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Expandable intraluminal endoprosthesisUSPTO Application #: 20070203570Title: Expandable intraluminal endoprosthesis Abstract: An expandable intraluminal endoprosthesis including a tubular member (1) a first diameter which permits intraluminal delivery of the member into a lumen of a body passageway, particularly a blood vessel. The tubular member (1) is capable of acquiring a second, expanded and deformed diameter upon the application from the interior of the tubular member of a radially outwardly extending force, which second diameter is variable and dependent on the amount of the force applied to the tubular member. Such a tubular member may be expanded and deformed to expand the lumen of the body passageway. The wall of the tubular member includes a substantially continuous structure (2) of mutually staggered undulations. This structure has been separated from a tube wall and exhibits at lest one pattern which advances substantially helically along a longitudinal axis of the tubular member. Connection elements within the structure connect adjacent undulations to each other. These connection elements are an integral extension of the undulations thereby interconnected. (end of abstract) Agent: White & Case LLP Patent Department - New York, NY, US Inventor: Gary J. Becker USPTO Applicaton #: 20070203570 - Class: 623001160 (USPTO) Related Patent Categories: Prosthesis (i.e., Artificial Body Members), Parts Thereof, Or Aids And Accessories Therefor, Arterial Prosthesis (i.e., Blood Vessel), Stent Structure, Having Multiple Connected Bodies The Patent Description & Claims data below is from USPTO Patent Application 20070203570. Brief Patent Description - Full Patent Description - Patent Application Claims [0001] The present invention relates to an expandable intraluminal endoprosthesis comprising a tubular member having a first and second end and a wall surface disposed between said first and second end, the wall having a substantially uniform thickness and having a first diameter in a first, unexpanded state which permits intraluminal delivery of the member into a lumen of a body passageway, particularly a blood vessel, which member is capable of acquiring a second diameter in an expanded and deformed state upon the application from the interior of the tubular member of a radially outwardly extending force, which second diameter is variable and dependent on the amount of said force applied to the tubular member, whereby the tubular member may be expanded and deformed to expand the lumen of the body passageway. More particularly the invention relates to an expandable intraluminal vascular endoprosthesis which is especially useful for repairing or reconstructing blood vessels narrowed or occluded by a disease. Commonly this kind of medical device is referred to as vascular stent or graft. [0002] Stents are prosthetic devices which are implanted inside a lumen in order to provide support for its wall and to assure an undisturbed flow through the lumen. This is particularly important in the field of angioplasty which is concerned with the repair and reconstruction of blood vessels. In that particular field stents are implanted within the vascular system to reinforce collapsing, partially occluded, weakened, or abnormally dilated sections of blood vessels. More generally, however, stents can be used inside the lumen of any physiological conduit or duct including the arteries, veins, bile duets, the urinary tract, alimentary tracts, the tracheobronchial tree, a cerebral aqueduct and the genitourinary system. Moreover stents can be used inside lumina of animals besides humans. [0003] Generally two types of stents may be distinguished. First there are self-expandable stents which automatically expand once they are released to assume a permanent deployed, expanded state. These stents expand to a defined diameter and are unable to remodel the true vascular anatomy over lengths greater than 2 cm. Their drawback is that the physician needs to place the right device and thereby has to rely on information derived from fluoro and angiographic equipment. A second type of stents concerns the so-called balloon expandable stents which generally involve a tubular member capable of receiving a balloon of a balloon-tipped catheter by means of which it may be deployed. The present invention particularly pertains to this second kind of stents. [0004] A common procedure for implanting a balloon-expandable stent in a blood vessel involves mounting the stent in its unexpanded, crimped state on a balloon-tip catheter of a suitable delivery system. The catheter is then slipped through an incision in the vessel wall and down the length of the vessel until it is positioned to bridge the diseased or narrowed portion of the vessel. The stent is then expanded with the aid of the balloon-catheter against the internal wall of the vessel. This may be done after the vessel has been predialated and it has been determined that a stent is necessary. Alternatively the vessel could be dilated by the stent itself while the latter is expanded by means of the balloon. It both cases the stent will maintain its deployed, expanded form once the balloon is evacuated and the catheter retracted again in order to provide a permanent support for the blood vessel concerned. [0005] A wide overview of vascular stents which are nowadays available is given in the Handbook of Coronary Stents by Patrick W. Serruys et al. of the Rotterdam Thoraxcentre Interventional Cardiology Group. This overview describes at page 21 ff. the so called Palmaz-Schatz.TM. stent as the gold standard in the field of stents. This stent concerns a number of consecutive slotted tubes of stainless steel which are mutually connected by means of one or more bridges. Although this stent is most widely used and tested in practice, it has been implanted in over 600000 patients all over the world, it still suffers from a number of drawbacks. The main drawbacks have to do with the stent-to-vessel-ratio uniformity and crimped as well as deployed flexibility. The stent-to-vessel-ratio involves the degree to which the vessel is supported by the stent in its expanded state and should not