The present invention relates to a bead to be interposed between a locking bone screw head and a receiving hole in a bone plate and to an implant construct comprising such a bead.
The defining feature of the present invention is the slightly conical or tapered head of the screws. Commonly referred to as “Morse taper”, this mechanical solution for a precise, reliable and reversible coupling of mechanical components invented by Samuel Colt (of Colt handgun fame) in 1854, was adopted by Stephen Ambrose Morse along with an equally lucrative invention of a spiral drill, which he contributed to, leading to formation of Morse Twist Drill and Machine Co. in New Bedford, Mass., in 1864, one of the uniquely American industrial manufacturing success stories of the 19th century, surviving to this day.
The original and still most commonly used Morse taper in machinery is defined as 1:20 (e.g. 1 mm change of diameter over a 20 mmm axial length), which corresponds to the total angle of the taper of 2.86 degrees. Adopted for use in orthopedic devices for coupling of e.g. heads to the stems in modular hip prosthesis (P. Hernigou, S. Queinnec, C. H. F. Lachaniette: One hundred and fifty years of history of the Morse taper: from Stephen A. Morse in 1864 to complications related to modularity in hip arthroplasty, International Orthopaedics (SICOT) (2013) 37:2081-2088), the taper has been changed to 1:10 (5.72 degrees) with many variations in geometry and fit. The important, unifying feature to all Morse-type tapers is the self-retaining or self-locking character of the connection—once the parts are put together, they will not come apart unless a significant force is used to separate them. The smaller the angle of the taper is, the tighter is the connection. However, the smaller the angle is, the tighter the manufacturing tolerances required are. The ultimate decision is a compromise of the requirements, the risks of separation vs. jamming, the expected coefficient of friction in use, and the manufacturing costs.
The first known, documented use of the Morse taper locking screws for internal fixation plates was in the research and development project carried out at the AO Research Institute, Davos, Switzerland in 1986, under a code name FIXIN (from FIXator INtern), led by the present inventor (see e.g. U.S. Pat. No. 5,151,103, Tepic et al.). The tapered heads of screws were locking in the plate via interposed, slotted and thus expandable balls. These plates and screws were applied to intact bones only in experimental sheep to study the impact on the periosteal blood supply. Whether the design was sufficiently robust to stabilize fractured bones was not tested because the first findings from the project on intact bones have demonstrated the damage to endosteal blood perfusion caused by conventional use of bi-cortical screws. Decision to switch to use of exclusively mono-cortical screws made the expanding balls un-necessary and the project took on a new name (PC-Fix for Point Contact Fixator), and with new élan at the Davos Institute it proceeded to demonstrate over the next decade with extensive pre-clinical and clinical testing the numerous advantages of keeping blood perfusion of fractured bone as intact as possible (The biomechanics of the PC-Fix internal fixator, Tepic, S. et al., Injury, Volume 26, B5-B10). The locking of the screw heads in the plates was necessary but preserving the blood perfusion by the periosteum called for further features of the plate design mostly of the bone-facing side of the plates. At that time reduction of the risks of screw heads jamming in the plate were addressed by the unique geometry of the coupling. The Morse taper couplings used in machines are manufactured from solid, hardened stock, ground to high precision and smooth surface finish. Screws and plates of PC-Fix were machined from relatively soft c.p. titanium with a recess for the screwdriver in the head. Preventing jamming due to so-called cold welding of the screw heads in the plates called for some careful observation, design, including Finite Element analysis. The residual risks due to over-tightening of the screws were deemed acceptable including by the surgeons participating in the clinical study in close to 2,000 human patients with forearm fractures. The results were published when the number of enrolled patients with follow-up reached about 1'200, Eijer H, Hauke C, Arens S, Printzen G, Schlegel U, Perren S M. PC-Fix and local infection resistance-influence of implant design on postoperative infection development, clinical and experimental results. Injury. 2001 September; 32 Suppl 2: B38-43).
However, the three commercial partners of the AO Foundation, later all merged into Synthes, subsequently acquired by Johnson and Johnson, now a part of DePuy-Synthes, did not commercialize PC-Fix and no other company has brought all of its crucial features to clinical use until Kyon's Advanced Locking Plate System (ALPS®) was released for veterinary use in 2007 (U.S. Pat. No. 8,968,368, Tepic).
