Endobronchial valve
Endobronchial valves were developed primarily by the start-up medical device company Emphasys Medical (now Pulmonx - Redwood City, California) as a minimally invasive alternative to lung volume reduction surgery for emphysema. In lung volume reduction surgery, a surgeon cuts into a patient's chest and cuts out one or more diseased portion(s) of a lung. Endobronchial valves were designed to replicate the effects of that procedure without requiring incisions, by simply allowing the most diseased portions of the lung to collapse. Emphasys was purchased by Pulmonx in 2009, and Pulmonx currently markets the Zephyr® endobronchial valve (developed by Emphasys) in Europe, Australia, China and many other locations outside the U.S. Pulmonx also sells the Chartis® Pulmonary Assessment System, which is a patient assessment tool used with endobronchial valves to help physicians target appropriate lung compartments for treatment. Another company, Spiration (Seattle, Washington), developed a different type of endobronchial valve and was acquired by Olympus in 2010.
Endobronchial valves may be the first successful medical device treatment of emphysema, a disease that affects billions of patients worldwide and has no known cure, being managed traditionally by lung transplantation and/or lung volume reduction surgery (though some patients do not meet the eligibility requirements for one or both of these invasive procedures). Endobronchial valves are typically implanted using a flexible delivery catheter advanced through a bronchoscope, and thus they are minimally invasive. The valves are also removable if they are not working properly. When properly used and correctly implanted, endobronchial valves have been shown to improve patients' ability to breathe, walk, exercise and perform their daily activities.
The endobronchial valve has these features:
- minimally invasive – no surgical incision;
- procedure of installation of the valve lasts about five minutes;
- intended to reduce acute hyperinflation;
- flexible – adapts to the variable size and shape of the airway;
- ability to “stage” procedure and treat conservatively;
- reversible – valves are designed to be removable post implantation;
- increased ability to carry out daily activities;
- improved exercise tolerance;
- increased ventilation to healthier portions of the lung.
- Links
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endobronchial valve
- http://www.wikidoc.org/index.php/Endobronchial valve
- Medical Conditions
- Emphysema
- Tuberculosis
- Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- Medical Devices
- Zephyr® Endobronchial Valve
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