surface, a plurality of segmented electrodes, and a plurality of spot electrodes. Each of the plurality of segmented electrodes and each of the plurality of spot electrodes can be laterally separated from each other by an electrically non-conductive substrate portion and each of the spot electrodes and each of the segmented electrodes can be electrically coupled to at least one wire or conductor trace.
In another embodiment of the disclosure, a system for ablating tissue can comprise a tip electrode comprising an electrically insulative substrate comprising an inner lumen, an external tip surface, and a plurality of channels extending from the inner lumen to the external tip surface, a plurality of segmented electrodes, and a plurality of spot electrodes. Each of the plurality of segmented electrodes and each of the plurality of spot electrodes can be laterally separated from each other by an electrically non-conductive substrate portion and each of the spot electrodes and each of the segmented electrodes can be electrically coupled to at least one wire or conductor. The system can further comprise an electronic control unit configured to control the plurality of spot electrodes and the plurality of segmented electrodes to bipolar pace cardiac tissue.
In yet another embodiment of the disclosure, a system for determining a tissue characteristic can comprise an electronic control unit configured to measure a pre-lesion impedance at a known temperature of a target site, measure an impedance at a known temperature of the target site after ablation has occurred, and utilize a model of lesion impedance behavior to determine a state of the target site.
In yet another embodiment of the disclosure, a system for determining a tissue characteristic can comprise an electronic unit configured to measure a heat flow ability of a target site before ablation has occurred, measure a heat flow ability of the target site after ablation has occurred, and use a thermal model of the target site to deduce at-least a depthwise temperature profile of the target site based on the before and after heat flow ability. The heat flow ability can be measured by changing a rate of heat accumulation in the target site and observing the corresponding change in a tissue surface temperature.
In yet another embodiment of the disclosure, a system for determining a tissue characteristic can comprise an electronic control unit configured to measure a pre-lesion impedance at a known temperature of a target site, measure an impedance at a known temperature of the target site after some ablation has occurred, utilize a model of lesion impedance behavior to determine a state of the target site, measure a heat flow ability of the target site before some ablation has occurred, measure a heat flow ability of the target site after some ablation has occurred, utilize a thermal model of the target site to obtain at-least a depthwise temperature profile of the target site based on the before and after heat flow, and employ both results via a weighting of the two results to determine a weighted lesion state.
Various embodiments are described herein to various apparatuses, systems, and/or methods. Numerous specific details are set forth to provide a thorough understanding of the overall structure, function, manufacture, and use of the embodiments as described in the specification and illustrated in the accompanying drawings. It will be understood by those skilled in the art, however, that the embodiments may be practiced without such specific details. In other instances, well-known operations, components, and elements have not been described in detail so as not to obscure the embodiments described in the specification. Those of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the embodiments described and illustrated herein are non-limiting examples, and thus it can be appreciated that the specific structural and functional details disclosed herein may be representative and do not necessarily limit the scope of the embodiments, the scope of which is defined solely by the appended claims.
Reference throughout the specification to “various embodiments,” “some embodiments,” “one embodiment,” or “an embodiment”, or the like, means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the embodiment is included in at least one embodiment. Thus, appearances of the phrases “in various embodiments,” “in some embodiments,” “in one embodiment,” or “in an embodiment”, or the like, in places throughout the specification are not necessarily all referring to the same embodiment. Furthermore, the particular features, structures, or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more embodiments. Thus, the particular features, structures, or characteristics illustrated or described in connection with one embodiment may be combined, in whole or in part, with the features structures, or characteristics of one or more other embodiments without limitation given that such combination is not illogical or non-functional.
It will be appreciated that the terms “proximal” and “distal” may be used throughout the specification with reference to a clinician manipulating one end of an instrument used to treat a patient. The term “proximal” refers to the portion of the instrument closest to the clinician and the term “distal” refers to the portion located furthest from the clinician. It will be further appreciated that for conciseness and clarity, spatial terms such as “vertical,” “horizontal,” “up,” and “down” may be used herein with respect to the illustrated embodiments. However, surgical instruments may be used in many orientations and positions, and these terms are not intended to be limiting and absolute.
It can be desirable to monitor and/or control the temperature of ablation electrode assemblies. It can also be desirable to use ablation electrode assemblies to provide irrigation fluid during RF ablation. RF ablation catheters can be configured to provide temperature feedback during RF ablation via a thermal sensor such as a thermocouple or thermistor. Typically, the temperature reading provided by a single thermal sensor inside an irrigated tip ablation electrode cannot accurately represent the temperature of the electrode/tissue interface. One reason is because a portion of the electrode that is in direct contact with the targeted tissue can have a higher temperature than the interior of the electrode where a single thermocouple typically resides because tip irrigation forms a thermal gradient from the tip external surface to the tip interior.
