An intravascular rotary blood pump possesses a catheter (10), a pumping device (50) disposed distally of the catheter and having at its distal end a flexible flow cannula (53) through which blood is either sucked or discharged by the pumping device (50) during operation of the blood pump, and at least one pressure sensor (27, 28A, 30) having at least one optical fiber (28A) which is laid along the flow cannula (53). The optical fiber (28A) and, where applicable, a sliding tube (27) in which the optical fiber (28A) is laid extend along a neutral fiber of the flow cannula (53).
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1. An intravascular rotary blood pump, comprising a catheter (10), a pumping device (50) disposed distally of the catheter (10) and having at its distal end a flexurally flexible flow cannula (53) through which blood is either sucked or discharged by the pumping device (50) during operation of the blood pump, and at least one pressure sensor (27, 28A, 30) having at least one optical fiber (28A), characterized in that the optical fiber (28A) is laid along a neutral fiber of the flow cannula (53).
0. 23. An intravascular rotary blood pump, comprising:
a catheter (10),
a pumping device (50) disposed distally of the catheter (10) and having at its distal end a flexurally flexible flow cannula (53) through which blood is either sucked or discharged by the pumping device (50) during operation of the blood pump, and
at least one pressure sensor (27, 28A, 30) having at least one optical fiber (28A) laid along a portion of the flow cannula (53) and extending in a longitudinal direction of the flow cannula (53), wherein the portion of the flexurally flexible flow cannula (53) is less flexurally flexible than the rest of the flexurally flexible flow cannula (53).
0. 18. An intravascular rotary blood pump, comprising:
a catheter (10),
a pumping device (50) disposed distally of the catheter (10) and having at its distal end a flexurally flexible flow cannula (53) through which blood is either sucked or discharged by the pumping device (50) during operation of the blood pump, and
at least one pressure sensor (27, 28A, 30) having at least one optical fiber (28A) laid moveably in a tube (27), the tube (27) is fixed along a neutral fiber of the flow cannula (53) selected to prevent breakage of the fiber (28A) during bending of the flow cannula (53) while the blood pump is guided through a vascular system of a patient, the tube (27) strengthening the neutral fiber of the flow cannula (53).
2. The blood pump according to
3. The blood pump according to
4. The blood pump according to
5. The blood pump according to
6. The blood pump according to
7. The blood pump according to
8. The blood pump according to
9. The blood pump according to
10. The blood pump according to
11. The blood pump according to
13. The blood pump according to
14. The blood pump according to
15. The blood pump according to
16. The blood pump according to
17. The blood pump according to
0. 19. The blood pump according to claim 18, wherein the tube (27) extends through walling of the flow cannula (53).
0. 20. The blood pump according to claim 18, wherein the tube (27) extends along an outer surface of the flow cannula (53).
0. 21. The blood pump according to claim 18, wherein the optical fiber (28A) is configured to undergo substantially no extension while the blood pump is guided through the vascular system of the patient.
0. 22. The blood pump according to claim 18, wherein the optical fiber (28A) is configured to undergo substantially no compression while the blood pump is guided through the vascular system of the patient.
0. 24. The blood pump according to claim 23, wherein the optical fiber (28A) extends through walling of the flow cannula (53).
0. 25. The blood pump according to claim 23, wherein the optical fiber (28A) extends along an outer surface of the flow cannula (53).
0. 26. The blood pump according to claim 23, wherein the optical fiber (28A) is configured to undergo substantially no extension while the blood pump is guided through the vascular system of the patient.
0. 27. The blood pump according to claim 23, wherein the optical fiber (28A) is configured to undergo substantially no compression while the blood pump is guided through the vascular system of the patient.
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This application 57 67 protruding from the motor section 51 into the pump section 52, which drives an impeller 58 by means of which, during operation of the blood pump, blood is sucked through the blood pass-through openings 54 at the distal end of the flexible flow cannula 53 and discharged proximally of the impeller 58 through the blood-flow pass-through openings 56. The pumping device 50 can also pump in the reverse direction when it is adapted accordingly. Leading through the catheter hose 20 of the catheter 10 to the pumping device 50 are the above-mentioned optical fibers 28A, 28B, on the one hand, and a power-supply line 59A for the motor section 51 and a purge-fluid line 59B.
