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| United States Patent | 4911170 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4911170.html |
| Inventor(s) | Thomas, III; Lewis J. (Schenectady, NY);
Gilmore; Robert S. (Burnt Hills, NY);
Trzaskos; Casmir R. (Amsterdam, NY) |
| Abstract | A broadband 25 to 50 MHz spherically focused ultrasonic transducer is
placed on the tip of a catheter such that ultrasonic images of arteries
and plaque are produced by introducing the catheter into arteries of
patients. The high frequency transducer has thin piezoelectric polymer
film as the transducing element and is adhered to a depression in the
reduced cross section catheter tip. A coaxial cable in the catheter
connects the transducer to an external signal source and a display for the
received signals. The diagnosis and characterization of arterial disease
is most often coupled with a therapeutic technique such as balloon
angioplasty. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4911170 |
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High frequency focused ultrasonic transducer for invasive tissue
characterization |
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| Publication Date |
March 27, 1990 |
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| Filing Date |
August 22, 1988 |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to an ultrasonic transducer on medical apparatus
that is introduced into the body and especially to a method of
characterizing arterial disease by generating ultrasound from within the
artery.
Atherosclerosis, hardening of the arteries, afflicts most people living in
developed countries. Coronary artery disease is the primary cause of
ischemic heart disease, which is responsible for more deaths in this
country than any other disease. Treatment of artherosclerosis currently
relies on considerable guess work by the physician. Some forms of plaque,
which are calcified lesions on arteries, may be effectively treated by
drugs while others require surgery. Also, approximately 30% of patients
who undergo balloon angioplasty for opening of occluded arteries, the
major cause of heart attacks, redevelop the occlusion within three months.
In order to select the proper course of treatment and to assess the
success of treatment, some means to differentiate types of plaques is
needed.
Most work attempting to characterize artery disease has used ultrasound at
the relatively low frequencies of 5 to 15 MHz. This is because the
transducers were placed on the surface of the skin, and therefore the
ultrasound has to penetrate considerable distance before the artery was
reached. Because of the high acoustic attenuation at the higher
frequencies of 25 to 50 MHz, these frequencies could not be used to
penetrate deep enough into the body to characterize arteries. Even carotid
arteries which lie very close to the skin in the neck are typically
examined with 15 MHz ultrasound. Due to the long wavelengths and broad
beamwidths of these systems little success has been achieved in
differentiating various types of atherosclerotic plaques even in
relatively accessible arteries such as the carotid. This work is described
at length in the medical literature.
Broadband high frequency (25 to 50 MHz) focused transducers have been
available for many years, and an ultrasonic microscope represents one of
the most significant applications of these transducers to nondestructive
testing. Refer for instance to "Acoustic Microscopy From 10 to 100 MHz for
Industrial Applications", R. S. Gilmore et al., Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond.
A320, 215-235 (1986). These systems are inappropriate for introduction
into arteries because of the size of the transducers, typically several
inches. Measurements in such an ultrasonic microscope on excised artery
specimens using a broadband 50 MHz transducer focused with an F/2 lens
indicate that the system can differentiate between normal artery and fatty
plaques, an early stage of atherosclerosis not normally detectable.
The ultrasonic transducers of this invention may be fabricated from thin
piezoelectric polymer film such as PVDF (poly vinylidene di fluoride).
High frequence transducing elements of this material are described in
patent 4,760,304, D. W. Oliver, "Dark Field Coaxial Ultrasonic Transducer"
and allowed divisional application S.N. 126,325, filed Nov. 30, 1987,
"Method of Fabricating Dark Field Coaxial Ultrasonic Transducer" now U.S.
Pat. No. 4,787,126.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
An object of the invention is to provide a device for improved
characterization of various types of arterial and heart disease by
introducing a broadband high frequency ultrasonic transducer into the
artery or heart and examining backscattered ultrasonic signals.
Another object is the provision of an ultrasonic transducer on the tip of a
catheter for improved differentiation and measurement of atherosclerotic
plaque.
Yet another object is to coordinate and couple the characterization of
vascular disease by in vivo ultrasound examination with the treatment of
the diseased tissue.
One aspect of the invention is medical apparatus for invasive ultrasonic
tissue characterization comprising an elongated flexible catheter to be
inserted into the body which has a broadband high frequency focused
ultrasonic transducer mounted on the tip of the catheter, which may have a
reduced cross section, to transmit ultrasound into the body and receive
echoes from body structures and diseased tissue. An electrical cable
inside the catheter is connected to the transducer and exteriorly to other
components of the imaging system. The latter is comprised of means to
pulse the transducer to display received signals. A high frequency, 25 MHz
to 50 Mhz, spherically focused transducer has a thin piezoelectric polymer
film transducing element such as PVDF which is adhered to a spherically
shaped depression in the end of the catheter.
