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Medical tubing: tinier than ever and much more complex.


Smaller diameters, thinner walls, and more complex structures--that's a short description of the latest in medical tubing, which was exhibited at February's MD&M West show in Anaheim, Calif. These micro-fine products nowadays are more apt to incorporate high-performance engineering resins, wire braiding or wrapping, and shrink tubes to hold increasingly complex structures together.

"The market is going toward more complex composite tubes, starting to use more and more materials in a given tube, and more wire wrapping and braiding," states Tim Lynch, v.p. of operations for tubing maker MicroLumen Inc., Tampa, Fla. "We'll take a pure PTFE PTFE

polytetrafluoroethylene.
 tube ID, then braid stainless-steel wire over it. Then we might add four different materials on the OD to change stiffness along the length--nylon at one end, changing to Pebax (polyether-amide TPE TPE Thermoplastic Elastomer
TPE Terminal de Paiement Electronique (French)
TPE Total Power Exchange
TPE Twisted Pair Ethernet
TPE Tampines Expressway (Singapore)
TPE Therapeutic Plasma Exchange
 from Arkema), in a sequence of softer and softer durometers, then a shrink tube of FEP See front end processor.  over the top to solidify it all."

Sometimes the composite is produced by one processor in-house. Sometimes different companies supply different layers. MicroLumen, for example, makes the PTFE tubes and over-braids them in-house, buys the Pebax and shrink tubing, and then assembles the composite.

New composites like these are driven by growing demand for minimally invasive surgery minimally invasive surgery Laparoscopic surgery, see there. See Laparoscopic cholecystectomy. , tubing for wires to stimulate nerves and regulate heartbeats, tubes for vascular access vascular access Clinical medicine The ability to enter the vascular system; the ease with which the vascular system can be entered for administering therapy or obtaining blood for testing  and urology urology

Medical specialty dealing with the urinary system and male reproductive organs. It traces its origin to medieval lithologists, itinerant healers who specialized in surgical removal of bladder stones.
, and ever-smaller catheters including those for surgery on infants.

Multiple-durometer sections on PTFE-lined shafts makes steerable composite tubes that can be moved into position within the vascular system, says Sean Lynn, associate director of extrusion development at Teleflex Medical, headquartered in Kenosha, Wis.

With smaller micro tubing comes demand for new or improved characteristics inside and out. Tubes have to thread more easily into the body, requiring more lubricated lu·bri·cate  
v. lu·bri·cat·ed, lu·bri·cat·ing, lu·bri·cates

v.tr.
1. To apply a lubricant to.

2. To make slippery or smooth.

v.intr.
To act as a lubricant.
 outer surfaces; and wires have to thread more easily through tubes with smaller clearances inside, requiring lower coefficients of friction on interior surfaces. These requirements often dictate using a composite of PTFE inside and a more conventional thermoplastic A polymer material that turns to liquid when heated and becomes solid when cooled. There are more than 40 types of thermoplastics, including acrylic, polypropylene, polycarbonate and polyethylene.  outside.

More wire braiding

"Braiding and coiling are getting more refined," says Duane Dunn, president of Dunn Industries Inc., Manchester, N.H., which has done over-braiding in-house for five years. In-house braiding with stainless-steel micro wire is growing rapidly, as finer tubing requires braiding to add burst strength or prevent kinking. Some firms like Precision Extrusion Inc., Glens Falls Glens Falls, city (1990 pop. 15,023), Warren co., E central N.Y., in the foothills of the Adirondack Mts. and on the Hudson River; settled 1762, inc. as a city 1908. Major industries include lumber, paper, and electronics. A navy training center is there. , N.Y.; Putnam Plastics Co. LLC (Logical Link Control) See "LANs" under data link protocol.

LLC - Logical Link Control
, Dayville, Conn.; and Teleflex Medical have done wire braiding in-house for years.

Other companies are now jumping into braiding and expanding rapidly. One micro-tube maker (which doesn't want to be identified) invested in 15 braiders in the past two years and has just ordered two more. Braiders work around the clock and don't need operator supervision. If a wire breaks, they just shut down.