Secondly, even properly knowing the surface interface temperature of the tip/tissue interface, the irrigation fluid can cause at-least the near surface of the target tissue to be subcooled relative to deeper tissues beyond the reach of the cooling effect but still within the RF affected heated zone. Thus the hottest spot of an irrigated lesion can be below the target tissue surface by a millimeter or two. So for better thermal control one can at-least get rid of the in-tip temperature gradient error such as by placing the thermocouple on the tip exterior surface as this invention teaches. The in-tissue temperature gradient which remains may be modeled or estimated such as by this disclosure.
Thus, if the tip thermal sensor is in direct contact with the targeted surface tissue such as by being situated on a tip surface facing that tissue, then the thermal sensor can provide a temperature reading generally corresponding to the actual temperature of the targeted tissue surface albeit that surface temperature is still suppressed by irrigation-cooling relative to deeper subsurface tissue within the RF treatment zone as stated above. Furthermore, multiple thermal sensors positioned at different tip surface locations on the electrode can be used to assure that at least one of them is directly facing the juxtaposed tissue to be lesioned no matter the rotational state of the tip relative to the tissue. For example and without limitation, the highest measured temperature of all these temperature sensing locations is likely the one facing the ablating tissue.
The ability to assess lesion formation during ablation is a desirable feature. This is achieved in today's practice by monitoring electrograms (EGM's) and pacing from electrodes before, during and after RF ablation. Closely spaced electrodes, either at or near the ablation tip can potentially provide highly local information that can be used to assess the effectiveness of the ablation therapy. That is to say that multiple electrodes facing a lesion on a catheter tip can be employed as bipolar pairs such that the electrical impedance between such nearby pairs and thereby also selectively through the intervening adjacent target-tissue and resulting lesion itself can be measured. The additional sensing electrodes can also be used to individually characterize the electrophysiology of the local substrate. This can help to diagnose the arrhythmia, determine the site for ablation and judge the resulting lesion size/depth.
The system 10 may include an electronic control unit (ECU) 12, an analog-to-digital converter (A-to-D) 14, a low-pass filter (L.P.) 16, a switch 18, a signal generator 20, and a plurality of body surface patch electrodes 22. The system 10 may be electronically and/or mechanically coupled with an elongate medical device, such as, in one embodiment, a contact or non-contact mapping catheter (e.g., a cardiac mapping catheter 24). The catheter 24 includes a distal end portion 26 and a proximal end portion 28. The distal end portion 26 includes an electrode assembly 32 and extends into a heart 36 of a patient 38. The proximal end portion 28 connects the catheter 24 to a switch 18 and to an irrigation pump (not shown).
The system 10 may be configured to provide, among other things, mapping of patient tissue, such as one or more chambers of the heart 36 of the patient 38, and a 3D model bearing the surface geometry of the mapped cardiac tissue. Accordingly, the ECU 12 may be configured to receive electrical measurements from one or more electrodes coupled to the electrode assembly 32 on the mapping catheter 24 and, based on those measurements, to assess one or more electrical characteristics of tissue surrounding the distal end of the mapping catheter 26. In an embodiment, the ECU 12 may be configured to determine a voltage distribution of an endocardial surface according to electrical measurements from mapping catheter electrode assembly 32. The ECU 12 may be further configured to determine that voltage distribution with respect to an anatomical model, such as a model of one or more chambers, features, and/or surfaces of the heart 36.
The ECU 12 may include a non-volatile memory 40 and a processor 42 configured to perform many of the functions and operations described herein—i.e., a memory 40 may store instructions for performing portions of one or more methods or processes described herein, and a processor 42 may be configured to execute those instructions to perform the methods or processes. The memory 40 may also be configured to store an anatomical model, such as a cardiac chamber model, a plurality of measurements from the mapping catheter 24, a plurality of terms and values for the methods described below, and other data and information. In an embodiment, the ECU 12 may additionally or alternatively comprise a field-programmable gate array (FPGA) and/or other known computing device. In some embodiments, and as discussed further below, the ECU 12 may be configured to perform a method of computing a 2D projection and/or a partially unfolded surface of a 3D model in order to better facilitate visualization of the model and features of the model. The ECU may also include models of the impedance behavior or heat-flow (calorimetry) behavior of forming lesions.