only be high, but preferably also uniform throughout the length of the stent. However, due to the inevitable bridges between adjacent tubes of the Palmaz-Schatz.TM. stent, there will be a bare area between adjacent segments of the stent once it has been deployed giving rise to a decreased and even poor stent-to-vessel-ratio at these locations. The other drawback concerns the rather high rigidness of the stent segments in their crimped and deployed state. As a consequence the stent has only a limited flexibility which hinders the delivery of the stent to its intended position inside the body. The poor deployed flexibility of this stent gives rise to a straightening of the vessel over segments longer than typically 2 cm which appears to be a primary cause for late term restenosis of the stented area. Typically this occurs after about 6 months after surgical post procedural. [0006] A balloon expandable stent with a highly uniform stent-to-vessel ratio as well as an excellent flexibility in its crimped state is described at page 63 ff. of the same reference and concerns the Cordis Coronary Stent. This device is composed of a single piece of tantalum (Ta) wire. The wire is wrapped to form a continuous sine wave and helically wound along a longitudinal axis. Both ends of the wire are weld terminated. A similar device was presented at the annual symposium of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) 11/95. This peripheral stent embodiment incorporates intermediate welds, patterned through the length of the stent. This device contains adjacent helical turns of the wire which are welded together at adjoining locations and exhibits a highly regular distribution of the wire along the length of the device. Its properties, such as crimped profile and stent-to-vessel ratio, are uniform over its length both in the crimped and deployed states. However, because of its constitution this device offers only a poor design freedom when it comes to tailoring the design to add specific functionality and remove certain drawbacks. Also the internal stress in the device once it has been wound hinders the provision of reliable welds between adjacent turns. These welds as well as those to the ends of the wire moreover remain a weak point especially during expansion of the device. [0007] It is an aim of the present invention to provide a balloon expandable stent which combines a high degree of uniformity and flexibility with excellent design capabilities. [0008] To this end an expandable intraluminal endoprosthesis of the kind described in the opening paragraph according to the invention is characterized in that at least in said first unexpanded state at least a part of said wall of said tubular member comprises a substantially continuous structure of mutually staggered undulations which has been separated from a tube wall, in that said substantially continuous structure comprises at least one pattern which advances substantially helically along a longitudinal axis of said tubular body and in that said structure comprises connection elements connecting adjacent undulations, which connection elements are an integral extension of the undulations which they connected. [0009] The structure making up the wall of the tubular member may be separated from a hollow tube by means of for instance laser cutting or a similar technique available to a skilled person. In this manner a substantially stress-free structure may be created incorporating a substantially helically advancing pattern which can be highly uniform and flexible throughout the length of the device but still facilitates unimpaired design freedom to tailor the pattern to meet additional functionality and to remove specific drawbacks. Moreover as the connecting elements are likewise separated from the tube as the rest of the structure and consequently are entirely integral with said structure the drawbacks associated with the welds in the prior art device may be avoided. The substantial helical pattern within the structure may be designed to form, upon deployment, a substantially continuously advancing spine as a kind of backbone of the device. [0010] A specific embodiment of the endoprosthesis according to the invention is characterized in that said structure comprises a continuous filament which is separated from a tube wall, in that said adjacent undulations are staggered in a substantially helical configuration advancing along a longitudinal axis of the tubular body to form one of said at least one substantially helical pattern within said structure, and in that a first helical turn of said filament around said longitudinal axis of said tubular member is connected to an adjacent second such turn of said filament by means of at least one of said connection elements, being an integral extension of said filament. This embodiment to large extend compares to the Cordis Coronary Stent referred to above, without however sharing the above described drawbacks of that device. [0011] In order to improve on flexibility in a compressed as well as in a deployed state of the device a further specific embodiment of the endoprosthesis is according to the invention characterized in that adjacent turns of said filament are connected to one another by means of a number of connection elements less than the number of undulations in said turns. Due to the fairly unlimited design freedom in the device of the invention, the number of interconnections between adjacent turns may be adapted freely to suit the flexibility of the device. The less connection between adjacent turns, the more flexible the device will be. Said design freedom moreover allows a variation of the number of interconnections between adjacent turns within the same device to suit an optimal behaviour. [0012] In a preferred embodiment an endoprosthesis is according to the invention characterized in that said structure comprises a number of turns of said filament whereby the connection elements to subsequent turns are radially shifted to form at least one further substantially helical pattern of said at least one substantial helical pattern within said structure. In this manner a kind of primary framework structure may be obtained which supports the vessel wall