Apparatus and methods for accessing and sealing bodily vessels and cavities
US-2024415543-A1 · Dec 19, 2024 · US
US9259233B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9259233-B2 |
| Application number | US-95185307-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Dec 6, 2007 |
| Priority date | Apr 6, 2007 |
| Publication date | Feb 16, 2016 |
| Grant date | Feb 16, 2016 |
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Method and device for distending a gynecological cavity. According to one embodiment, a mechanical, non-fluid device is used to distend the gynecological cavity. Such devices include, for example, self-expanding members, such as resilient baskets, coils, whisks, prongs, and loops, or mechanically expanded members, such as inflatable balloons, mechanically-expanded cages and loops, and scissor jacks. The device may serve a purpose in addition to distension, such as illumination, imaging, irrigation, drug delivery, resection and cauterization.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A method of performing a transcervical surgical procedure in a uterus, comprising: transcervically positioning an expandable support structure within the uterus using a deployment tool releasably attached to the support structure; expanding the support structure into a three-dimensional configuration including an upper portion and a lower portion spaced apart from the upper portion, wherein expanding the support structure delivers an expansion force against opposing walls of the uterus to thereby create a three-dimensional void within the uterus between the upper and lower portions of the expanded support structure through non-fluid mechanical distention of the uterus; detaching the deployment tool from the expanded support structure; removing the deployment tool from the uterus, leaving the expanded support structure in place; after removal of the deployment tool from the uterus, introducing a surgical instrument into the uterus so that a distal end of the surgical instrument is located in the void between the upper and lower portions of the expanded support structure; using the surgical instrument to perform a surgical procedure in the uterus by advancing the surgical instrument through an opening in the expanded support structure while the expanded support structure distends the uterus through non-fluid mechanical distention, the surgical procedure including removal of uterine wall tissue through the opening; removing the surgical instrument from the uterus upon completion of the surgical procedure, collapsing the support structure within the uterus after removal of the surgical instrument from the uterus; and removing the collapsed support structure from the uterus. 2. The method as in claim 1 , further comprising coupling the support structure to a removal tool before collapsing and removing the support structure from the uterus. 3. The method as in claim 1 , wherein the procedure is surgical removal of fibroid tissue. 4. The method as in claim 1 , wherein expanding the support structure delivers an expansion force of at least about 0.5 lbs to mechanically distend the uterus. 5. The method as in claim 1 , wherein expanding the support structure delivers an expansion force of at least about 1.0 lbs to mechanically distend the uterus. 6. The method as in claim 1 , wherein expanding the support structure delivers an expansion force of at least about 5.0 lbs to mechanically distend the uterus. 7. The method as in claim 1 , wherein expanding the support structure achieves an equivalent distension of the uterus to that achieved by introduction of a liquid distension media at a pressure of at least about 40 mm Hg. 8. The method as in claim 1 , wherein expanding the support structure achieves an equivalent distension of the uterus to that achieved by introduction of a liquid distension media at a pressure of about 70 mm Hg. 9. The method as in claim 1 , the uterus having a fundus, wherein the expanded support structure contacts a surface of the fundus. 10. A method of performing a procedure in a uterus of a patient, the uterus having a cervix at a proximal end and a fundus at a distal end, comprising: positioning a deployment tool in at least inside the cervix; delivering an expandable support structure through the deployment tool and into the uterus; expanding the support structure into a three-dimensional configuration including an upper portion and a lower portion spaced apart from the upper portion, wherein expanding the support structure delivers an expansion force against opposing walls of the uterus to thereby create a three-dimensional void within the uterus between the upper and lower portions of the expanded support structure through non-fluid mechanical distention of the uterus; removing the deployment tool from inside the patient, leaving the expanded support structure in place within the uterus; after removal of the deployment tool from the patient, introducing a surgical instrument into the uterus so that a distal end of the surgical instrument is located in the void between the upper and lower portions of the expanded support structure; using the surgical instrument to perform a surgical procedure in the uterus by advancing the surgical instrument through an opening in the expanded support structure while the expanded support distends the uterus through non-fluid mechanical distention, the surgical procedure including removal of uterine wall tissue through the opening; removing the surgical instrument from the uterus upon completion of the surgical procedure, collapsing the support structure within the uterus after removal of the surgical instrument from the uterus; and removing the collapsed support structure from the uterus. 11. The method as in claim 10 , the uterus having a fundus, wherein the expanded support structure contacts a surface of the fundus. 12. The method as in claim 10 , further comprising coupling the expandable support structure to a removal tool before removing the expandable support structure from the uterus. 13. The method as in claim 10 , wherein the procedure is surgical removal of fibroid tissue. 14. A method of performing a transcervical procedure in a uterus of a patient, comprising: transcervically positioning an expandable support structure within the uterus using a deployment tool that is inserted into the patient to access the uterus, the deployment tool being releasably attached to the support structure, the support structure comprising a three-dimensional array of filaments, with adjacent filaments of the array defining windows there between; expanding the support structure, wherein expanding the support structure delivers an expansion force against opposing walls of the uterus so that the expanded filament array defines a three-dimensional interior void within the uterus through non-fluid mechanical distention of the uterus, thereby providing access to uterine wall tissue from within the interior void of the expanded support structure through the windows of the expanded support structure; detaching the deployment tool from the expanded support structure; removing the deployment tool from the patient, while leaving the expanded support structure in the patient's uterus; after removing the deployment tool from the patient, introducing a surgical instrument into the uterus so that a distal end of the surgical instrument is located in the interior void of the expandable support structure defined by the filament array; and using the surgical instrument to remove uterine wall tissue through one or more windows defined by adjacent filaments of the expanded support structure while the support structure distends the uterus through non-fluid mechanical distention. 15. The method as in claim 14 , further comprising coupling the support structure to a removal tool, and removing the support structure from the uterus. 16. The method as in claim 14 , wherein the uterine wall tissue comprises fibroid tissue. 17. The method as in claim 14 , wherein expanding the support structure delivers an expansion force of at least about 5.0 lbs to mechanically distend the uterus. 18. The method as in claim 14 , wherein expanding the support structure achieves an equivalent distension of the uterus to that achieved by introduction of a liquid distension media at a pressure of at least about 40 mm Hg. 19. The method as in claim 14 , the uterus having a fundus, wherein the expanded support structure contacts a surface of the fundus.
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