Steeger USA Inc. in Inman, S.C., is a major supplier of customized micro-tube braiding machinery. It uses components from Steeger in Germany, but is an independent company. Steeger USA claims to make braiders for smaller tubes than other equipment can handle as small as 0.005 in. OD currently, and it is working on even smaller sizes. Steeger braids round wire down to 0.0005 in. and flat wire down to 0.003 x 0.0035 in.

At MD&M, International Polymer Engineering Inc. in Tempe, Ariz., unveiled a new line of flexible endoscopic en·do·scope  
n.
An instrument for examining visually the interior of a bodily canal or a hollow organ such as the colon, bladder, or stomach.



en
 micro tubes consisting of solid PTFE spiral wound with stainless-steel micro-wire and then coated on top with an extruded layer of porous PTFE. "It's unusual to bond solid PTFE to porous PTFE," says International Polymer president Anthony Green Anthony Green may refer to:
  • Abdul Raheem Green, formerly Anthony Green - British Sheikh and convert to Islam
  • Anthony Green (musician)
  • Anthony Green (painter) (born 1939)
  • Anthony Green (footballer)
  • Anthony Green (Near Eastern archaeologist)
. "Solid PTFE gives lubricity lu·bric·i·ty  
n.
The quality or condition of being lubricious.



[Late Latin lbricit
 on the inside. Porous PTFE allows embedding of wire and bonding." Two years ago, International Polymer introduced an earlier generation of the tube, called FluoroFlex, in which porous PTFE was extruded over solid PTFE with no wire in between.

Two firms introduced the first wire-braided FEP tubes at MD&M. Teleflex showed tubing with 0.004-in. wall thickness and IDs down to 0.009 in. Medical Profiles & Engineering (MP&E), Minnetonka, Minn., displayed tubing with a 0.005-in. wall. MP&E has braided braid·ed  
adj.
1.
a. Produced by or as if by braiding.

b. Having braids.

2. Decorated with braid.

3.
 in-house for about five years.

Raumedic in Leesburg, Va., launched a new micro tube capable of 1200-psi pressure. It has a TPU TPU - Text Processing Utility  inner tube 0.035 in. thick that is over-braided with polyester yarn and then coated with more TPU on top. Raumedic does some of its own overbraiding now but plans to braid 100% in-house within six months.

MP&E also braids onto a TPU sheath with 0.005 in. OD and onto a coextruded tube with a TPU inner layer and either Pebax or HDPE HDPE
abbr.
high-density polyethylene
 outer layer. The latter has 0.005-in. ID and 0.008-in. OD.

Precision Extrusion and Putnam both braid over multi-lumen tubes. "The challenge is not to collapse the lumens," says Putnam president James Dandeneau. Putnam recently began to vary the pitch in spiral winding to control product flexibility or reduce the amount of metal in areas where less kink resistance is needed or where side ports need to be cut.

Teleflex Medical produces multilumen tubing as well, with FEP-lined lumens to improve electrical isolation from the metal braiding and to make it easier to pass wires through.

New use of PEEK

High-heat, high-priced PEEK resin from Victrex has been used in small pharmaceutical tubes for years because of its chemical resistance. A medically implantable grade has been available since 2001 from Invibio, a unit of Victrex. A handful of companies use PEEK for medical micro tubes.

Zeus Inc., Orangeburg, S.C., is the world's only maker of heat-shrinkable PEEK tubing, which it launched in 2005. Wall thickness is as small as 0.002 in. before shrinking and 0.004 to 0.010 in. afterward. Expanded ID ranges from 0.057 to 1.250 in. The ratio of shrunk to preshrunk pre·shrunk also pre-shrunk  
adj.
Of, relating to, or being fabric or a garment that has undergone shrinking during manufacture to minimize subsequent shrinkage: preshrunk jeans.
 wall length (circumferential) is 1.3:1.

Putnam made its first PEEK micro tubes in 1996, Precision Extrusion did so in 2003. Both developed customized equipment to handle the high processing temperatures of up to 700 F. Precision Extrusion makes PEEK tubing with up to four lumens, walls as thin as 0.006 in., and ID of 0.011 in.