The preferred embodiment is an ultrasonic tipped catheter to be inserted
into and produce images of an artery. The catheter tip is approximately
hemispherical and the high frequency spherically focused transducer is
mounted on the tip to transmit ultrasound approximately perpendicular to
the longitudinal axis of the catheter so as to be incident on a wall of
the artery and detect ultrasound backscattered from the wall and any
plaque in the artery. The catheter may have means to treat the plaque,
such as an inflatable balloon to perform balloon angioplasty. This device
may be used to determine treatment strategies and to ascertain the
efficacy of the treatment.
Another aspect of the invention is a method of characterizing arteries in
vivo. An ultrasonic tipped catheter as already described is inserted into
the artery, and the transducer is pulsed, generates ultrasound, and
receives ultrasound backscattered from an artery wall and any plaque in
the artery. The final step is imaging the backscattered signals in order
to characterize the arterial disease. A further feature is that ultrasonic
imaging of the artery may be coupled with balloon angioplasty or another
therapeutic technique.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a cross section of a human artery illustrating deposits of a
plaque.
FIG. 2 is a longitudinal cross section through the artery and a catheter
having an ultrasonic transducer on the tip to characterize arterial
disease and a balloon to treat the disease.
FIGS. 3 and 4 show transmitted and received signals from a healthy artery
and a diseased artery having fatty plaque deposits.
FIG. 5 is a longitudinal cross section of the catheter tip showing the
ultrasonic transducer and a guide wire that is retracted to make acoustic
measurements.
FIG. 6 is a longitudinal cross section to a larger scale of a portion of
the catheter tip and the high frequency PVDF film ultrasonic transducer.
FIG. 7 shows the other end of the catheter and a block diagram of the
ultrasonic imaging system.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Many different types of catheters are used to study different parts of the
body. For examining large arteries and the inside of the heart, the
catheter may be as simple as a relatively large piece of plastic tube with
a 2.5 to 3 mm diameter. For measurements in the coronary arteries smaller
catheters having a diameter of 1.2 to 1.5 mm which have steerable guide
wires are used. This description will discuss an ultrasonic catheter which
can be used in coronary arteries; however, with the removal of the guide
wire and increases in the size of the catheter, this design could be
adapted for use in larger arteries or the heart.
In FIG. 1 is shown a diseased coronary artery which has a 3 millimeter
diameter. The outer and inner walls are seen at 10 and 11 and the fatty
plaque 12 is of sufficient extent that the opening 13 in the artery may
have a diameter as small as 1 mm. In FIG. 2, an ultrasonic tipped catheter
14 is introduced into the artery and remaining opening 13 to produce
ultrasonic images of the artery and characterize arterial disease. The
catheter itself may be conventional except that the tip is partly cut
away, and a broadband high frequency focused ultrasonic transducer 15 is
mounted in the reduced cross section tip portion 16. This catheter has a
guide wire 17 running longitudinally through the center of the tubular
catheter body 18; this wire has a flexible tip and is used to steer the
catheter into the appropriate location in the artery, and is then
withdrawn when the ultrasonic measurements are made. An inflatable balloon
19 on a forward section of the catheter is used to perform balloon
angioplasty and treat the fatty plaque. The catheter may instead have
means to perform another type of therapy such as laser angioplasty. Most
commonly the ultrasonic diagnostic and characterization technique is
coupled with a therapeutic technique such as balloon or laser angioplasty.
The ultrasonic transducer 15 is preferably a 25 MHz to 50 MHz, spherically
focused device that transmits ultrasound to be incident on the artery
walls 10 and 11 and detects ultrasound backscattered from these walls and
any plaque 12 in the artery. The ultrasound examination has three
functions, the location, the diagnosis, and characterization of arterial
disease. As the ultrasonic catheter is moved through the artery, the
ultrasonic measurements serve to locate the plaque precisely and the
thickness of plaque may be measured before and after a treatment such as
balloon angioplasty. The characteristics of the plaque are determined,
specifically is it a type than can be treated by balloon angioplasty and
if another type of treatment such as bypass surgery is needed.
