Bone plates with intraoperatively tapped apertures

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 7537596
  • Patent Number
    7,537,596
  • Date Filed
    Monday, June 21, 2004
    20 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, May 26, 2009
    15 years ago
  • Inventors
  • Original Assignees
  • Examiners
    • Robert; Eduardo C.
    • Reimers; Annette
    Agents
    • Kolisch Hartwell, P.C.
Abstract
Method of tapping a bone plate intraoperatively. A bone plate having an aperture may be selected, and the bone plate may be placed on a bone. A thread may be formed in the aperture using a tap device with the bone plate disposed on the bone. A hole may be formed in the bone, with the hole in alignment with the aperture. The hole may be widened adjacent the aperture to create a counterbore in the bone. A fastener may be advanced into threaded engagement with the thread after removal of the tap device from the aperture.
Description
INTRODUCTION

The human skeleton is composed of 206 individual bones that perform a variety of important functions, including support, movement, protection, storage of minerals, and formation of blood cells. These bones can be grouped into two categories: the axial skeleton, and the appendicular skeleton. The axial skeleton consists of 80 bones that make up the body's center of gravity, and the appendicular skeleton consists of 126 bones that make-up the body's appendages. The axial skeleton includes the skull, vertebral column, ribs, and sternum, among others, and the appendicular skeleton includes the long bones of the upper and lower limbs, and the clavicles and other bones that attach these long bones to the axial skeleton, among others.


Bones of the skeleton may become fractured in response to trauma. To ensure that the skeleton retains its ability to perform its important functions, and to reduce pain and disfigurement, fractured bones should be repaired promptly and properly. Typically, fractured bones are treated using fixation devices, which reinforce the fractured bones and keep them aligned during healing. Fixation devices may take a variety of forms, including casts for external fixation and bone plates for internal fixation, among others. Casts are minimally invasive, allowing reduction and fixation of simple fractures from outside the body. In contrast, bone plates are sturdy internal devices, usually made of metal, that mount directly to the bone adjacent the fracture.


Bone plates may be used to repair a fracture, as follows. First, a surgeon selects an appropriate plate. Second, the surgeon reduces (sets) the fracture. Finally, the surgeon fastens the plate to opposite sides of the fracture using suitable fasteners, such as screws and/or wires, so that the bone is fixed in position. The mounted plate may be left in place permanently, or it may be removed after the bone has healed sufficiently.


Bone plates typically include a plurality of apertures for receiving fasteners such as bone screws. These apertures may be nonthreaded or threaded.


Nonthreaded apertures may be used to provide compression at a selectable angle of fastener placement. Specifically, a bone screw inserted through a nonthreaded aperture will thread into the bone but not the bone plate. Thus, the screw will turn without limitation until the bone plate and bone are brought into contact, or compressed. Furthermore, variable angle screws may be used in conjunction with nonthreaded apertures. This may allow the angle with which the screw enters the bone to be chosen by the surgeon intraoperatively.


Threaded apertures, in contrast, may be used to lock the screw into the plate and buttress the bone. Specifically, a bone screw inserted through a threaded aperture will thread into both the plate and bone. Thus, there may be a space between the plate and bone if the screw is threaded fully into the plate (such that the screw cannot turn any more) before compression occurs between the bone and the plate. The space may have several advantages, such as facilitating healing by preserving blood flow to the bone, and, in the case of a removable bone plate, reducing undesirable bonding of the plate to the bone. However, a threaded aperture typically limits the angle of installation of the screw, since the threads provide a fixed orientation for engagement between the screw and the aperture. A fixed screw also may act as a buttress in the bone to reduce malunion due to bone resorption.


Bone plates are provided with nonthreaded or threaded apertures based on the best guesses of manufacturers regarding the most suitable apertures for a given indication. Thus, surgeons currently may be limited to using plates designed only for the most common fractures. However, although many fractures share common motifs, no two fractures or bones are identical. In some cases, a surgeon may want a threaded aperture where a nonthreaded aperture is provided, or vice versa. Similarly, a surgeon may find it desirable to insert a screw through a threaded aperture, but at a specific angle that is not provided by a conventional bone plate.


