Hermetically sealed feedthrough connector using shape memory...

Surgery: light – thermal – and electrical application – Light – thermal – and electrical application – Electrical therapeutic systems

Reexamination Certificate

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Reexamination Certificate

active

06498952

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to an electrical connector used with an implantable medical device, such as a pacemaker, for stimulating selected body tissue for connecting an implantable electrical lead to the electrical circuits within a hermetically sealed housing of the medical device. More particularly, the present invention relates to a feedthrough connector assembly which employs shape memory alloy components for ease of manufacture and for assuring a hermetically sealed engagement with the electrical lead.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Implantable electronic devices are in use providing electronic pulses to stimulate tissue via a lead extending from an implanted pulse generator to a desired internal location. An example of this type of technology is a pacemaker and a pacing lead which provides electrical stimulation to the heart. The pacemaker is usually implanted in a subcutaneous cavity, and the leads extend either transvenously to the internal cavities of the heart, or to patch electrodes located on external surface of the heart.
The leads generally include at least one, and often two or more, electrodes located at a distal end, and a connector having a similar number of electrical connector elements for interconnection to the pulse generator at the proximal end. The electrical connector elements, or contacts, at the proximal end and the distal electrodes are interconnected by conductors extending through an insulated lead body. It is common for the leads to include helically wound conductors which are either coaxially mounted or side-by-side wound within the lead body, separated by insulation.
The connector is inserted into a receiving orifice in a header portion of the pulse generator. The header portion of the pulse generator may be formed from an epoxy material which is assembled and bonded to the main body of the pulse generator. The main body of the pulse generator is generally a metallic self-contained housing or can, which encloses the source of electrical energy and electrical circuitry for controlling the electrical stimulus delivered by the lead.
In the design of the lead connector and the pulse generator, it is important for the lead to be safely secured to the pulse generator to prevent inadvertent decoupling. Generally, connectors have been assembled using flexible insulation materials to separate the respective electrical components. Problems which arise in the construction and use of multiple conductor lead connectors are primarily related to the design of the electrical interconnection between the conductors and the contacts. The connector must be constructed in a manner which prevents fluids from invading the connector and shorting the electrical conductors therein. At the same time, simpler constructions which reduce the number of components, speed the assembly process and assure that the resulting medical device is hermetically sealed are constantly being sought.
A number of patents are representative of the prior art in this regard.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,934,366 to Truex et al. discloses a feedthrough connector for an implantable medical device which combines the connector function with the feedthrough function and eliminates the need for the cast epoxy connector previously used on such devices.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,653,759 to Hogan et al. discloses an in-vivo methodology for repairing aruptureso fragmented segment of a pre-existing therapeutic appliance which has been previously surgically positioned or implanted within a human body. The repair methodology eliminates the need for surgical excision procedures by using a guiding catheter and deformable, thermoelastic shape-memory alloy rods in order to access and repair the flawed or failing therapeutic appliance.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,908,447 and 5,957,966 to Schroeppel et al. both disclose a cardiac lead that includes a connector for connecting to a cardiac stimulator and a flexible sleeve coupled to the connector. The sleeve has a first segment, a second segment, and a jacket coupling the first segment and the second segment. The jacket is composed of a shape-memory polymeric material which deforms diametrically in situ to selectively disconnect the first segment from the second segment. An electrode is coupled to the sleeve and a conductor is disposed in the sleeve and coupled to the connector for conveying electrical signals. The breakaway function of the jacket allows removal of all but a small portion of the lead without dissection of fibrous tissue. It was in light of the foregoing that the present invention was conceived and has now been reduced to practice.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A feedthrough connector for an implantable medical device includes a hermetically sealed housing containing an electrical circuit and a tubular barrel with an open end and a closed end defining a tubular channel that protrudes into the sealed housing while maintaining the seal of the housing. The inside of the tubular channel is open to the outside of the sealed housing through the open end and the tubular barrel also has a plurality of circumferentially spaced openings extending between an outer peripheral surface and the tubular channel. An electrical contact assembly electrically in common with the electrical circuit within the housing serves to make electrical contact with an electrical lead axially inserted into the open end of the tubular channel. The electrical contact assembly includes a plurality of contact members received in and projecting radially through a plurality of circumferentially spaced openings and a sleeve member of shape memory alloy freely overlies the contact members when in a first deformed-shape configuration but engage the contact members and the outer peripheral surface of the tubular barrel when in a second memory-shaped configuration, urging the contact members into mechanical, electrical, and hermetically sealed engagement with the electrical lead. The tubular channel may include a plurality of conductive cylindrical portions coaxial with the axis of the tubular barrel, the dimensions of the diameter of the successive cylindrical portions progressively decreasing from the open end to the closed end.
The electrical contact assembly includes an annular spring member which overlies the plurality of circumferentially spaced openings in the tubular barrel and itself has a plurality of cicumferentially spaced holes generally aligned with the openings in the tubular barrel. The contact members are balls, each having a diameter greater than the diameter of the openings in the tubular barrel and greater than the diameter of the holes in the annular spring member. The balls are captured between the annular spring member and the tubular barrel and project through the holes for engagement with the electrical lead.
The annular spring member is discontinuous, having opposed finite ends capable of being separated against hoop bias from a closed position at which the finite ends are in a proximate relationship to an open position at which the finite ends are in a distant relationship for placement on the tubular barrel, then returned to the closed position when overlying the plurality of circumferentially spaced openings.
The tubular barrel has a pair of annular grooves in the outer peripheral surface longitudinally straddling the plurality of circumferentially spaced openings and lying in parallel spaced apart planes transverse of the tubular barrel axis. In a cooperative manner, the sleeve member has an inner peripheral surface with a pair of annular rims lying in parallel spaced apart planes aligned, respectively, with the annular grooves of the tubular barrel. With this construction, as the sleeve member assumes the second memory-shaped configuration, the annular rims of the sleeve member fittingly engage with the annular grooves of the tubular barrel and hermetically seal the region therebetween when the electrical lead is axially inserted into the open end of the tubular channel and sealingly engaged therewith.
Desirably, the tubular channel has an annular seal groove locat

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