Radio frequency waveforms recorded from normal and fatty regions of the
artery are shown in FIGS. 3 and 4. When there is normal tissue the large
amplitude transmitted signal 20 is followed by a large amplitude received
signal 21 representing ultrasound backscattered from the artery wall and a
short period of lower amplitude echo signals 22. The acoustic signal
resulting from a diseased artery having fatty plaque deposits is easily
distinguished. The transmitted signal 23 is followed by lower amplitude
signals 24 resulting from ultrasound backscattered by the fatty plaque.
The larger voltage signal 25 and lower amplitude echo signal voltages 26
representing reflections from the wall and subsequent echoes are as
before. Some plaque may be more rather than less reflecting; in this case
the echo from the plaque may be larger than the wall echo. These are
one-dimensional images of the echoes from one point in the artery such as
might be displayed on an oscilloscope. When the entire catheter is rotated
or only the tip, this yields a two-dimensional, B-scan display.
In FIG. 5 there is shown a longitudinal cross section of the tip of the
ultrasonic catheter 14. The body 18 of the catheter is usually made of a
flexible, inert plastic. A guide wire 17 with a flexible spring-like tip
runs down the center of the catheter. Electrical signals are transmitted
to and received from ultrasonic transducer 15 via a coaxial electrical
cable 27 running the length of the catheter. The heart of the system is
the ultrasonic transducer 15 itself which suitably has a piezoelectric
polymer as the transducing element. Gold or aluminum electrodes are
applied to the film to provide electrical connections to the cable. Wires
28 and 29 connect the two electrodes to the center and outer conductors 30
and 31 of the cable. With the guide wire 17 retracted, pulsing the
transducer 15 generates a focused ultrasonic field 32 that propagates
toward the artery wall in a direction approximately perpendicular to the
longitudinal axis of the catheter.
The reduced cross section, approximately hemispherical tip portion 16 of
ultrasonic catheter 14, and the ultrasonic transducer 15 and its
connections to coaxial cable 27 are shown to an enlarged scale in FIG. 6.
The preferred piezoelectric polymer is PVDF (poly vinylidene difluoride).
By using very thin PVDF films, 9 microns or less in thickness, good
broadband high frequency transducers may be realized and, since the PVDF
film is thin, the material may be focused simply by attaching the PVDF to
an appropriately shaped support. In order to produce the correct geometry
for focusing the ultrasonic field at the artery wall, a spherically shaped
depression 33 is machined in the center tip. The high frequency
spherically focused transducer 15 is fabricated by laying over the cavity
a circular disk of the PVDF film 34 which has gold electrodes 35 and 36 on
either surface, and pressing the disk into the cavity with an
appropriately sized ball. The transducer is adhered to the catheter tip by
a layer 37 of non-conductive epoxy. Small dots of conductive epoxy 38 and
39 serve to attach the wires 28 and 29 to the inner and outer electrodes
35 and 36. The diameter of the 25 MHz to 50 MHz broadband spherically
focused transducer 15 can be approximately equal to the external diameter
of the catheter. The diameter may thus be as small as 1 mm to 3 mm.
FIG. 7 is a diagram of the other end of the ultrasonic tipped catheter 14
which is external to the body of the patient. The ultrasonic imaging
system itself, other than the high frequency transducer, may be
conventional and the external components are illustrated. A tube 40 is
provided for radio-opaque dye to inflate the balloon 19. This tube has a
lock structure 41 for attachment to a syringe and exits into a small
channel 42 that extends most of the length of the catheter to the balloon
19 (FIG. 2) near the tip. The electrical coaxial cable 27 exits the
catheter body 18 near the end of the catheter. The imaging system
components include a transmit/receive unit 43, a trigger circuit 44 to
time the generation of RF pulses, an amplifier 45, and a display device
46. Coaxial cable 27 can be a 50 ohm transmission line, and 50 ohm cables
47 and 48 interconnect the transmit/receive unit 43 with the coaxial cable
and with amplifier 45. Display 46 may be a simple oscilloscope, a
television monitor, or a computer system.
An ultrasonic tipped catheter has been described such that ultrasonic
images of arteries are produced by introducing a transducer into the
arteries of patients. This new arterial disease characterization apparatus
may be used both to determine appropriate treatment strategies and to
ascertain the efficacy of the treatment. Other applications of the
invention are the diagnosis and characterization of various types of
vascular and heart disease. The latter includes characterization of
myocardium as a replacement for endocardial biopsy for determination of
global heart disease such as cardiomyopathy and heart rejection after a
heart transplant.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with
reference to preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those
skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made
without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in
the appended claims.
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Description  |
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