SUMMARY

The present teachings provide systems, including apparatus, methods, and kits, for selectively tapping apertures of bone plates, to form threaded apertures during installation of the bone plates (i.e., intraoperatively).





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a system for tapping bone plates intraoperatively, including an exemplary tap device being positioned for tapping an aperture of a bone plate while the bone plate is disposed on a surface of a bone, in accordance with aspects of the present teachings.



FIG. 2 is a fragmentary perspective view of a distal portion of the tap device of FIG. 1.



FIG. 3A is a side elevation view of the tap device of FIG. 1.



FIG. 3B is a fragmentary side elevation view of selection portions of the tap device of FIG. 1, particularly a tap portion of the tap device.



FIG. 3C is a sectional view of the tap device of FIG. 1, taken generally along line 3C-3C of FIG. 3B.



FIG. 4 is a fragmentary side elevation view of another exemplary tap device for intraoperatively tapping an aperture of a bone plate, in accordance with aspects of the present teachings.



FIG. 5 is a side elevation view of an exemplary bone screw that may be threadably engaged with a thread of an aperture intraoperatively tapped by the system of FIG. 1, in accordance with aspects of the present teachings.



FIG. 6 is a partially sectional view of the bone screw of FIG. 5 placed into threaded engagement with a bone plate and bone, in accordance with aspects of the present teachings.



FIGS. 7-12 are partially sectional views of exemplary configurations of a bone plate, a bone, and bone screws created by performing steps of a method of securing a bone plate to a bone, in accordance with aspects of the present teachings.



FIG. 13 is a sectional view of an exemplary guide device clamped to a bone and a bone plate and defining a path through an aperture of the bone plate and into the bone, in accordance with aspects of the present teachings.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The present teachings provides systems, including apparatus, methods, and kits, for selectively tapping apertures of bone plates, to form threaded apertures during installation of the bone plates (i.e., intraoperatively). These systems may allow a surgeon to choose independently between threaded and nonthreaded engagement with a fastener for different apertures of the bone plates, so that each fastener can be locked or not locked, respectively, to the plates. Moreover, these systems may allow the surgeon to choose the angle at which fasteners engage the bone plate and bone, by allowing the apertures to be tapped at selected angles.



FIG. 1 shows an exemplary system 10 for intraoperatively tapping an aperture(s) of a bone plate. The system may include, among others, (1) a tap device 12, (2) a bone plate 14 having one or more apertures 16, and (3) fasteners to be received in tapped and/or nontapped apertures of the bone plate. The tap device may be used to form a thread in (to tap) any suitable number of the apertures of the bone plate. Each aperture may be threaded or nonthreaded before intraoperative tapping is performed. Furthermore, one or more (or all) apertures may be sized/shaped to be tapped intraoperatively with the tap device, and one or more (or no) apertures may be sized/shaped so that they cannot be tapped readily with the tap device. In some embodiments, an aperture(s) may be formed and tapped in a bone plate by the tap device. In some examples, the tap device may drill, ream, and/or tap bone underlying each aperture. Further aspects of tap devices and their uses in general, and tap device 12 and its uses in particular, are included below in Sections I and III, among others.


The bone plate may be disposed on a bone 18, adjacent a suitable surface of a bone. The suitable surface may be disposed on diaphyseal bone (the shaft of the bone) and/or on metaphyseal bone (near an end of the bone). In some embodiments, intraoperative tapping adjacent metaphyseal bone may be more suitable, due, for example, to the greater complexity in shape and/or breakage patterns in metaphyseal regions. The bone may have at least one discontinuity, such as a fracture 20, which may be spanned by the bone plate, and/or the bone plate may strengthen a bone lacking a discontinuity, among others. The bone plate may be connected to the bone with suitable fasteners, such as one or more bone screws 22 received in apertures of the bone plate and engaged with underlying bone. In some examples, the fasteners may be positioned to secure the bone plate to the bone on only one side or on opposing sides of the discontinuity. In some embodiments, the fasteners may include a wire, a clamp, a pin, and/or the like. In any case, the fasteners may hold the bone plate in position on the bone provisionally, as the bone plate is being tapped at one or more apertures (and then removed/replaced), or for an extended period, such as during healing of the bone, among others.