PEEK tubes insulate wires to protect medical devices like pacemakers against short circuits. Besides high dielectric strength In physics, the term dielectric strength has the following meanings:
  • Of an insulating material, the maximum electric field strength that it can withstand intrinsically without breaking down, i.e., without experiencing failure of its insulating properties.
 (>500 v/mil), it boasts chemical inertness, kink resistance, and low coefficient of friction coefficient of friction
n. pl. coefficients of friction
The ratio of the force that maintains contact between an object and a surface and the frictional force that resists the motion of the object.
 (0.35 to 0.5). But PEEK is corrosive to extruders, so the barrel and screw require special metallurgy. "Everything about the machine has to be able to withstand 1200-1500 F temperatures, or it just won't last," says one engineer familiar with PEEK extrusion.

But the big difficulty is controlling micro-tube dimensions while the PEEK cools. The resin needs to achieve maximum crystallinity in order to achieve top physical properties, so cooling has to be slow and controlled.

Thinner and thinner

Both thermoplastic and silicone rubber Noun 1. silicone rubber - made from silicone elastomers; retains flexibility resilience and tensile strength over a wide temperature range
synthetic rubber, rubber - any of various synthetic elastic materials whose properties resemble natural rubber
 tubes are achieving new thinness records, especially the latest heat-shrink tubes. Heat-shrink polyester (usually PET) and PE tubes replace spiral wrapping with thin film and adhesive to cover tiny high-pressure catheters, micro-wire devices, and joints between tubes. Shrink tubes can also insulate electrically and compress the OD of a micro wire bundle.

Advanced Polymers has made polyester shrink tube for 18 years, but five years ago began making it with 0.0001-in.-thick walls--"significantly thinner than anyone else can produce," according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Robert Bley at manufacturers' rep. David Schnur Assoc., Menlo Park Menlo Park.

1 Residential city (1990 pop. 28,040), San Mateo co., W Calif.; inc. 1874. Electronic equipment and aerospace products are manufactured in the city. Menlo College and a Stanford Univ. research institute are there.

2 Uninc.
, Calif. In 2006 Advanced Polymers also produced polyester heat-shrink tube with the smallest ID on the market--0.006 in.

PE shrink tube typically shrinks much more than PET. Extrnmed LLC in Placentia, Calif. (which merged last year with Extrnsioneering in Temecula, Calif.), introduced PE shrink tubing two years ago with walls as thin as 0.00025 in., expanded ID from 0.010 to 0.30 in., and shrink ratio of 10:1. Extrumed makes the initial tubing, sends it out for radiation crosslinking, and then reheats, inflates, and stretches it.

Cobalt Polymers in Cloverdale, Calif., claims to make the world's only Pebax shrink tubes. It makes one with walls as thin as 0.001 in. and 0.010-in. OD, and another with 0.002-in. walls and 0.012-in. OD. Both have shrink ratios of 2:1 or 4:1. Cobalt also introduced ultra-thin polyolefin shrink tube at MD&M with walls as thin as 0.002 in.

Holes are getting so tiny they're literally invisible. Precision Extrusion last year developed a thick-walled PVC PVC: see polyvinyl chloride.
PVC
 in full polyvinyl chloride

Synthetic resin, an organic polymer made by treating vinyl chloride monomers with a peroxide.
 micro tube with 0.26-in. OD and ID of only 0.0018 in., which can be seen only under a microscope. The tube is for highly controlled fluid transfer, such as for chemotherapy. Previously, Precision Extrusion's smallest PVC tubing ID was a barely visible 0.003 in.

MicroLumen recently introduced a thermoset A polymer-based liquid or powder that becomes solid when heated, placed under pressure, treated with a chemical or via radiation. The curing process creates a chemical bond that, unlike a thermoplastic, prevents the material from being remelted. See thermoplastic.  polyimide Pronounced "poly-ih-mid." A type of plastic (a synthetic polymeric resin) originally developed by DuPont that is very durable, easy to machine and can handle very high temperatures. Polyimide is also highly insulative and does not contaminate its surroundings (does not outgas).  lead tube (produced by casting over a mandrel mandrel /man·drel/ (man´dril) the shaft on which a dental tool is held in the dental handpiece, for rotation by the dental engine.

man·drel or man·dril
n.
1.
) for nerve stimulation with 0.0005-in. wall thickness (0.003 in. ID x 0.004 in. OD) and tolerance of [+ or -] 0.0002 in. on ID and 0.00025 in. on wall thickness.

