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[0001] The invention disclosed herein relates to a method and device for treating obesity. More particularly, the invention relates to a method and device wherein a covered stent having at least one one-way valve is positioned to extend from a patient's gastro-esophageal junction to the patient's duodenum.
[0002] Surgical treatment of morbid obesity dates back to 1954 when the first jejunoileal bypass (intestinal) was done specifically for weight loss. The premise of this bypass was that patients could eat large amounts of food and the excess would either be poorly digested or passed along too rapidly for the body to absorb excess calories. In addition, intestinal bypass caused a temporary decrease in appetite which also resulted in weight loss. Unfortunately, essential nutrients were also lost in the stool. Because the effects of intestinal bypass were too difficult to predict and manage, the original form of the operation is no longer performed.
[0003] In 1969 it was noted that near-total removal of the stomach for cancer or ulcers caused patients to remain at below normal weight. This suggested that a gastric bypass could be used for severe obesity. This approach involved stapling off most of the stomach, bypassing the duodenum, and allowing the undigested food to pass along directly into the intestine. Most of the early operations eventually failed because the pouch became enlarged.
[0004] Today there are two primary surgical procedures used for achieving weight loss. One is the vertical banded gastroplasty, commonly referred to as VBG, and the other is the Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, or simply, the gastric bypass.
[0005] Gastric bypass involves significant enough risk to a patient that it is considered only as a lifesaving undertaking for morbidly obese individuals. Reported complications following the gastric bypass include postoperative complications and side effects such as marginal ulcers, wound infections, pulmonary emboli, gastrointestinal hemorrhage, renal failure, and numerous other disorders. The nature, severity, and frequency of these problems have in fact led some to doubt the advisability of the known surgical techniques for treatment of obesity. There has been, and continues to be, a need for less traumatic surgical or non-surgical techniques to treat obesity.
[0006] It is an object of the invention to provide a method and device for treating obesity.
[0007] It is also an object of the invention to provide an endoscopic device to separate ingested food and gastric fluids.
[0008] It is a further object of the invention to provide an endoscopic device to separate ingested food in the small bowel from digestive enzymes.
[0009] It is additionally an object of the invention to provide a covered stent having one-way valves.
[0010] It is a yet further object of the invention to provide a method for treating obesity wherein a covered stent having one-way valves is inserted into a patient's gastrointestinal tract.
[0011] These and other objects of the invention will become more apparent from the discussion below.
[0012] According to the invention, a device is inserted into a patient's stomach endoscopically to separate ingested food from gastric fluids and, optionally, to separate ingested food in the duodenum from digestive enzymes. In one embodiment of the invention, a stent is inserted into a patient's gastrointestinal tract to bypass the stomach. The stent comprises a covered stent having one-way openings and/or valves on its annular surface and preferably at least one one-way valve at one end to permit entry of food and/or liquids. Optionally the one-way valve at the end of the stent can comprise a sleeve that extends through the stent, preferably into the duodenum or beyond. One end of the stent is intended to be positioned at or above the gastro-esophageal junction, and the other end is intended to be positioned in the duodenum or beyond. The net effect of endoscopic gastric bypass is to replicate some or all of the effects of a surgical gastric bypass.
[0013] The stent is advantageously delivered on a balloon dilatation catheter having one or more dilatable balloons. Preferably the distal and proximal portions of the stent are attached or crimped to corresponding portions of the catheter, and then, when the stent is properly positioned, balloons are dilated to expand the stent portions. Self-expanding stents, with appropriate catheter-based delivery systems, could be used as well. The stent can be removed by use of one or more of known methods or devices.
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[0018] The invention can perhaps be better appreciated by making reference to the drawings. In
[0019] Optionally stent
[0020] Also, as shown in
[0021] It is within the scope of the invention that one-way valves
[0022] One skilled in the art would appreciate the various aspects of the stent of the invention, e.g., the length of valve member
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[0024] In
[0025] The width, length, and other parameters of the stent of the invention will vary, especially according to the patient, as one skilled in the art would appreciate. The overall length of the stent will be from about 10 to about 40 cm, preferably from about 12 to about 30 cm, and the expanded diameter will be from about 1.5 to about 4 cm, preferably from about 2 to about 3 cm. The number and placement of one-way valves in each of the stent tubular member
[0026] Materials useful according to the inventor include biocompatible material such as stainless steel or nitinol and acid resistant polymers.
[0027] It will be further apparent to one skilled in this art that the improvements provided for in the present invention, while described with relation to certain specific physical embodiments also lend themselves to being applied in other physical arrangements not specifically provided for herein, which are nonetheless with the spirit and scope of the invention taught here.