Catheter support structure

Surgery – Means for introducing or removing material from body for... – Treating material introduced into or removed from body...

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C604S523000, C604S525000, C604S527000, C604S264000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06290692

ABSTRACT:

I. BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention pertains to catheters for passage through a vasculature system. More particularly, this invention pertains to a novel construction of at least a segment of a catheter.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Catheters are widely used in medical treatment. A catheter is an elongated flexible member advanced through the vasculature system to a desired site. The catheter may be advanced over a previously inserted guide wire.
With the catheter in place, a wide variety of substances may be passed through the catheter to the site. For example, drugs may be moved through the catheter for site-specific drug delivery. Also, implements may be passed through the catheter. The catheter may also be used to remove fluids from the site. Still further, a catheter may be equipped with implements (e.g., balloon tips) for performing procedures (e.g., angioplasty) at the site.
Catheters have long been used in cardiovascular treatment. More recently, catheters are used in neurological procedures requiring advancement of the catheter through very narrow vessels. To accomplish these advances, a high degree of flexibility is desired. Also, catheters need very thin walls in order to retain an internal bore having as large a diameter as possible.
While advancing a catheter, a physician may twist a proximal end of the catheter in order to cause a corresponding twist of the distal end of the catheter (referred to as “torque transmission response”). A consistently reliable torque transmission response (e.g., a consistent one-to-one torque transmission response) is desired.
In designing catheters, it is desirable to provide a catheter which is kink resistant. Namely, a catheter typically is a tube with an internal bore of circular cross-section. When a catheter bends, it may be inclined to kink resulting in closure or geometric deformation of the circular bore. Such closure or deformation is undesirable. Further, in certain applications, the catheter may be subjected to high internal pressures (e.g., 300 psi). Such pressures tend to burst the catheter or expand the catheter geometry.
Catheter geometry can also by deformed by torque applied to the catheter. Many catheters are designed to have a reinforcing coil extending along the length of the catheter. If torque is applied in the direction of the coil winding, the internal diameter of the catheter may reduce. If torque is applied in the opposite direction, the diameter may expand. Dual coil catheters (i.e., catheters having two coils extending the length of the catheter with one coil being a clockwise wind and the other being a counter-clockwise wind) have been developed to retain dimensional stability regardless of direction of torque and to increase torque transmission. Unfortunately, such catheters are costly and have an extra layer of coil which takes up an already limited space within the vasculature. Thus a need exists to develop catheters that are kink resistant, able to transmit torque effectively and take up a minimal amount of space within the vasculature.
II. SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
One aspect of the present invention relates to a catheter including a segment having a longitudinal axis, and a plurality of circumferential supports surrounding the axis. A plurality of filaments surround the circumferential supports. The circumferential supports assist in providing kink resistance, while the filaments provide enhanced torque and axial load transmission through the catheter segment.


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