while maintaining deployed flexibility. More specifically a preferred embodiment of the endoprosthesis according to the invention is characterized in that at least a portion of the structure comprises a number of connection elements which are substantially equally divided in each turn of said filament and in that connection elements in successive turns are helically shifted by approximately one undulation pitch distance. By shifting the connection elements substantially a full pitch distance a structure is realized in which successive connection elements are linked to each other by substantially a full undulation of said first pattern. This undulation introduces significant slack and expandable diameter within the helical spine created by the interlinked connection elements which allows a very gradual expansion of the device transverse to its longitudinal direction. This reduces so called foreshortening which is a longitudinal shrinking of the device as it is expanded and would otherwise limit the effective range of the device. [0013] A further specific embodiment of the device according to the invention is characterized in that at least some of the connection elements comprise a strut diagonally interconnecting a first side of a first adjoining undulation to an opposite side of a second adjoining undulation, the strut being entirely integral with said adjoining undulations and having a direction different to the helical direction of said one substantial helical pattern within said structure. Upon deployment, this structure will create a kind of spine which runs over a series of connection elements in a different, or even contra-, helical direction compared to that of said one substantially helical pattern. Such multiple-helix structure is capable of withstanding a significant hoop strength whilst still being flexible and conformal to the natural vessel wall. [0014] In a still further embodiment an endoprosthesis is according to the invention characterized in that the connection elements to subsequent turns are radially shifted by approximately one undulation pitch distance. Due to this regular pattern of connection elements one or more continuous, helically turning spines will be obtained in the deployed stale of the device, formed by subsequent struts and the respective sides of the undulations they interconnect. These spines may form a scaffolding lattice which uniformly supports the vessel wall while maintaining deployed flexibility in order to be as conformal as possible with the natural form of the vessel concerned. It has been found that especially lack of the latter, resulting in a unnatural straightening of the vessel over a certain length, is a primary cause for late term restenosis of the stented segment. Due to the deployed flexibility and its highly conformal deployed shape this still further embodiment of the invention aims to avoid this problem. [0015] To further improve on flexibility while maintaining hoop strength, i.e. the ability to withstand inwardly directed radial forces, a further specific embodiment of the endoprosthesis according to the invention is characterized in that the first side of said first undulation, said opposite side of said second undulation and said strut have a first filament width and in that the opposite side of said first undulation and the first side of the second undulation have a second filament width, the first filament width being larger than the second filament width. The inventor has recognized that said second filament width may be made smaller than said first filament width, thus gaining flexibility, without deteriorating the strength of the device and particularly its radial hoop strength. [0016] In a further specific embodiment the endoprosthesis according to the invention is characterized in that said strut connecting opposite sides of adjoining undulations of subsequent turns have a substantially S-shaped structure. Such a double curved structure of the connection elements creates more slack between mutually interconnected undulations allowing more expansion as well as an improved stent to vessel ratio at said area once the prosthesis has been deployed. [0017] A still further preferred embodiment of the endoprosthesis according to the invention is characterized in that the connection elements each comprise two intersecting struts which are entirely integral with each other and with the adjoining undulations which they connect. The inventor has recognized that on deployment of the device such an interconnection element will first rotate around its central axis before the entire force applied pulls axially on the point of inter section. As a consequence a certain stress relief is incorporated in the device which allows for a smaller filament width. This does not only add to the flexibility of the device but also leads to a more favourable radio-opacity. Moreover, the intersecting struts leave a substantially unchanged scaffolding area or footprint upon deployment of the structure thereby improving on the eventual stent-to-vessel ratio of the device compared to a connection element which will almost entirely stretch upon deployment. [0018] The design freedom gained by the endoprosthesis according to the invention appears fairly unlimited and can be applied to precisely tailor the properties of the device to specific requirements. Not only the form, number and the location of connection elements but also the filament width and form of particular parts may be adapted in this sense. As an example, a further specific embodiment of the invention is characterized in that the undulations in said filament have a first mutual pitch in a first of said turns of said filament and a second mutual pitch in a second of said turns, the first and second pitch being different from each other. Varying the mutual pitch of the undulations will generally give rise to more or less flexibility in combination with less or more vessel support at the zones concerned. [0019] A still further embodiment of the endoprosthesis according to the invention is characterized in that at least a part of at least one undulation in at least one turn of said at least one substantially helical pattern has an increased amplitude, while