|
|
|
| United States Patent | 4202349 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4202349.html |
| Inventor(s) | Jones; James W. (4108 James Dr., Metairie, LA 70003) |
| Abstract | A radiopaque blood vessel marker is provided for attachment to the side
wall portions of a blood vessel during, for example, a coronary by-pass
operation. The markers in the preferred embodiment are flattened,
oval-shaped radiopaque discs which are attached to the outer peripheral
wall portion of the blood vessel at one hundred eighty degrees
(180.degree.) with respect to one another (See FIG. 3). Each radiopaque
marker can be comprised of a central imbedded element of radiopaque
material such as tantilum which is surrounded by a suitable plastic or
like resinous material which is inert and acceptable for use within the
human body. During a coronary by-pass, for example, these markers could be
attached by suturing or like means to the vein graft which is itself
sutured into its new position during the by-pass operation. A fluoroscopic
examination by a radiologist would reveal a desirable pulsation of the
graft vessel in the form of the two attached markers as the radiopaque
markers will constantly move (in and out) with respect to one another.
Each marker is attached to the undulating wall portion of the vessel which
is constantly moved when blood flow is passing through the graft as is
desirable. In the event that complications arise, and the graft becomes
clotted (stopping the flow of blood therethrough), a fluoroscopic
examination will reveal that the radiopaque vessel markers do not move in
and out with respect to one another but rather are stationary indicating a
lack of undulation and a corresponding lack of blood flow. |
|
|
|
Title Information  |
|
|
|
|
|
Drawing from US Patent 4202349 |
|
|
Radiopaque vessel markers |
|
|
|
|
|
| Publication Date |
May 13, 1980 |
|
|
|
|
|
| Filing Date |
April 24, 1978 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Title Information  |
|
|
References  |
|
|
| *references marked with an asterisk below are user-added references |
|
U.S. References |
|
|
|
|
|
|
U.S. References |
|
|
Foreign References |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Foreign References |
|
|
Other References |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other References |
|
|
|
|
|
References  |
|
|
|
|
|
| Market Size |
|
Estimate the gross annual revenues of the relevant market
sector:
|
| | |
| |
|
|
| Market Share |
|
Estimate the percentage of the relevant market sector this invention will capture:
|
| | |
| |
|
|
| Reasonable Royalty |
|
What percentage of gross sales should the inventor or assignee be paid?
|
| | |
| |
|
|
|
Public's "Guesstimation" of Royalty Value
|
| Market Size | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Market Share | N/A | [No votes] | | x | Reasonable Royalty | N/A | [No votes] |
| | N/A | |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Market Review  |
|
|
Technical Review  |
|
|
Claims  |
|
|
What is claimed as invention is:
1. A radiopaque vessel marker comprising:
a. radiopaque marker means adapted for surgical attachment to a portion of
an interior blood vessel for indicating the pulsatile flow of blood
through the vessel said means providing spaced portions for indicating
relative movement with respect to one another during such pulsitile blood
flow, said marker means being of a substantially radiopaque material; and
b. means associated with said marker means for attaching said marker means
to the interior blood vessel.
2. The vessel marker of claim 1 wherein said radiopaque means is attached
to the outer surface portion of an interior blood vessel.
3. The vessel marker of claim 1 wherein said marker means is a pair of
substantially flattened discs adapted for attachment to opposite outer
wall portions of a blood vessel.
4. The vessel marker of claim 3 wherein each of said discs is provided with
identifying indicia thereon.
5. The vessel marker of claim 3 wherein said attachment means is comprised
of at least one opening through said disc, and suture means insertable
through said opening and a portion of the vessel for tying said disy to
the vessel at said opening.
6. A method of fluoroscopically inspecting a vessel like structure within
the human body comprising the steps of:
a. attaching a pair of spaced radiopaque markers to the outside peripheral
wall portion of the vessel-like structure the pair of markers adapted for
relative movement with respect to one another; and
b. examining fluoroscopically the relative movement of each spaced
radiopaque marker attached to the vessel-like structure responsive to
pulsatile blood flow therethrough.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein in step "a" each radiopaque body is
surgically attached to the outside peripheral wall portion of the
vessel-like structure.
8. The method of claim 6 wherein in step "a" two radiopaque bodies are
surgically attached by suturing to the vessel-like structure.