The locking mechanism of ALPS® differs from that used in PC-Fix. The screw heads are conical but with a much larger angle and thus not self-retaining. A similar design is used in car wheel lug bolts—the screw threads of ALPS® screws do engage with the (partial) threads in the plate holes as they are threaded into the bone. This design provided new opportunities—each plate hole could accept a downsized regular screw with the same angulation freedom as in the original DCP (Dynamic Compression Plate, of AO/Synthes) plates as well as allowing for the fracture compression function of DCP.
During the years of patent protection for PC-Fix (with the patent rights assigned by the AO Foundation to its commercial partners) the only use of Morse taper screw heads for locking implants was by Kyon in its “Zurich Cementless” THR (U.S. Pat. No. 5,458,654, Tepic) and by Intrauma, Rivoli TO, Italy for its FIXIN™ plating system. The Intrauma locking system relies on screws similar to PC-Fix screws but with a machine-threaded ring interposed between the plate and the screw head. These screw heads invariably jam into the rings, but the rings can be removed from the plate if needed.
The present invention discloses a solution for angulation of bone screws with conical self-locking heads in the bone plates with conical holes. Angulation is made possible with the addition of a bead head, particularly a spherical bead head interposed between the screw head and the plate hole. To allow insertion of the screw at an angle the hole in the bone is drilled in the bone with aid of a special drill sleeve. Then a bead having a conical hole is inserted into the plate hole with a proper orientation e.g. with aid of a bead-holder. Finally, the screw, down-sized compared to the nominal locking screw, is inserted through the hole of the bead into the bone. That locks the head of the angulated screw inside the bead and the bead inside the plate hole. Furthermore, locking screws can be augmented by the beads to allow them to be used as dynamic compression screws.
In a first aspect, the present invention relates to a bead, particularly a spherical bead, with a conical hole for interposition between a locking bone screw head and a receiving hole in a bone plate. The bead may be used for bone fixation in medicinal applications usually in combination with a fitting bone screw and a bone plate.
In certain embodiments, the conical hole of the bead is tapered with a self-locking angle which may be between about 2.7° and about 8°, particularly between about 4° to about 6.5° and more particularly about 5.7°, corresponding to a screw-taper of 1:10.
In a second aspect, the present invention relates to an implant construct comprising a bead, particularly a spherical bead, as described above, and a locking screw, and to an implant construct comprising a bead, particularly a spherical bead, as described above, and a locking screw, and a bone plate. The bead comprises a conical hole and the bone screw is adapted for insertion into a bone through the conical hole of the bead. The screw may comprise a self-locking head for fixation. The bone plate comprises at least one receiving hole adapted for insertion of the bead.
In certain embodiments, the screw comprises a conical head wherein the total angle of the conical screw head is larger than the angle of the hole in the bead, particularly by about 0.2° to about 0.4°, more particularly by about 0.3°.
In certain embodiments, the total angle of the conical hole in the bone plate is about the same as the total angle of the conical hole in the spherical bead.
In a third aspect, the present invention relates to a method for fixing a bone plate to a bone comprising the steps:
(i) drilling at least one hole into the bone,
(ii) providing a bone plate comprising at least one conical hole,
(iii) providing a bead, particularly with a conical hole, wherein the bead is adapted to fit into the conical hole of the bone plate,
(iv) inserting the bead into the conical hole of the bone plate, and
(v) inserting a bone screw having a conical self-locking head through the conical hole of the bead into the bone.
The bead, the bone screw and the bone plate of the present invention can be made of any suitable material, e.g. of a metal or metal alloy. In particular embodiments, the bead, the bone screw and/or the bone plate are made of titanium or a titanium-containing alloy.
There is ample evidence that titanium and its alloys can provide all of the mechanical requirements needed but with improved biocompatibility in comparison to stainless steels, for example, most commonly used 316L, or EN 1.4404.
The human orthopedic industry, however, has been and remains reluctant to abandon its reliance on stainless steel, especially in trauma devices. Thus, in certain embodiments, the bead, the bone screw and/or the bone plate are made of stainless steel.