The sensor head 60 of the first pressure sensor is fixed on the outside of the pump housing of the pump section 52. The appurtenant optical fiber 28B is guided in a thin plastic hose 21 over a short distance of for example 5 cm within the catheter hose 20, in order to ensure that the optical fiber 28B does not break upon strong curvatures of the catheter 10 in this region of the catheter hose 20. Outside the pumping device 50 the optical fiber 28B is laid freely and only bonded to the outer wall of the pumping device 50 by means of bonding agent. This minimizes the outer cross-sectional dimensions of the pumping device 50. The bonding of the optical fiber 28B is possible because the pumping device 50 is rigid in this region and the optical fiber 28B hence does not have to be movable relative to the pumping device 50.
In contrast, the optical fiber 28A leading to the sensor head 30 of the second pressure sensor is laid freely in a hose or tubelet, preferably a nitinol tubelet, along the total periphery of the pumping device 50, so that it can shift relative to the pumping device 50 within this hose or tubelet upon changes of bend of the flow cannula 53. The hose or tubelet thus forms the sliding tube 27 for the optical fiber 28A and extends along a neutral fiber of the flow cannula 53 on the outer surface of the flow cannula. It is likewise possible to lay the sliding tube 27 inside the flow cannula 53, in particular when a pressure inside the flow cannula 53 is to be measured, or to integrate it into the walling of the flow cannula 53.
The neutral fiber of the flow cannula 53, in the exemplary embodiment represented in
As explained at the outset, the optical fiber 28A can also be laid and fixed along a neutral fiber of the flow cannula 53 directly without an additional sliding tube 27. Freely laying the optical fiber 28A within the sliding tube 27 laid along the neutral fiber serves only to give the optical fiber 28A additional resistance to breakage.
The hose and/or tubelet of the sliding tube 27 in which the optical fibers 28A, 28B are laid can extend shortly into the catheter hose 20, but can also extend completely through the catheter hose 20 and end in a corresponding plug at the end of the line for insertion of the relevant pressure sensor into a connection of the evaluation device 100.
Distally before and/or beside and/or behind the sensor heads 30 and 60 there is respectively provided a bulge 35, 65 which protects the sensor heads 30 and 60 from damage upon introduction of the blood pump through a hemostatic valve or sluice valve. Furthermore, the sensor heads 30 and 60 are respectively set in a depression 36, 66 of the pumping device 50. This is not represented in
In a similar manner (
The sensor head 30 can alternatively extend together with the sliding tube 27 up to an arbitrary place on the soft-flexible tip 55 and be protected mechanically there e.g. by the walling of the soft-flexible tip 55. Bending-induced pressure artifacts are low, since the sensor membrane is disposed orthogonally to the walling. Only the bonded connection between the optical waveguide 34 and the sensor head must be protected against bending. This can be effected through the tubelet 27 or an additional stiffening in the region of the bonding.
The optical fiber 28B as well as the optical fiber 28A are preferably glass fibers, which are usually polymer-coated. Optical fibers made of plastic are likewise employable. However, optical fibers made of glass can be manufactured especially thin, which is favorable—in particular in combination with the additional sliding tube 27—for minimizing the total cross section of the pumping device 50. It is thus advantageous to employ optical fibers with a glass core which do not exceed a total diameter of 130 μm. It is true that such thin optical fibers are especially in danger of breaking when they are subjected to tensile or compressive forces. However, this risk is reduced to a great extent by disposing the optical fiber along the neutral fiber of the flow cannula 53. The sliding tube 27 can then possess an inner diameter of only 150 μm. The outer diameter then lies slightly thereabove, for example at 220 μm, so that the total cross section of the pumping device 50 is not significantly increased. For it is to be taken into consideration that the sliding tube 27 must always be laid outside the pumping device 50 at least in the region of the pump section 52. Tubelets made of the shape-memory alloy, nitinol, are commercially available with the above-mentioned inner and outer diameters. However, it is also possible to employ sliding tubes, in particular nitinol tubelets, with greater diameters, for example an inner diameter of 230 μm and an outer diameter of 330 μm. The optical fiber 28A can then also have an accordingly greater diameter.
There is a distinction between normal optical fibers and graded-index fibers. In graded-index fibers the glass-fiber cladding 28clad is formed by a plurality of superjacent glass layers with different refractive indices. The employment of graded-index fibers is preferred in connection with the present invention because they are more bendable and more lossless than simple glass fibers.
The sliding tube 27 consists for its part of an outer casing 27a, with an inner-side coating 27i. The outer casing 27a substantially defines the bending and extension properties of the sliding tube 27, while the inside coating 27i is essential for reducing the frictional forces acting between the sliding tube 27 and the optical fiber 28. The inside coating 27i is hence preferably a metallic coating or again a low-friction polymer coating, in particular made of polytetrafluoroethylene.
The sliding tube 27 can additionally be filled with a liquid in order to minimize frictional forces that occur.
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