Specialty Silicone Fabricators, Paso Robles Robles is a common surname in the Spanish language meaning oaks, and may refer to:
  • Alfonso García Robles (1911-1991), Mexican diplomat and politician
  • Aurora Robles (born 1980), Mexican fashion model
  • Charlie Robles (born 1943), Puerto Rican musician
, Calif., has made silicone micro tubes with walls as thin as 0.003 in. The company, which builds its own dies, says this product uses its thinnest die clearance yet.

Medical tubes also are finding ways to cram in more and more lumens. In early March, Putnam produced a tube of soft Pebax with 0.3-in. ID, 0.4-in. OD, and 25 lumens, believed to set a new record. Specialized Engineering in Stockton, Calif., introduced a 22-lumen nylon microtube two years ago with 21 small lumens around a bigger central lumen with 0.100-in. ID.

Putnam and MicroLumen have produced tubing with one or two lumens that have inner linings of a different material. For about 10 years, Putnam has offered lumens lined with extruded TP polyimide or PE. For about five years, MicroLumen has produced lumens with an inner lining of cast polyimide that is over-wrapped with PE shrink tubing.

More slip inside & out

Coextrusion is growing in popularity as a way to make micro tubes more slippery inside and more lubricated outside. Liner materials can be PTFE with a coefficient of friction (COF) of 0.1, PTFE mixed with polyimide (COF of 0.3), or polyimide (COF of 0.5). Solutions to higher lubricity on the outside are PTFE, nylon, Pebax, and surface-treated silicones.

Extrumed and Dunn both produce Pebax tube with five different sequential durometers along the length. Dunn makes Pebax tube with 0.0025-in. wall thickness, 0.086-in. ID, and 0.0008-in. concentricity.

Since silicone is inherently porous and slightly sticky, it has to be coated if those traits aren't desirable. Raumedic recently began sending silicone micro tube out for a secondary treatment that reportedly cuts surface stickiness by about 50%. To block both stickiness and porosity, silicone tubes can also be treated with parylene, a polymer applied by plasma treatment in a vacuum. It results in a COF comparable to PTFE.

Other tubing surface modifications use pharmaceutically functional molecules such as the anticoagulant anticoagulant (ăn'tēkōăg`yələnt), any of several substances that inhibit blood clot formation (see blood clotting).  Heprin. Polymer Technology Group, Berkeley, Calif., has modified micro-tube surfaces for eight years with its patented Surface Modifying End Group (SME (1) (Small and Medium-sized Enterprise) See SMB.

(2) (Subject Matter Expert) An individual who is well-versed in the policies and procedures of a particular department or division.
) technology. This bonds a functional molecule to the ends of their TPU polymer chains, which have a special binding site. During and after extrusion, Heprin molecules migrate to the surface of the tube, reducing the risk that the tube will cause clotting.

NEED TO KNOW MORE?

For more information on these companies and

their products, visit www.ptonline.com/suppliers

Arkema Inc., Philadelphia

(800) 932-0420 * www.arkema-inc.com

Invibie, West Conshohocken, Pa.

(484) 342-6004 * www.invibio.com

Steeger USA LLC, Inman, S.C.

(864) 472-7000 * www.steegerusa.com

Victrex USA Inc., West Conshohocken, Pa.

(484) 342-6001 * www.victrex.com

LEARN MORE

Visit Online

www.ptonline.com/articles/200704cu3.html for a link to this related article:

* Medical Tubing Coextrusion Brings a New Level of Care, Feb. '02

By Jan H. Schut, Senior Editor
COPYRIGHT 2007 Gardner Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Schut, Jan H.
Publication:Plastics Technology
Date:Apr 1, 2007
Words:1986
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