9. The method of claim 6 wherein in step "a" the pair of radiopaque markers
are attached to the outer peripheral wall portion of a blood vessel at
opposite sides thereof.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein in step "a" the two markers are attached
to the outer peripheral wall portion of a blood vessel to be inspected at
substantially one hundred eighty degrees (180.degree.) apart.
11. The method of claim 6 wherein in step "a" two radiopaque discs are
surgically attached by suturing to opposing outer wall portions of a blood
vessel to be fluoroscopically inspected.
12. The method of claim 6 wherein the vessel to be fluoroscopically
inspected is provided with the pair of spaced markers during a surgical
operation.
13. A method of adapting a bypass graft blood vessel for subsequent
fluoroscopic examination, comprising the steps of:
a. surgically removing a blood vessel a patient to be used as a bypass;
b. attaching a pair of spaced radiopaque markers to the bypass blood vessel
outer opposite wall portions; and
c. surgically grafting the bypass blood vessel into a desired position with
the grafted bypass vessel thereafter circulating blood.
14. The method of claim 13 further comprising the step "d" of
fluoroscopically examining the pair of radiopaque markers to determine
relative movement therebetween.
15. The method of claim 13 wherein in step 15 the pair of markers oscillate
with respect to one another from a farther relative position to a closer
relative position responsive to pulsatile blood flow through the graft
vessel.
16. The method of claim 13 wherein in step "b" the radiopaque markers are
surgically attached by suturing to the bypass vessel.
17. The method of claim 13 wherein in step "b" the pair of spaced
radiopaqued markers are provided with differing indicia markers.
18. A method of adapting a bypass graft blood vessel for subsequent
fluoroscopic examination comprising the steps of:
a. surgically removing a blood vessel from a patient to be used as a bypass
graft vessel;
b. attaching at approximately one hundred eighty degrees (180.degree.)
apart a pair of spaced radiopaque markers to the bypass blood vessel outer
wall surface portion, the pair of spaced markers being independently
movable with respect to one another during pulsatile blood flow through
the bypass blood vessel graft;
c. surgically grafting the bypass blood vessel into a desired position with
the grafted bypass vessel thereafter adapted for circulating blood;
d. fluoroscopically examining the pair of radiopaque markers to determine
relative movement therebetween, the examination determining relative outer
vessel wall position and the presence of pulsatile blood flow through the
graft.
19. A radiopaque coronary vessel marker apparatus comprising:
a. a pair of radiopaque marker discs adapted for surgical attachment to a
portion of an interior blood vessel, said pair of discs indicating the
pulsatile flow of blood through the blood vessel during, for example a
coronary bypass operation, said radiopaque marker discs comprising each a
marker body, said marker body providing an inner radiopaque member
surrounded by an inert covering;
b. at least one opening through each marker body at said covering, said
opening adapting each of said marker discs for surgical sutured attachment
to a desired vessel to be marked.
20. The radiopaque vessel marker apparatus of claim 19 wherein said
covering is an inert plastic resinous covering.
21. The radiopaque vessel marker apparatus of claim 19 wherein said marker
discs are generally oval shaped.
22. The radiopaque vessel marker apparatus of claim 19, wherein there are
two openings on each marker disc at opposite end portions thereof.
23. The radiopaque vessel marker apparatus of claim 19, wherein there is
further provided suture means adapted for attachment to said marker bodies
at said openings, said suture means being provided with a needle for
attaching said suture means and said associated discs to a vessel to be
marked.
24. A radiopaque vessel marker apparatus for indicating vessel pulsatile
blood flow comprising:
a. first radiopaque oval marker disc, said marker disc having a pair of
suture attachment openings at its opposite end portions;
b. a second radiopaque oval marker disc, said second marker disc having a
pair of openings at its opposite end portions, said openings adapted for
receiving surgical suture therethrough for attaching said marker disc to a
vessel to be marked, said first and said second radiopaque markers each
comprising a central inner radiopaque member and a surrounding and
embedding outer covering, said covering being an inert plastic material,
each of said markers providing upper and lower surfaces, said lower
surface of each marker disc being adapted for attachment to the surface
portion of a vessel to be marked, said radiopaque member adapting each of
said discs for fluoroscopic examination; and
c. surgical suture attachment means associated with each of said openings
on each of said markers for attaching said markers to a blood vessel to be
marked, said surgical suture means being adapted for atttachment to a
surgical needle during operation.