In addition to (and as a part of) electrophysiology mapping, the system 10 may be configured to determine the position and orientation (P&O) of the mapping catheter 24 (e.g., particularly of the distal end portion 26) within the patient 38. Accordingly, the ECU 12 may be configured to control generation of one or more electrical fields and determine the position of one or more electrodes (e.g., the electrode assembly 32) within those fields. The ECU 12 may thus be configured to the control signal generator 20 in accordance with predetermined strategies to selectively energize various pairs (bipoles) of the body surface patch electrodes 22, as described in greater detail below. In operation, the ECU 12 may (1) obtain raw patch data (i.e., voltage readings) via the filter 16 and the A-to-D converter 14 and (2) use the raw patch data (in conjunction with electrode measurements) to determine the raw, uncompensated, electrode location coordinates of the electrode assembly 32 positioned inside the heart 36 or a chamber thereof in three-dimensional space. The ECU 12 may be further configured to perform one or more compensation and adjustment functions, and to output a location of the electrode assembly 32. Motion compensation may include, for example, compensation for respiration-induced patient body movement, as described in U.S. Publication No. 2012/0172702, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
The body surface patch electrodes 22 may be used to generate axes-specific electric fields within the patient 38, and more specifically within the heart 36. Three sets of patch electrodes may be provided: (1) electrodes 22X1, 22X2, (X-axis); (2) electrodes 22Y1, 22Y2, (Y-axis); and (3) electrodes 22Z1, 22Z2, (Z-axis). Additionally, a body surface electrode (“belly patch”) 22B, may be provided as an electrical reference. Other surface electrode configurations and combinations are suitable for use with the present disclosure, including fewer electrodes 22, more electrodes 22, or different physical arrangements, e.g. a linear arrangement instead of an orthogonal arrangement.
Each patch electrode 22 may be independently coupled to the switch 18, and pairs of the patch electrodes 22 may be selected by software running on the ECU 12 to couple the patch electrodes 22 to the signal generator 20. A pair of electrodes, for example the Z-axis electrodes 22Z1, 22Z2, may be excited by the signal generator 20 to generate an electrical field in the patient 38 and, more particularly, within the heart 36. In one embodiment, this electrode excitation process occurs rapidly and sequentially as different sets of the patch electrodes 22 are selected and one or more of the unexcited surface electrodes 22 are used to measure voltages. During the delivery of the excitation signal (e.g., current pulse), the remaining (unexcited) patch electrodes 22 may be referenced to the belly patch 22B and the voltages impressed on these remaining electrodes 22 may be measured. In this fashion, the patch electrodes 22 may be divided into driven and non-driven electrode sets. The low pass filter 16 may process the voltage measurements. The filtered voltage measurements may be transformed to digital data by the analog to digital converter 14 and transmitted to the ECU 12 for storage (e.g. in the memory 40) under the direction of software. This collection of voltage measurements may be referred to herein as the “patch data.” The software may have access to each individual voltage measurement made at each surface electrode 22 during each excitation of each pair of surface electrodes 22.
The patch data may be used, along with measurements made at the electrode assembly 32, to determine a relative location of the electrode assembly 32. The patch data may also be used along with measurements made at the electrode assembly 32 and/or other electrodes on the catheter 24, such as a tip electrode, or on another device to determine a relative location of the electrode assembly 32 and/or the other electrodes. The discussion above and below describes determining the location of the electrode assembly 32, but it should be understood to apply to a tip electrode and other electrodes, as well. In some embodiments, potentials across each of the six orthogonal patch electrodes 22 may be acquired for all samples except when a particular surface electrode pair is driven. In some embodiments, sampling a voltage with a particular patch electrode 22 while a surface electrode 22 acts as a source or sink in a driven pair may be avoided, as the potential measured at a driven electrode during this time may be skewed by the electrode impedance and the effects of high local current density. In an alternate embodiment, however, sampling may occur at all patch electrodes 22, even those being driven.
Generally, in an embodiment, three nominally orthogonal electric fields may be generated by a series of driven and sensed electric bipoles in order to determine the location of the catheter 24 (i.e., of the electrode assembly 32). Alternately, these orthogonal fields can be decomposed and any pair of surface electrodes (e.g., non-orthogonal) may be driven as bipoles to provide effective electrode triangulation.
Referring again to
Some or all of the conventional twelve (12) ECG leads, coupled to additional body patches and designated collectively by reference numeral 44, may be provided to support the acquisition of an electrocardiogram (ECG) of the patient. As shown, the ECG leads 44 may be coupled directly to the ECU 12 for acquisition and subsequent processing to obtain the phase of the heart in the cardiac cycle. Cardiac phase information may be used, in an embodiment, in mapping of electrical activity of the heart 36, as described below.