The bone plates of the present invention may have outside shapes almost identical to those of the original ALPS®, except for the screw holes. Minor adjustments were made to take advantage of now smaller holes to increase the overall strength. The first choice of material for plates is c.p. titanium Grade 4 but there is also an option of titanium alloy (Ti6Al4V), so-called Titanium Grade 5, for plates that may need extra strength. Titanium Grade 4 is slightly weaker than stainless steel 316L most commonly used for plates and screws. However, the shape and size of the implants can be easily adjusted to make up for that difference. For example, plates size 10 of the original ALPS® of the same outside dimensions as the benchmark plate used for comparison, DCP 3.5 from Synthes made in stainless steel 316L, has 20% higher strength in bending. In typical conditions of heat treatment and cold-work used for implants, titanium Grade 5 has about 50% higher strength than Grade 4 or stainless steel 316L. The downside of using Grade 5 is in its lower ductility so the plates cannot be bent as much as those made in Grade 4 or in stainless steel.
The bone screws of the current invention are made preferably from a titanium-aluminum-niobium alloy (Ti6Al7Nb or TAN). Decades after its invention, TAN is getting some attention in the industry. The mechanical properties are identical to those of TAV (Ti6Al4V) but due to replacement of the highly toxic vanadium by the very inert niobium, TAN is about as biocompatible as the pure titanium. Bone adhesion to TAN is superb to the point that removal of integrated TAN implants might be more difficult than of any other metallic implants.
The plates of this invention are preferably treated by micro peening process for increased fatigue strength.
The locking screws with a Morse taper type head, such as in PC-Fix, can be used in almost all circumstances alone in their locking configuration at 90 degrees to the plate, but there is an occasional need for using screws angulated with respect to the plate as well as applying compression across the fracture or osteotomy plane.
To provide for screw angulations of the same amplitude as in the original ALPS®, which is the same as in DCP, a new solution, disclosed herein, was found by the addition of beads. The beads may be of spherical shape outside and are provided with a conical hole to receive the locking head of the screws. The utility of the beads goes past the obvious conversion of a conical to a spherical head. If the screws with spherical heads were to be inserted into the conical holes of the plates, the plates could not be held in their axial position on the bone—the screws with spherical heads (or augmented with bead heads) inserted at an angle would hit the top of the receiving hole before the head could be seated in the plate hole. If such screws were used only one per plate, this axial slip could be tolerated but that angulated screw would have to be inserted as the first screw, which is generally not an acceptable restriction to fixing a plate to a fractured bone. Drilling of the hole for the angulated screw is possible with a dedicated drill sleeve. The bead is then inserted into the screw hole in the plate with aid of a bead holder. Once the bead is firmly seated in the plate hole, a locking screw, e.g. downsized from the regular screw, can be screwed through the bead into the bone until it safely locks in the bead. The bead is then also locked in the plate, albeit not as strongly as a conical head screw. Use of the beads in conjunction with locking screws is indicated only seldom, e.g. for screws very close to joints or possibly for use as compression screws. It should be noted that the dynamic compression principle cannot be used unless the fracture (osteotomy) is close to transverse. In veterinary (but also in human) trauma surgery a great majority of fractures are oblique, spiral or comminuted and thus not amenable to treatment by interfragmentary compression.
For practical reasons of producing the beads and the selection of bone screws, the difference of the two screw diameters is about 0.9 mm to about 1.1 mm, particularly about 1 mm. The total angle 42 of the conical head 41 of the screw 40 is the same as the total angle 3 of the screw head 2 of the screw 1,
Once the bead 30 is in place, cross-section (b), the screw 40 can be inserted through the bead and screwed into the bone 55, locking its head into the bead and the bead into the plate.
The invention of the screw head beads disclosed herein makes it possible to use, in addition to perpendicular, nominally sized locking screws with Morse taper heads, inclined screws of a smaller diameter in the bone plates with conical holes. It is also possible to use bead-augmented screws to create dynamic compression if needed. On a practical side, only one type screw—locking with a tapered head—can provide for all applications of bone plates. The use of beads in most cases is optional—only in peri-articular fractures and in rare cases where dynamic compression is possible and called for. An important advantage of using the beads, when indicated, is also the elimination of fretting between the screws and the plates, which is the main risk of detrimental tissue response to implants.
The following items of the specification further characterize the invention:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
19198069.7 | Sep 2019 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2020/075617 | 9/14/2020 | WO |