25. The radiopaque vessel marker apparatus of claim 24 wherein said
radiopaque member is a tantilum metal material. |
|
|
|
|
Claims  |
|
|
Description  |
|
|
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to medical appliances and instruments. More
particularly, the present invention relates to radiopaque markers which
can be attached to the outer wall portions of a vessel, the markers being
of such a radiopaque nature allow inspection of their respective position
by fluoroscopic examination, thus indicating the desirable pulsation of
blood vessel or artery walls to which they are attached.
2. General Background and Prior Art
During certain surgical operations involving the circulatory system of a
patient, portions of the circulatory system are removed from legs and
grafted to the patient in the heart region. Operations of this type are
known in the art as a coronary bypass. The "graft" can be a vein
surgically removed from a portion of the leg and then sutured into its
desirable position as is known in the art.
Complications can arise if the graft becomes clotted with blood and cannot
convey the amount of blood therethrough as is desirable. If a surgeon is
suspicious that such a blockage has occurred, he must now investigate the
blockage by means of a complicated procedure using a catheter and
injecting dye into the patient. The dye injected into the vessels will
allow them to be viewed by a fluoroscope or like device during a
fluoroscopic examination thereby allowing the doctor to determine whether
or not the vessel has collapsed or is in fact satisfactorily conveying
blood.
The catherization of a patient in this manner is time consuming, expensive,
and entails a certain risk to the patient. Hospitalization of the patient
is required.
Therefore, a need exits for a simple and inexpensive manner for providing a
means of checking a patient at any desirable time to determine whether or
not his graft (which was earlier applied during a coronary bypass or like
operation) is still functioning properly and conveying blood as is
desirable.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF THE PRESENT INVENTION
The present invention solves all the prior art problems and shortcomings by
providing a radiopaque vessel or artery marker attachable to the outer
vessel wall. The vessel marker can be in the form of a substantially
flattened disc having means for attaching the disc to the vessel. In the
preferred embodiment, a pair of discs could be attached at roughly one
hundred eighty degrees (180.degree.) with respect to one another around
the vessel or graft. These two disc-like marker bodies are sutured into
place on the graft by the surgeon during the coronary bypass operation.
Thereafter, they provide a permanent indicator of the outer vessel wall
position which position can quickly be observed by a mere fluoroscopic
examination. Thus, a patient who has had a coronary bypass operation can
be checked promptly, quickly and inexpensively with little risk to the
patient by means of a fluoroscopic examination wherein the surgeon,
radiologist, or attending physician would merely observe the patient's
chest and examine the two radiopaque discs to see if their respective
movements were indicative of blood flowing through the graft in a
desirable fashion.
As is known in the art, the walls of a vessel will "pulsate" or move with
respect to the central bore of the vessel as blood is being pumped by the
heart therethrough. This enlargement of each vessel and subsequent
contraction will cause the radiopaque markers to appear to move closer and
farther apart sequentially as blood is pumped through the vessel to which
they are attached. Such a desirable pulsation and accompanying relative
movement of each marker body with respect to the other would indicate to
the surgeon, radiologist, or attending physician during a fluoroscopic
examination that blood is flowing through the artery as desired. With such
a cornary marker, no catheterization or other surgical procedure would be
necessary in order to examine the patient properly. Indeed, a surgeon
could merely have his patients report in to his office on a periodical
basis (removing the need for a hospital visit) and do a quick and simple
fluoroscopic examination of the area to which the graft was applied and
examine the two attached radiopaque marker bodies to see if their movement
was oscillating with respect to one another from a farther position to a
closer position. If such movement was apparent, the surgeon could be
assured that the vessel was expanding and contracting responsive to the
flow of blood therethrough in a desirable manner.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
For a further understanding of the nature and objects of the present
invention, reference should be had to the following detailed description,
taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like parts
are given like reference numerals and wherein:
FIG. 1 is a top view of the preferred embodiment of the apparatus of the
present invention illustrating a plurality of radiopaque artery markers;
FIG. 2 is a schematic perspective view of a typical blood vessel with a
radiopaque marker of the present invention attached thereto;
FIG. 3 is a sectional view of the preferred embodiment of the apparatus of
the present invention illustrating the connection of two radiopaque
markers to a typical vein structure;
FIG. 4 is a sectional view of the preferred embodiment of the apparatus of
the present invention;
FIG. 5 is a sectional view of an alternative embodiment of the apparatus of
the present invention; and
FIG. 6 is a sectional view taken along lines 6--6 of FIG. 4.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
In FIG. 1, there can be seen a plurality of artery markers 10. Each artery
marker 10 is comprised of a marker body 11 having openings 14 therethrough
which openings provide a means for attaching each respective marker body
11 to a vessel wall 23 as will be described more fully hereinafter. In
FIG. 1, artery markers 10 are shown to have a marker body dimension of
approximately 5 millimeters in length by 2 millimeters in width, with an
oval-shaped marker body 11 being illustrated in the preferred embodiment.
