THIS invention relates to a flexible drive assembly and to a bone distraction apparatus in which the drive is used.
Distraction osteogenesis, also known as callus distraction, callotasis or osteo-distraction, is a surgical process used to reconstruct skeletal deformities and lengthen bones of the body. In this process, a corticotomy is used to fracture the bone which is to be lengthened. In the corticotomy, the cortex of the bone is cut or fractured, leaving surrounding tissues intact. After the corticotomy, the two cortical bone ends are gradually moved apart, i.e. distracted, during a distraction phase, allowing new bone to form in the gap between the separated bone ends, When the required amount of distraction has taken place, a consolidation phase follows in which the bone continues healing.
Distraction technology as outlined above was primarily used in orthopaedics, but is now also used by maxillofacial surgeons to correct deformities of the jaw such as microagnathia (undersize jaw) and midface and fronto-orbital hypoplasia in patients with craniofacial deformities.
A known facial distraction device, available from KLS Martin of the USA, has small bone attachment plates engaged in threaded manner with a power screw forming part of a distraction component. The bone attachment plates are fixed, for example by means of screws, to the bone ends which are to be distracted, During distraction, the power screw is rotated through a predetermined angle at regular intervals in order to drive the bone plates apart, and hence distract the bone ends, through a predetermined distance. In a typical example, the power screw may be rotated one full turn each day in order to distract the bone ends by 1 mm per day.
Given the limited space available in the area of the human jaw, typically the mandible, and the natural curvatures present in the jaw anatomy, it is necessary to employ a rotary drive to transmit rotary torque to the power screw from a driving tool such as a wrench. In the KLS Martin device, the flexible drive is provided by a number of tightly coiled springs of progressively smaller diameter located one inside the other. Opposite ends of the spring assembly are connected respectively to the power screw of the distraction component and to a formation engagable by the driving tool.
The spring assembly used in the KLS Martin apparatus has a number of disadvantages including the following:
The present invention seeks to provide a flexible drive assembly and bone distraction apparatus which addresses at least some of the problems outlined above.
According to one aspect of the invention there is provided a flexible drive assembly comprising a plurality of identical drive elements connected to one another in series, each drive element having a body with a central axis and male and female ends, the male end including a projecting rib of non-circular cross-section, and a female end defining a socket with a groove therein which is of non-circular cross-section, wherein the drive elements are connected to one another in series by location of the male end of one element in the series in the socket at the female end of a neighbouring element in the series with the rib of the male end received as a snap fit in the groove of the socket, the male ends and sockets being configured to allow limited pivotal movement to take place between adjacent elements, in each case about an axis transverse to the central axes of the elements, while also allowing the connected elements to transmit rotational torque in either direction from one to the other.
In the preferred embodiment the male end of each drive element has oppositely inclined flanks on either side of the projecting rib, the flanks defining a non-circular cross-section. The flank on one side of the rib may be convex and the flank on the other side of the rib may be concave.
The rib and flanks of the male end of each drive element, and the socket and groove of the female end of each drive element may have a polygonal, preferably hexagonal, cross-section.
Facets of the polygonal cross-section of the socket may be convex.
Typically transverse dimensions of the socket and groove are greater than corresponding transverse dimensions of the rib and flanks by an amount which allows pivotal movement to take place between connected elements while still ensuring rotational interference between the elements for torque transmission purposes.
In the preferred embodiment each element has an axial passage through it, the axial passages of the individual elements combining to form a continuous passage through the connected elements of the drive assembly, With this feature, the drive assembly can include an elongate, bendable member, preferably of wire, which extends through the continuous passage to maintain a desired angulation of the assembly.
The drive elements may be configured such that each element in the series can be axially misaligned by at least 5°, preferably about 6.5°, relative to adjacent elements.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a bone distraction apparatus comprising a flexible drive assembly as summarised above. The apparatus typically includes a distraction component including a rotatable power screw which has respective ends carrying threads of opposite hand and bone attachment members engaged in threaded manner with the respective ends of the power screw such that rotation of the power screw moves the bone attachment members towards or away from one another, and wherein a first, distal end of the flexible drive assembly is connected in a rotation-transmitting manner to the power screw.
Typically the opposite, proximal end of the flexible drive assembly carries a formation engagable by a rotary drive tool, whereby the drive tool can be operated to rotate the drive assembly, and hence the power screw, via the drive assembly.