at least the adjoining part of an adjoining undulation in an adjacent turn has a correspondingly decreased amplitude. In this case the mechanical properties of the device and especially the manner of deployment as well as the stent-to-vessel ratio may be tailored by offsetting the point where adjacent undulations meet. [0020] More specifically a further embodiment of the endoprosthesis according to the invention is characterized in that a first pair of adjacent undulations of said structure is connected by means of a first connection element, in that a second pair of adjacent undulation of said structure is connected by means of a second connection element, in that in between said first and second pair of connection elements at least one undulation of an intermediate pair of undulations has an increased amplitude, to bridge at least part of the length of said first and second connection element. In this case the inevitable length of the connection elements between adjacent turns of the device is at least partly compensated by the increased amplitude of said at least one undulation, leading to a more uniform deployed stent-to-vessel ratio. [0021] Besides or even instead of being formed by a series of substantially helically staggered undulations, a substantially helically advancing pattern within the structure may also be created by the connection elements in themselves. In this respect, a specific embodiment of the endoprosthesis according to the invention is characterized in that said structure comprises at least one series of connection elements which are substantially regularly distributed over at least part of the length of said tubular body and in that successive connection elements within said at least one series are radially shifted to form one substantially helical pattern of said at least one substantially helical pattern within said structure. More specifically, a preferred embodiments of the endoprosthesis according to the invention is characterized said successive connection elements are mutually connected by an elongated member which has a greater length than the linear distance between said connection elements in said first unexpanded state of the structure, in order to impart radial expandability to the structure. [0022] In this manner a helically advancing spine is realised throughout at least a part of the device which adds to the scaffolding lattice of the structure, especially in the deployed state of the device. One or even more of such spines may give the device a considerable hoop-strength and supporting capability, without depriving the structure of its crimped as well as deployed flexibility. The greater length of the elongated member adds expandable diameter to the individually connected connection elements, imparting additional slack within the structure, an improved expandability and less fore-shortening on the device. This additional circumference allows for side branch access greater than the maximum expanded diameter of the stent along the longitudinal axis. In this respect, a specific embodiment of the endoprosthesis according to the invention is characterized in that said elongated member comprises a substantially S-curved bent. The S-curved members are situated along the spiral helix equidistantly spaced, along the longitudinal axis of the tubular body, and primarily allow the device to uniformly expand out radially enabling the structure to orient itself into a helical structure upon deployment. In a more particular embodiment the S-curved bent is orientated substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis of the tubular body, which allows the member to uniformly expand perpendicular to said axis. This prevents the device from twisting and rotating on the balloon-catheter, or the like, as the device undergoes expansion. [0023] The endoprosthesis according to the invention may have a uniform structure throughout the device. A preferred embodiment of the device is however characterized in that the tubular body comprises a central portion, two outer portions at opposite ends of said tubular body and at least one intermediate portion in between the central portion and each of said end portions, the different portions being designed according to their specific function in the device. This embodiment is based on the recognition that different requirements may have to be imposed on different parts of the endoprosthesis to precisely meet the specific function or desired behaviour of the part concerned while the device is either unexpanded, expanded or in a transition between the unexpanded and expanded state. The present invention provides for a device in which this kind of tailoring may be implemented. [0024] More particularly a further embodiment of the endoprosthesis according to the invention is characterized in that at least in one of the two outer portions of the tubular body the undulations in said structure have a gradually decreasing amplitude whether or not in combination with a changing pitch or filament width in order to render a free end of said portion substantially transverse to the longitudinal axis of said body, at least in said first unexpanded state of said structure. Such a square-like tubular end of the endoprosthesis prevents an undesired cantilever protrusion of the last turn which otherwise could harm the wall of the lumen while the device is being navigated to its intended position. Moreover this structure improves the mechanical bond between the endoprosthesis and the balloon of the catheter used to manipulate the device within the body. The square end is created by gradually decreasing the amplitude and changing the pitch of the last few undulations until there is a final smooth transition forming the desired square end. Modifications of the filament width at this area may further improve this part's behaviour. Continue reading... Full patent description for Expandable intraluminal endoprosthesis Brief Patent Description - Full Patent Description - Patent Application Claims Click on the above for other options relating to this Expandable intraluminal endoprosthesis patent application. ### 1. Sign up (takes 30 seconds). 2. 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