It should be understood that similar shapes and similar radiopaque bodies
and structures would suffice within the teaching of the present invention.
Note that indicia markings 17 could be provided on each marker 10 as an
aid to the surgeon as to the proper position to locate the respective
marker body 11. In FIG. 1, the letters L and R, for example, indicate left
and right which would provide indicia for illustrating to the physician
that these two markings 11 would be attached to the left and right portion
of vessel 20 respectively, while C and D could indicate "circumflex" and
"descending" respectively.
FIGS. 2 and 3 illustrate the attachment of artery markers 10 to a typical
vessel 20 or like blood conveying vein, artery or like "vessel-like"
anatomical structure within the human body. FIG. 2, note that artery
marker 10 has been attached by means of sutures 24 applied through
openings 14 at the peripheral edge portion of each marker body 11. Note
that the artery marker 10 can be attached to vessel 20 on its outer
surface 21 by means of surgical sutures 24. The surgeon performing the
bypass operation could thus easily attach the markers 10 during the bypass
surgical procedure itself.
In FIG. 3, a sectional view of the attachment of two artery markers 10 is
illustrated. In the preferred embodiment, a pair of markers 10 would be
attached to illustrate the relative movement of the walls 23 (see FIG. 4)
of each vessel 20 to which the markers 10 were attached. In FIG. 3, this
relative movement would be inward and outward as is illustrated by arrows
22. Arrows 26 in FIG. 3 illustrate the flow of blood through the inner
portion of each vessel 20.
FIG. 4 illustrates the preferred embodiment of the apparatus of the present
invention and its method of attachment to vessel wall 23. In FIG. 4, there
is seen an artery marker designated generally by the numeral 10. Marker 10
is comprised of a marker body 11 which is provided with a central inner
radiopaque member 30 which can be, for example, a suitable radiopaque
metal such as tantilum (See FIG. 6). Surrounding and embedding this
central inner radiopaque member 30 is an outer covering 32. Covering 32
can be, for example, a suitable inert plastic or like resinous material.
Such plastic inert materials are known in the medical arts and are
generally known and provided as approved plastics for use within the human
body by the Federal Food and Drug Administration. Each marker 10 is
provided with an upper surface 15 and a lower surface 16. Note that the
lower surface 16 is attached to the surface 21 of each vessel 20, with the
vessel wall 23 being schematically illustrated in FIG. 4. A pair of
openings 14 provice a means for the attachment of sutures 24 therethrough
and into a portion of the vessel wall 23. Each suture 24 can be applied by
means of a surgical needle 27, with the suture 24 being shown threaded
through needle 27 at the needle eye 29. Arrow 28 schematically illustrates
the surgical suturing of a suture 24 or other suitable tie such as silk
for attaching artery marker 10 to the vessel wall 23. Such a surgical
attachment of marker 10 to the vessel wall 23 could be performed by the
surgeon simultaneously with the removal of the graft vein from the leg or
vessel 20 during the arterial bypass operation. Indeed, markers 10 could
be applied before the graft was sutured into its position.
In FIG. 5, is seen an alternative embodiment of the apparatus of the
present invention designated generally by the numeral 40. Artery marker 40
would be entirely of a plastic or like resinous material, providing a
marker body 41 and a plurality of openings 42 for the attachment of the
marker body 41 to the vessel wall 23 as was afore described with respect
to the preferred embodiment.
Because many varying and different embodiments may be made within the scope
of the inventive concept herein taught, and because many modifications may
be made in the embodiments herein detailed in accordance with the
descriptive requirement of the law, it is to be understood that the
details herein are to be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting
sense.
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
|
Description  |
|
|
|
|
|