Implants such as, for example, bone plates, must often be contoured to a fit a patient's specific anatomy to properly fix a fracture. The bone plates may be bent by a surgeon or other user using bending pins slid over drill guides that are pre-assembled with the bone fixation element receiving holes of the bone plate. Forces applied to the bending pins are transferred to the drill guides attached to the bone plate until the bone plate is bent, as desired. This process, however, exerts bending forces directly to the threading formed in bone fixation element receiving holes and, in some cases, may damage the bone plate beyond usability.
The present invention is directed to a system for bending an implant, comprising a drill guide extending longitudinally from a proximal end to a distal end, the drill guide including a distal portion having a first threading extending therealong to engage a threading along an interior of a bone fixation element receiving hole of an implant and a proximal portion having a second threading extending therealong and a bending pin extending longitudinally from a proximal end to a distal end including a recess extending proximally therefrom, the recess sized and shaped to receive the proximal portion of the drill guide and including a corresponding threading therealong for engaging the second threading.
The present invention may be further understood with referenced to the following description and the appended drawings, wherein like elements are referred to with the same reference numerals. The present invention is directed to a system for treating a bone and, in particular, to a system for bending an implant to correspond to a patient's anatomy. Exemplary embodiments of the present invention describe a system comprising a drill guide engaged within a bone fixation element receiving hole of an implant and a bending pin threadedly engagable with the drill guide to contact a surface of the implant so that bending forces applied to the bending pin are directly applied to the implant. It will be understood by those of skill in the art that the terms “proximal” and “distal” refer to a direction toward (proximal) and away from (distal) a user of the device.
As shown in
As shown in
In one exemplary embodiment, the distal portion 118 tapers from a proximal end 130 thereof toward the distal end 114 to engage a tapered bone fixation element receiving hole 104 (e.g., a locking screw hole). The proximal portion 120 may have a substantially constant cross-sectional area along a length thereof. The proximal portion 120 may also include a flat surface 146 extending along a length thereof. In an exemplary embodiment, the proximal portion 120 includes a pair of flat surfaces 146 diametrically opposed from one another. The flat surfaces 146 may engage a tool which is used to assemble the drill guide 102 with the bone plate 106 so that assembling the drill guide 102 to the bone plate 106 does not cause any damage to the second threading 124 of the drill guide 102 and/or any portion of the bending pin 108, which may otherwise be used to assemble the drill guide 102 to the bone plate 106.
As shown in
In use, the drill guides 102 may be pre-assembled with the bone plate 106 with the distal portion 118 of each of the drill guides 102 received within a corresponding one of the bone fixation element receiving holes 104 of the bone plate 106. In particular, the first threading 122 of the distal portion 118 is threadedly engaged with the bone fixation element receiving hole 104 so that the proximal portion 120 and the non-threaded portion 128 extend proximally from the proximal surface 144 of the bone plate 106. Each of the bending pins 108 is then engaged with a corresponding one of the drill guides 102. Specifically, the proximal portion 120 is received within the recess 140 of the bending pin 108, the bending pin 108 being rotated about a longitudinal axis thereof so that the threading 126 along the interior of the recess 140 engages the second threading 124. The bending pin 108 is rotated relative to the drill guide 102 until the distal end 110 contacts the proximal surface 144 of the bone plate 106 and the non-threaded portion 128 of the drill guide 102 is received within the non-threaded portion 142 at the distal end of the recess 140.
Once a desired number of bending pins 108 has been engaged with the drill guides 102, a user grips the gripping portions 138 of first and second ones of the bending pins 108, moving the first and second bending pins 108 relative to one another to bend the bone plate 106 as desired. As would be understood by those skilled in the art, different bending pins 108 may be moved relative to one another in selected directions to bend the bone plate 106 as desired. The non-threaded portion 128 of the drill guide 102 within the non-threaded portion 142 of the bending pin 108 acts as a guide to direct the bending force applied to the bending pin 108 to the drill guide 102. As described above, the contact between the bone plate 106 and the distal end 110 of the bending pin 108 applies the bending force directly to the proximal surface 144 of the bone plate 106, preventing damage to the bone fixation element receiving holes 104.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that variations can be made to the structure and methodology of the present invention, without departing from the scope of the invention. Thus, it is intended that the present invention cover the modifications and variations of this invention provided that they come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.
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