In summary,
where Vk is the voltage measured on patch k and In→m is a known constant current driven between patches n and m. The position of the electrode assembly 32 may be determined by driving current between different sets of patches and measuring one or more patch impedances. In one embodiment, time division multiplexing may be used to drive and measure all quantities of interest. Position determining procedures are described in more detail in, for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,263,397 and 7,885,707 referred to above. To perform an electrophysiology (e.g., mapping) procedure, the distal end portion 26 of the catheter 24 or multiple such catheters 24 may be manually guided to a desired location by a user such as a physician.
In addition to determining the positions of the electrode assembly 32, the system 10 may also be configured to characterize and assess the tissue of the heart, including lesions. Accordingly, the ECU 12 may be further configured to perform one or more steps in one or more complimentary methods of determining a voltage distribution on a cardiac surface, such as determining the impedance between intra-tip electrodes facing the lesion and sensing the temperature at multiple locations facing the lesion on electrode assembly 32. Because these methods employ entirely different signal types (electrical voltage and temperature) they provide a more sound answer as to lesion size by using two entirely independent lesion-assessment mechanisms. In the case of the temperature aspect, the use of temperature sensing over time can be used in response to an RF power change. The temporal temperature response can be fitted to a thermal model of the tissue in manners of thermal modeling both inside and outside catheter ablation. One embodiment employs the intra-tip impedance measurements and the complimentary and independent temporal temperature responses to RF power changes (which temporal responses are referred to as thermal calorimetry). Both pieces of information can be utilized such as by averaging them or weighing one somewhat more than the other in accordance with the user's confidence in each.
In one embodiment, the electrode assembly discussed herein can comprise a multi-electrode RF ablator tip having dual-mode (the bipolar electrical impedance mode and the complimentary independent calorimetry mode embodiment discussed above) omnidirectional lesion feedback capability, mapping and orientation independent sensing capability and optionally shared interconnects. An electrode tip assembly as discussed herein can have these characteristics while still leaving physical room for a force feedback sensor. Lesion feedback can be assessed omnidirectionally, this means the catheter tip is able to be used to acquire information with any rotational orientation or regardless which tip surface is actually facing the cardiac tissue, using one or both complimentary feedback methods (both simultaneously, sequentially, or independently used) practiced from a multi-electrode tip with an electrically-insulative substrate. As a result, in some embodiments, no rotation of the electrode tip is required to ensure that the minimum needed tissue-facing electrodes (for lesion impedance feedback) and thermocouples (for lesion thermal or calorimetric feedback) are, by-default, always facing the tissue of interest.
To explain further, two different methods can be used together, either simultaneously or sequentially in a complimentary fashion, to provide more reliable lesion feedback than previous methods. The first method is in-tip cross-electrode (bipolar) or single electrode (unipolar) electrical impedance measurement(s). Bipolar measurements can be done using one or more in-tip subelectrode pairs, with the utilized bipolar-driven pair facing the lesion and showing the major known local impedance changes accompanying lesion formation. An RF body patch is not required for these lesion-local measurements and the real time local temperature can be taken into account as it has a known effect on impedance also. Unipolar measurements can be done using a 3-terminal impedance measurement. These two methods can result in more specific ablation or pacing segment activation. The second complimentary and independent method is “calorimetry” which can comprise monitoring real time local surface-tissue lesion temperature in response to a known ablation energy input rate changes (input rate increases or decreases such as momentary turning on or off of power) injected into an assumed model-volume of tissue of known thermal properties adjacent the known electrodes. Another method to change (e.g. momentarily reduce) effective heat energy input is to change (e.g. momentarily reduce) the irrigant flow rate which essentially leaves more heat in the lesion tissue region.
In this second calorimetry method a simple thermal model of the tissue (temperature versus depth) is employed. Essentially widely known tissue thermal models can predict the buildup or relaxation of a temperature-vs depth profile as a function of time after a heat input at the tissue surface is started or stopped. Other than the input lesion energy and irrigant heat removal the other assumptions that can be made are that the initial tissue is at 37 Deg C. (body temperature) and that the target tissue is blood-perfused (further cooled by perfusing blood). Thus, since we can detect the tissue surface temperature and we can predetermine at what time ablating heat (or irrigation) is turned on or off or step-changed in magnitude, we can observe the changing surface temperature upon such a heating change and deduce a lesion temperature depth profile and lesion tissue thermal conductivity versus depth during that observation period. There is a unique solution for the temperature and thermal conductivity profile for each observed surface temperature response to a heating change. Thus knowing the deduced temperature profile and thermal conductivity profile allows judgement of the lesion extent based purely on thermal considerations. For example lesioned tissue has markedly lower thermal conductivity than unlesioned tissue. For example the presence of a high temperature (e.g 60 deg C.) at a known depth allows an estimate of the time-to-necrosis to be estimated (less than a second to necrosis at 60 deg C.). Further discussion relating to thermal models can be found in Berjano, Enrique J., Theoretical modeling for radiofrequency ablation: state-of-the-art and challenges for the future, BioMedical Engineering OnLine 2006, 5:24, which is hereby incorporated by reference as though fully set forth herein.
