A device to prevent complications during catheterization.
AB Wire
An Indian American cardiologist nationally renowned for his advances in emergency heart care, Dr. Samir Pancholy, has invented a device to prevent complications during catheterization.
Pancholy, an interventional cardiologist in Clarks Summit, located in Pennsylvania, helped introduce the nation to a less painful, safer way to insert a catheter through the wrist instead of the groin. He is breaking ground with a device that prevents blood vessels from closing after the procedure, reported The Citizens’ Voice.
“One of the potential downsides of doing radial artery catheterization is that because it’s a small artery and we put equipment in there, it tends to close up or occlude,” Pancholy was quoted as saying.
In May, Pancholy and VasoInnovations Inc., the company he started with several partners, received patents for VasoBand.
Doctors catheterize patients for procedures like installing a stent, clearing blockages in blood vessels or inserting tiny cameras to look inside the heart.
VasoBand wraps around the wrist covering the access point and applies pressure to the both radial and ulnar arteries. It stops bleeding from the radial artery but keeps blood flowing to prevent occlusion after the procedure, the report said.
Only a small portion of radial artery catheterizations led to closed arteries in 2002, when Pancholy first began the procedure — about 7 to 10 percent, he said. Through techniques he and colleagues developed in 2008 that later became nationally accepted best practices, they cut that down to 2 to 3 percent.
However, those closed arteries mean grave complications later, and a tiny fraction of occlusions wasn’t good enough for the doctor.
Because the radial artery loops around at the wrist and connects with the ulnar artery, blood still travels normally to the hand, and it’s possible that patient and doctor may never know the radial artery closed, Pancholy said.
“We’d go in once, do the catheterization, everything goes fine and the patient goes home,” he said. “Then, two years later they have another blockage that we have to fix and we can’t go back in that same artery again — it closed up.”
He learned that by applying pressure to the other side of the artery loop, to the ulnar artery, the catheterization access site is less likely to close, the Voice reported.
“Randomized trials have actually shown that compressing the ulnar artery with any device leads to a lower rate of occlusion,” he said.
Using small balloons, the bracelet puts targeted pressure on the ulnar artery as well as the radial artery.
Now that they have their patent, the team is to start more trials for the device in India and the Czech Republic where they have already tested compression techniques.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is reviewing the device before it can be put into production. The company plans to patent the device and corresponding technique in other nations so it can be standardized and improve outcomes for patients worldwide.
When VasoBand was just a concept, Pancholy met California patent attorney and engineer Raj Sardesai, Ph.D., through a mutual friend. Sardesai, now his business partner, helped revise and submit the patent application. He saw in Pancholy a shared desire to help improve medicine, he said.
VasoInnovations has about five more patents pending for other devices to improve heart medicine, “all kinds of novelty gadgets that we are inventing around the space of radial artery catheterization,” Pancholy said.
As the company grows, he wants to offer VasoInnovations as a resource to other pioneering physicians. The company and its team of experts could help them with patent law, testing and FDA approvals, he said.