The apparatus may include a coupling means which connects the flexible drive assembly to the power screw in a manner which allows rotational torque to be transmitted to the power screw in a first direction corresponding to distraction of the bone attachment members, but which disconnects the drive assembly from the power screw if rotational torque of predetermined magnitude is applied to the drive assembly in an opposite, second direction. In the preferred embodiment the coupling means includes a coupler connectable to an end of the power screw, a connection element at the distal end of the drive assembly to which an endmost one of the drive elements is connectable and which is itself connectable to the coupler in a manner to transmit torque in the first direction and which disconnects from the coupler when torque of the predetermined magnitude is applied to the drive assembly in the second direction. It is also preferred that the coupler includes a threaded socket at a distal end thereof into which one end of the power screw is threaded in order to connect the coupler to the power screw at a threaded connection, that the threaded connection is arranged to tighten when torque corresponding to distraction of the bone attachment members is applied, and that the coupler and connection member make threaded engagement with one another, one of them including a radial rib which snaps into a radial groove in the other of them when they are threaded together, and the configuration being such that the rib unsnaps from the recess when the predetermined magnitude of torque is applied in the second direction.
The invention will now be described in more detail, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
The bone distraction apparatus 10 seen in
The flexible drive assembly includes a number of identical, discrete drive elements 14, one of which is illustrated in
At the enlarged male end, the drive element includes a laterally projecting rib 26 and flanks 28 and 30 which are inclined in opposite directions relative to the rib. The rib and both flanks have a polygonal, in the illustrated case, hexagonal shape in cross-section. The facets 32 of the flank 28 are slightly convex and the facets 34 of the flank 30 are slightly concave.
At the female end, the drive element includes a socket 36 formed in an enlarged end section 38 which has an external surface 40 of round cylindrical shape. The socket has generally a polygonal, in this case hexagonal, shape in cross-section. Each facet 42 of the hexagonal shape has a convexly curved shape. An undercut groove 44 with inclined flanks 46 is formed in the socket as shown.
The male and female ends of the drive element 14 are connected to another by a relatively slender waist 48 of circular cross-section.
The drive elements 14 are connected to one another in series to form the flexible drive assembly 12. Each connection is made by generally aligning the facets of the male end of one element with the facets of the socket 36 of the next element, and pushing the male end into the socket with sufficient force to cause the rib 26 to snap into the groove 44.
The cross-sectional dimensions of the socket are somewhat greater than those of the male end received in the socket. Despite this, the rib 26 is held captive in the groove 44 with sufficient security to prevent the elements from being pulled axially apart from one another without application of substantial force. The greater dimensions of the socket also allow some pivotal movement to take place between the connected elements about an axis transverse to the central axes 18 of the drive elements 14, i.e. such that the axes 18 go out of alignment with one another. This is illustrated in
Typically, each element will be able to pivot through a maximum angle of at least 5° relative to the next element. In the illustrated embodiment, the maximum angle 52 is approximately 6.5°.
It will be understood that the allowed angulation at each connection between two drive elements can be summed to provide substantial total angulation over the whole length of the drive assembly 12.
As also shown in
The endmost drive element 14.1, at the distal end of the flexible drive assembly, is connected to a connection element 60. This element has a socket 62 which is geometrically similar to the sockets 36 of the drive elements. The endmost drive element 14 makes a snap fit connection with the connection element 60 in the same way that the drive elements are connected to one another.
The opposite end 64 of the connection element 60 is formed with an external thread 66. At the proximal end of the thread 66 there is a radial, outwardly facing rib 68, a groove 70 and a shoulder 72.
The distraction apparatus also includes a coupler 74 formed at one end with an internal thread 76 complemental to the thread 66. Towards the opposite end of the coupler there is a groove 78 and an inwardly facing rib 80.
During assembly of the distraction apparatus, the threaded end 64 of the connection element is threaded into the coupler. When the thread 66 is fully threaded into the thread 76, the rib 68 snaps into the groove 78 and the shoulder 72 comes into abutment with the end of the coupler as indicated by the numeral 82.
The distraction apparatus 10 also includes a distraction component 84 which includes a housing 86 formed with a longitudinal slot 87. A power screw 88 is free to rotate in the housing 86. The opposite ends of the power screw are formed with external threads 94, 96 of opposite hand. The power screw is engaged with the coupler 74 by threaded engagement of the thread 96 with an internal thread 98 in distal end of the coupler.