In one embodiment, the tip can have a thermally and electrically-insulative substrate such as a ceramic substrate and a plurality of thin electrodes on an outside substrate surface such that the thermal response of the tissue results in the thin metal surface electrode portions, and any thermally connected thermal sensors, closely and rapidly follow the detectable tissue surface temperature. By placing thermal sensors around the tip such as under small isolated discs of such thin film electrodes, the thermal sensors can measure that tissue surface tissue temperature in real time because those thermal sensors have a thermally insulating base, i.e. a ceramic base, and virtually no depth-wise or lateral heat transfer. In ceramic tips of low thermal conductivity, the tip can have a significant irrigant flow (recirculating or passed into the bloodstream) to maintain tip surface temps below blood thrombosis temperatures. Alternatively or additionally the tips can ablate in a pulsed RF mode wherein time is allowed for the tip surfaces to cool between such repeated ablation power pulses.
In some embodiments, the thermal sensor (e.g thermocouple or thermistor) wires and the isolated disc sub-electrode wires can be cross-shared to perform one or more of the following: tissue temperature measurement, tissue impedance measurement, tissue electrical potential mapping or pacing, and electric-field spatial navigation or even ablation itself. Since these embodiments can optionally perform several functions with very few wires, thereby retain compatibility with tip-force sensor usage by limiting the required space for wired interconnections within the catheter body and catheter tip and reserving space for a tip-force sensor which has its own interconnections. The tip electrodes, as described above and below, can take on a range of configurations ranging from several large electrodes with small gaps to a single large electrode with smaller separate electrically isolated electrodes embedded in it. The actual ablation electrodes may or may not be shared or included in the feedback electrodes. In one embodiment, it is desired to have the feedback electrodes and the feedback thermal sensors provide lesion-specific feedback which means that the feedback electrodes and thermal sensors will be within the area-wise confines of the ablating electrode.
The tip electrodes described herein can lead to reduced manufacturing costs. The ceramic tips can be precisely green-molded and then fully fired to have fine features and surface finishes and even electrical and irrigant vias or ports to route interconnections and/or irrigant from the tip interior to the tip outer surfaces. The metallization of the electrode tips can be done in several different ways depending on the desired product and cost. In one embodiment, the ceramic tip substrates can comprise one of aluminum oxide (alumina) or zirconium oxide (zirconia) or zirconia toughened alumina. In one embodiment, all of the metallization processes can be batched and several hundred electrode tips can be co-deposited. The metallization techniques can include one or more of wet plating, PVD, and CVD vapor deposition methods for metals such as platinum or other exposed noble metals. The patterned electrodes can also be patterned additively or subtractively. A modified laser developed for machining stents can be used to pattern the narrow kerfs through a metallic ceramic overcoat to define such separated electrodes down to an underlying isolating ceramic base layer. An exemplary method such as sputtering may be used to deposit a well-adhering underlayer and then a second process such as electroplating may be used to thicken the electrode at a much lower processing cost. Subtractive etching or lasering might be done on the underlayer or on the dual layer sandwich. Screen printing or other mechanical printing methods for surface film conductors can be used if the needed electrode pattern resolution is loose enough. Inkjet printing of conductor films can likewise be used.
Vias or irrigant ports may be molded or drilled into the ceramic tips such that interconnections from the surface electrodes can be routed into the tip interior and irrigant may pass outwards from the tip. Those via interconnections might electrically and physically comprise plated vias or discrete wires routed through the vias. Presuming the vias are metallized or plated, at least near their outside tip-surface as by electroless plating, electroplating, CVD or sputtering for example, then the metallurgical joint between a discrete via wire and the via metallization can be hidden beneath the tip surface and covered over with a localized coating or plug of biocompatible epoxy or the like. The hidden metallization joint may comprise, for example, a soldered joint, laser welded joint or a silver-epoxy joint for example. In another embodiment, a via/port can deliver both irrigant and route an electrode or thermocouple interconnection to the tip surface.
