Mechanical anastomosis system for hollow structures

Surgery – Instruments – Surgical mesh – connector – clip – clamp or band

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C606S139000, C227S901000, C227S902000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06485496

ABSTRACT:

The present invention relates to a system for making anastomoses between hollow structures by mechanical means, and also to a device and an applicator for use therewith.
Such a system may for example be used when making a bypass past narrowings or occlusions of arteries caused by arteriosclerosis. There are now various possibilities of remedying such constrictions or occlusions.
If the constriction or occlusion takes place in a coronary artery, the least radical method is to dilate the constriction by means of a PTCA procedure (Percutaneous Transluminal Coronary Angioplasty), which may or may not be followed by the placing of an intraluminal stent. This is not always possible, however.
On the other hand, as already mentioned before, it is possible to make a bypass by means of surgery. To this end an artery (arteria mammaria interna) or a vein from the leg (vena saphena magna) may be used, for example. An anastomosis is thereby made in the coronary artery, distally of the constriction or occlusion. The interconnection between the vessels is then manually sutured by means of 8 to 20 stitches. Said anastomosis may be a side-to-side or an end-to-side anastomosis. The natural origin of the arteria mammaria interna is usually preserved, so that such a bypass will directly be functional. A bypass made of a vena saphena magna will have to be sutured separately in the aorta (the so-called proximal anastomosis). Due to the small diameter of coronary arteries (1-3 mm), it is generally decided to stop the heart in order to be able to carry out the anastomosis precisely and safely. The blood circulation is kept going by a heart-lung machine during this time. Although this is a well-tried and reasonably safe method, it has certain drawbacks. Thus, the use of the heart-lung machine has a number of side effects for the patient, as a result of which recovery following surgery takes more time. Moreover, the necessary disposables for the heart-lung machine are costly.
At present, techniques are available for a number of readily accessible coronary arteries to make manually sutured vascular connections to a beating, functioning heart. Generally, a device which more or less immobilizes a small area of the heart by mechanical means is used thereby. The drawbacks of said method are the fact that only a limited number of places on the heart can be reached and the fact that part of the heart is temporarily anaemic, because it is necessary to stop the circulation through the blood vessel to be treated for 8-15 minutes.
The object of the present invention is to provide a system for making anastomoses between hollow structures by mechanical means, which will make it easier to make mechanical anastomoses.
In order to accomplish that objective, the system according to the invention is characterized by a device in the shape of an annular or tubular element comprising joining means provided circumferentially thereon for joining the abutting walls of the hollow structures together, as well as an applicator for moving said annular or tubular element in position and activating the joining means thereof.
The system according to the invention makes it possible to effect an anastomosis faster and more easily by placing an annular or tubular element comprising joining means with the aid of said applicator, which joining means are also activated by said applicator, in such a manner that the anastomosis is made.
The system according to the invention has a wide range of applications, due to the fast and accurate manner of making an anastomosis. Thus, the following applications are conceivable:
“port access surgery”, such as laparoscopic or thoracoscopic vascular reconstructions;
small, precise vascular connections to a moving organ, as in heart surgery; and
vascular reconstructions wherein the circulation through the supplying vessel may only be shut off for a very short period of time, as in neurosurgery.
Of course, it is also possible to use the invention to make anastomoses between other hollow structures.
The invention also comprises embodiments of devices and applicators for use in the above-described system for making anastomoses by mechanical means.
The device of the system according to the invention can be used intraluminally as well as extraluminally, and it can be adapted both for side-to-side anastomoses and for end-to-side anastomoses. The joining means are preferably pin-shaped elements, whereby pairs of pin-shaped elements may be considered, which can function as staples, or independently operating pin-shaped elements, which can be fixed to the vessel walls by being deflected. Preferably, the tubular or annular elements for intraluminal use can expand from a smaller starting diameter to a final joining diameter, whereby the joining means can be activated either automatically upon expansion or individually. The elements may have a circular cross-section, but also an elliptical cross-section, for example, so that the resulting anastomosis will also have a circular or an elliptical cross-section.
The invention furthermore comprises a method for making intraluminal side-to-side or side-to-end anastomoses between hollow structures by mechanical means, which is characterized by providing an applicator and associated joining means for joining the abutting walls of the hollow structures together, placing said joining means around the applicator, inserting said applicator and said joining means into one of said hollow structures to a location internally of the abutting walls of the hollow structures, and activating said applicator, and thus passing said joining means through said abutting walls or clamping said joining means against said abutting walls for the purpose of keeping said abutting walls in sealing contact with each other.
With this method, a number of loose staples may be used as the joining means.


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Review of Facilitated Approaches to Vascular Anastomosis Surgery; Pau

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