The distraction component 84 includes bone attachment plates 100, 102 which have internally threaded portions (not visible in the drawings) which extend through the slot 87 and make threaded engagement with the respective threads 94, 96. It will be understood that if the power screw is rotated in one direction about its axis, the bone distraction plates will be moved towards one another, and if the power screw is rotated in the opposite direction the bone distraction plates will be moved apart from one another, i.e. distracted. The arrangement is such that the threaded engagement between the power screw 88 and the coupler 74 will tighten further if the power screw is rotated in the direction to cause distraction of the bone attachment plates.
The numeral 104 indicates a hexagonal section engagement formation, at the opposite, proximal end of the drive assembly 12, which can be engaged by a suitable wrench or other tool for the purposes of applying rotary torque to the drive assembly. The formation 104 in this embodiment has a male end, similar to the male end 20 of a drive element 14, which is connected to the endmost drive element 14.2 at the proximal end of the assembly 12. This connection is achieved in the same way that connections are made between adjacent drive elements, i.e. a snap fit connection.
The flexible drive assembly 12 is flexed as necessary to extend forwardly and around the mandible from the distraction component 84. In practice, the drive assembly 12 is sutured into an incision made for the purpose in the soft tissue of the lower gum, with only its proximal end, including the formation 104, projecting forwardly out of the incision.
The overall flexibility of the drive assembly 12 allows the assembly to be flexed to suit a wide variety of different shapes. in the illustrated case, this enables the assembly to be used in a variety of different mouths in which the jawbones may be of different size or shape.
Once the apparatus has been installed in the manner described above, and a prescribed period of latency has passed, actual distraction can commence. At regular time intervals a wrench or other tool is engaged with the formation 104 and is operated to rotate the formation and hence the drive assembly 12. The drive assembly in turn transmits the same rotation to the connection element 60. The connection element transmits the same rotation to the coupler 74 through frictional engagement between the threads 66 and 76 and between the shoulder 72 and the proximal end surface of the coupler. The coupler in turn transmits the same rotation to the power screw 88.
The direction of the rotary torque applied to the formation 104 and transmitted to the power screw 88 is in the sense required to distract the bone attachment plates 100, 102. The bone portions on either side of the break 110 are accordingly distracted, i.e. moved apart from one another.
In a typical distraction procedure, a certain amount of rotation, corresponding to a certain amount of distraction, is applied to the formation at regular time intervals. For example, one full rotation, corresponding to 1 mm of distraction, may be applied to the formation once per day. The procedure may for example be repeated every day for, say nine days, corresponding to a total of 9 mm distraction.
After the required amount of distraction has taken place, the flexible drive assembly is disconnected from the distraction component 84. This is achieved by applying reverse torque to the formation 104. The reverse torque which is applied must be sufficient to cause the rib 68 to unseat, i.e. unsnap, from the groove 78, whereafter further reverse torque serves to unscrew the connection element 60 from the coupler 74. After disconnection of the flexible drive assembly from the distraction component, the drive assembly may be withdrawn and the gum in which it was laid is allowed to heal. The soft tissue of the gum may if necessary be sutured closed over the distraction component, which is, with the bone attachment plates still in the distracted condition, left in place for a period of time sufficient for bone growth, i.e. ossification, to take place in the distracted break 110. After the required healing period, for example six to ten weeks, the distraction component is disconnected from the bone and removed through an incision in the gum.
The fact that a substantial, predetermined reverse torque has to be applied to the formation 104 in order to disconnect the flexible drive assembly from the distraction component is considered advantageous because this will make it more difficult for the patient himself inadvertently to achieve a disconnection. It is envisaged that in practice the patient or his assistant will be supplied with a unidirectional wrench or other tool which can be used to achieve distraction but which cannot be used to apply reverse torque. Only the clinician will have access to a tool able to apply torque in both directions.
When compared to the known KLS Martin system described above, the distraction apparatus described above has a number of advantages, as follows:
In the illustrated example there is, as explained above, the facility to disconnect the entire drive assembly 12 from the distraction component 14 after a required amount of distraction has taken place.
In
To facilitate the disconnection of the drive assembly using this technique, the surfaces 128, 130 (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2012/04176 | Jun 2012 | ZA | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2013/054225 | 5/22/2013 | WO | 00 |