An embodiment of a catheter assembly 200 is generally shown in
The tip electrode group 201 can comprise multiple segmented tip subelectrodes that can be configured to perform directed ablation toward selected tissue, and the spot electrodes can act not only as localized thermal sensors, but can also act as electrodes for locally sensing or pacing tissue, measuring local impedance such as between different spot electrodes. The spot electrodes can also further be configured to act as e-field navigation electrodes. The spot electrodes can further be used with the segmented tip electrodes of the tip electrode 201 for orientation independent sensing as described in the '160 reference, the '576 reference, and the '582 reference incorporated by reference above. In one embodiment, where a conductor pair coupled to the thermal sensor is electrically connected to a spot electrode, the shared functions as described herein can be used to decrease the total number of wires within the tip electrode. In another embodiment, the tip electrode can comprise five segmented tip electrodes around the tip circumference. The five segmented tip electrodes can be used such that an assumption can be made that at least two of the segmented tip electrodes and associated spot electrodes face tissue for a majority of their longitudinal length. In some embodiments, the larger electrodes surround smaller or spot electrodes as shown in
In another embodiment, the spot non-conductive portions can be removed or filled such that an individual segmented tip electrode and the associated spot electrode can be thermally and electrically coupled. As a result, the thermal sensor and associated spot electrode cannot be used as a separate electrode from the segmented tip electrode, however, the thermal sensor can still be used for calorimetry purposes. Calorimetry is the monitoring of the temperature of a tissue mass during calibrated heat-input or heat-output such that a thermal property of the tissue mass can be deduced.
In simplest terms, as a tissue dehydrates and lesions develop, the tissue's thermal conductivity and specific heat drop significantly. As a result, a pulse of injected heat before such a lesion is made will result in a smaller depth-wise temperature gradient than after the lesion is present and cooled back to a starting temperature. Use of the disclosure can involve calorimetry measurement before, during, and after a lesion is formed when the calorimetry method is employed. Tissue impedance can be a function of tissue dehydration but also of tissue temperature. Thus measuring such temperature facing the lesion also results in a more accurate temperature-corrected lesion impedance reading. Given a pair of electrodes or spot electrodes which both face tissue, the bipolar impedance can be measured between such pairs of intra-tip electrodes. This impedance can be affected by the electrode spacing, which will determine the penetrating depth of fringe fields, and electrode size which is fixed and can be a design choice. The two techniques, bipolar impedance lesion feedback and calorimetry each depend on different lesion physical properties—i.e. electrical conductivity versus thermal conductivity/specific heat. The electrical impedance depends primarily on the electrical conductivity of the lesion and has a depth limit dictated by the shape of the electrical fringing fields whereas thermal calorimetry depends on the thermal conductivity and specific heat of tissue and has a deeper depth limit from which residual heat may leak toward the tissue surface. Thus, complimentary techniques can improve accuracy.
A plurality of subelectrodes 323 can also be located on the catheter assembly 300. Each of the subelectrodes 323 can be separated from the tip ring electrode and other subelectrodes by a non-conductive gap portion of the tip electrode 301. In the illustrated embodiment, each of the segmented subelectrodes can extend longitudinally from the second circumferential non-conductive portion 329 to a distal end 333 of the tip electrode 301. In the illustrated embodiment, each of the plurality of segmented subelectrodes 323 can be separated by a longitudinally extending non-conductive gap portion 335.
The tip electrode can further comprise at least one ring spot electrode 341. The at least one ring spot electrode 341 can be disposed within the tip ring electrode 321. In the illustrated embodiment, the at least one ring spot electrode 341 can be disposed evenly between a proximal edge of the tip ring electrode and a distal edge of the tip ring electrode. The at least one ring spot electrode 341 can be surrounded by a ring spot non-conductive portion 343. The ring spot non-conductive portion 343 can electrically isolate the ring spot electrode 341 from the tip ring electrode 321 and can also electrically isolate the ring spot electrode 341 from the rest of the electrodes on the tip electrode 301. In other embodiments, the at least one ring spot electrode can comprise a first ring spot electrode and the electrode tip can comprise additional ring spot electrodes spaced apart from the first ring spot electrode. In one embodiment, the tip electrode can comprise a second ring spot electrode disposed around 180 degrees around a circumference of the tip ring electrode from the first ring spot electrode. In another embodiment, the tip electrode can comprise four separate ring spot electrodes evenly spaced at 90 degrees around a circumference of the ring electrode 321. The tip electrode 301 can further comprise one or more irrigation through-holes 345. The irrigation through-hole(s) 345 can be fluidly coupled to an irrigation source to supply an irrigant or other fluid to an exterior of the distal portion 311 of the electrode tip 301. In other embodiments, the irrigation through-hole can comprise one of a plurality of irrigation through-holes. In the illustrated embodiment, each of the longitudinally extending non-conductive portions 335 can extend from the second circumferential non-conductive portion 329 to a non-conductive portion surrounding the irrigation through-hole 345. This results in each of the segmented tip electrodes being bound on a proximal end by the second circumferential non-conductive portion 329, on each side by a separate longitudinally extending non-conductive portion, and at a distal end by the irrigation through-hole 345. In another embodiment, each of the segmented electrodes can abut the irrigation through-hole. In some embodiments, an irrigation via 345 including a metallized interior diameter metallized also is also configured to act as an electrical connection or via from the tip surface to the tip interior such as to both RF-power and irrigate a surface electrode.
The tip electrode group 501 can comprise and be formed within a thin layer of conductive material clad or deposited onto the electrically-insulative substrate 505,507. The thin layer of conductive material deposited onto the electrically-insulative substrate can improve temperature correlation between the electrode and tissue interface because it is configured as a thin layer of heat and electrically conducting material, and itself has a low thermal capacity to modulate heat in the tissue itself. The thin metal layer on the electrically and thermally insulating substrate 505,507 can also therefore preserve important thermal gradients seen along the tissue surface. The thin layer of conductive material (one or more electrodes thereof) can be at-least temporarily if not permanently electrically connected to an ablation system to allow for the delivery of ablative energy or the like. The thin layer of conductive material can be electrically connected to the ablation system in any manner conventional in the art. For example, a conductor wire can be provided. The conductor wire can extend through a lumen within the catheter shaft. The patient may also utilize a ground-return patch in the case of a single wire fed monopolar RF tip. Groups of such electrodes may be employed to perform ablation and/or perform impedance feedback from lesions or to perform electrical sensing or pacing.
In some embodiments the electrically-insulative substrate can comprise a thermally insulative material. Alumina, zirconia toughened alumina and zirconia are all poor thermal conductors but have been proven in dental and medical implants. Silicon nitride is a better thermal conductor than the others but still electrically insulative and also proven in medical implants. Silicon nitride has the same order of thermal conductivity as platinum iridium which is a very poor metallic thermal conductor. For this reason silicon nitride can thermally act similarly to existing platinum-iridium tips and remove substantial heat from the tissue by having the tip irrigated.
In such embodiments the electrically-insulative substrate can provide an insulated internal flow path for ionically conductive saline or other irrigation fluid. The electrically-insulative substrate can thermally isolate the multiple thermal sensors located within the tip electrode 203. By thermally isolating the temperature sensors, the tip electrode 203 can have an improved ability to measure the temperature at the tip-tissue interface during lesion formation. i.e. Using the thermally insulating substrate 505 the tip can accurately and more importantly rapidly detect the true tissue surface temperature without suppressing it to a large degree due to tip-induced tissue cooling. The listed ceramics above allow placement of temperature sensors on the tip surface.
The tip electrode group 501 of
The illustrated embodiment in
Again for intra-lesion bipolar electrical impedance feedback one connects across any two electrodes which both face the lesion. These may be two spot electrodes or a spot electrode and a larger ablating electrode surrounding it for example.
For pace and ablate feedback the split tip implementations of
Again, for calorimetry, we have thermocouples which face tissue and themselves sit on a thermally insulating tip material such as ceramic or polymer. We also have an adjacent or surrounding ablation electrode facing (and causing) the lesion. Using known RF thermal modeling techniques (earlier reference) we can make a depth-wise thermal profile model which incorporates decreasing thermal conductivity (and specific heat) of the tissue with extent of necrosis or lesioning. In this manner a bolus of injected heat (as by an RF power pulse), when stopped, will result in a thermal temperature decay at the tissue surface detectable by the surface contacting thermocouple(s). This decay curve is fitted to an assumed temperature and thermal conductivity profile that caused it. The initial starting assumption (before any lesion formation) is a decreasing temperature with depth and no thermal conductivity change (initially no necrosis has occurred). As the lesion progresses decreased thermal conductivity and specific heat is assumed (as caused by lesioning necrosis progressing downwards) such that the surface temperature decay curve is matched by the models current temperature and conductivity profile. Increasing degrees of tissue thermal exposure can result in increasing loss of thermal conductivity and specific heat as dewatering occurs. Full necrosis is the final state. Thus the changes are gradual which can allow for a feedback loop to automatically control ablation.
In another embodiment, the use of combined electrical impedance and calorimetry lesion-feedback tools can be configured to be acquired by impedance and calorimetry sensors that can be built upon an electrically and thermally insulating substrate. These two insulating qualities (electrical and thermal) can assure that the two feedback methods are sampling only the adjacent facing and underlying forming lesion. A number of possible calorimetric algorithms can be employed whether based on the incorporated references cited above, or using a new algorithm. This disclosure is not limited to a particular algorithm. Further, the two outputs, the electrical impedance, and the calorimetric information can have their corresponding presumed lesion depths be weighted in any desired manner such as 50/50 or equally wherein they are averaged.
It can be further noted that navigation magnetic coils (not shown) can easily be embedded or contained within the ceramic tip and that the navigation magnetic coil connecting wires can also perform shared duty as optionally might the thermal sensors.
In some embodiments, the system can comprise an ECU.
In other embodiments, any of the methods listed in
Claims
1.-26. (canceled)
27. A tip electrode comprising: wherein each of the plurality of segmented ablation electrodes is coupled to at least one of the plurality of wire or conductor traces and wherein each of the plurality of segmented ablation electrodes are laterally separated from each other by an electrically insulative gap.
- an electrically insulative substrate comprising an inner lumen and an external tip surface, wherein the electrically insulative substrate comprises a rigid material;
- a plurality of segmented ablation electrodes disposed on the electrically insulative substrate; and
- a plurality of wire or conductor traces,
28. The tip electrode according to claim 27 further comprising a plurality of channels extending from the inner lumen to the external tip surface.
29. The tip electrode according to claim 27, further comprising a plurality of thermal sensors, wherein at least one of the plurality of wire or conductor traces comprises a conductor pair and wherein one of the plurality of thermal sensor is electrically coupled to the conductor pair.
30. The tip electrode according to claim 27, further comprising a plurality of spot electrodes disposed on the electrically insulative substrate.
31. The tip electrode according to claim 30, wherein each of the plurality of spot electrodes are laterally separated from the plurality of segmented ablation electrodes by an electrically insulative gap.
32. The tip electrode according to claim 31, wherein each of the spot electrodes are electrically coupled to at least one of the plurality of wire or conductor traces.
33. The tip electrode according to claim 31, wherein at least one of the plurality of spot electrodes is disposed within the lateral confines of at least one of the plurality of segmented ablation electrodes.
34. The tip electrode according to claim 31, further comprising a thermal sensor disposed adjacent one of the plurality of spot electrodes such that the thermal sensor can be electrically connected to a conductor pair electrically connected to the spot electrode.
35. The tip electrode according to claim 31, wherein each of the spot electrodes is disposed within a separate segmented ablation electrode.
36. The tip electrode according to claim 27, wherein each of the plurality of segmented ablation electrodes extend in a longitudinal direction along a length of the tip electrode.
37. A system for ablating tissue comprising:
- a tip electrode comprising: an electrically insulative substrate comprising an inner lumen and an external tip surface; and a plurality of segmented ablation electrodes, wherein at least one of the plurality of segmented ablation electrodes is disposed on the electrically insulative substrate, wherein each of the plurality of segmented ablation electrodes are laterally separated from each other by an electrically insulative gap and wherein each of the segmented ablation electrodes are electrically coupled to at least one wire or conductor; and
- an electronic control unit configured to control the plurality of segmented ablation electrodes to bipolar ablate cardiac tissue.
38. The system according to claim 37, wherein the electronic control unit is configured to bipolar ablate cardiac tissue.
39. The system according to claim 37, further comprising a plurality of spot electrodes disposed on the electrically insulative substrate.
40. The system according to claim 39, wherein the electronic control unit is further configured to use the plurality of spot electrodes for at least one of: orientation independent sensing, pacing, location sensing/tracking, and local impedance sensing.
41. The system according to claim 39, wherein at least one of the spot electrodes is disposed within one of the plurality of segmented ablation electrodes.
42. The tip electrode according to claim 39, further comprising a thermal sensor disposed adjacent one of the plurality of spot electrodes such that the thermal sensor can be electrically connected to a conductor pair electrically connected to the spot electrode.
43. A tip electrode comprising:
- an electrically insulative substrate comprising an inner lumen and an external tip surface;
- a plurality of segmented ablation electrodes; and
- a plurality of wire or conductor traces,
- wherein at least one of the plurality of segmented ablation electrodes is disposed on the electrically insulative substrate, wherein each of the plurality of segmented ablation electrodes are laterally separated from each other by an electrically insulative gap, and wherein each of the segmented ablation electrodes are electrically coupled to at least one of the plurality of wire or conductor traces.
44. The system according to claim 43, further comprising a plurality of spot electrodes disposed on the electrically insulative substrate.
45. The system according to claim 44, wherein at least one of the spot electrodes is disposed within one of the plurality of segmented ablation electrodes.
46. The tip electrode according to claim 44, further comprising a thermal sensor disposed adjacent one of the plurality of spot electrodes such that the thermal sensor can be electrically connected to a conductor pair electrically connected to the spot electrode.
Type: Application
Filed: Mar 12, 2021
Publication Date: Sep 2, 2021
Inventors: John W. Sliwa (San Jose, CA), Zhenyi Ma (Santa Clara, CA), Stephen A. Morse (Menlo Park, CA), John A. Hauck (Shoreview, MN), Don Curtis Deno (Andover, MN)
Application Number: 17/200,457