The apertures to be tapped (i.e., threaded) in a plate, and the angles at which the apertures are tapped, may be selected. Selection may be performed during surgery, based on x-ray (or other) imaging data, direct observation, trial fitting, and/or placement of a guide device, among others. The use of bone screws in conjunction with one or more threaded apertures of a bone plate may allow at least a portion of the plate to be optionally positioned as a buttress, away from the bone. This may allow periostea, blood vessels, and/or the like to pass under the plate without being pinched or damaged, possibly promoting faster healing. Positioning the plate slightly away from the bone further may allow for some amount of natural settling and/or thickening (e.g., through calcification) of the fractured bone. Accordingly, the present teachings may provide greater flexibility in placement of bone screws into bone (such as metaphyseal bone), improved attachment of bone screws to bone plates and/or to bone, and/or improved fixation and healing of injured bones, among others.


Further aspects of the present teachings are included in the following sections, including, among others, (I) tap devices, (II) fasteners for tapped apertures, (III) methods of tapping apertures and of securing bone plates to bones, (IV) bone plates, (V) guide devices, (VI) kits, and (VII) examples.


I. Tap Devices


The systems of the present teachings provide tap devices. A tap device may include any structure that can be manipulated or operated to form a thread(s) in a bone plate, particularly while the bone plate is disposed on a bone. The tap device also may be configured to form and/or follow a hole in bone and/or in the bone plate, to widen a hole in the bone (and/or in the bone plate), and/or to reduce or draw out “chips” (i.e., bone and/or plate material removed by the tap device), among others. The tap device may be solid or may be partially or completely hollow, for example, cannulated with an axial bore. The tap device may include a tip portion, a reamer portion, a tap portion, and a driven portion, among others. Any two or more of these portions may be coupled to one another in a fixed or a movable (such as a rotatable) relationship. In some examples, these portions may be formed integrally as one piece, for example, as a tapping bit. In some examples, the tap device also may be configured to secure the bone plate to bone, such as a bone screw having a tapping structure included in the head of the bone screw.


The tap device may be formed of any suitable material hard enough to cut a thread in the bone plate and/or bone. Accordingly, the material for the tap device may be selected, for example, based on the composition of the bone plate. The material also may be rigid enough to transmit a torque from the driven portion of the tap device to the tap portion, and to remain generally nondeformed during tapping operations. Exemplary materials for the tap device may include metal, ceramic, plastic, composite, and/or the like.


The tip portion, also termed a guidance tip, may be disposed at a leading end (a distal region) of the tap device, to guide the tap device into bone. The tip portion may help to stabilize the tap device and to hold it at a fixed angle relative to the bone, while tapping takes place. Alternatively, or in addition, the tip portion may facilitate penetrating the bone at a desired angle to produce a pilot hole in the bone, or may follow, widen, and/or deepen all or part of a preexisting pilot hole. The tip portion may be rigid enough not to be deformed substantially as it guides the tap portion to the bone plate.


The tip portion may have any suitable shape and size. The tip portion may be generally linear or may be nonlinear, such as helical or curved. The tip portion may be generally cylindrical, having a smooth, textured, and/or contoured surface. A distal end region of the tip portion may be rounded, tapered, and/or or pointed, among others. In some examples, the tip portion may include drilling structure, so that the tip portion also can form a hole in bone as the tip portion enters bone. In this case, the tip portion may include a cutting edge, a helical channel, and/or a distal end region that is sharp, among others. The tip portion may have any suitable length, measured axially in the tap device. Generally, the tip portion may be at least as long as the tap portion, and may be at least about twice or three times as long as the tap portion, among others. Furthermore, the tip portion may have a length selected according to the length of the shaft of a bone screw to be used with the tap device. For example, the tip portion may have a length that is about as long as, shorter than, or longer than, the length of the shaft of the bone screw to be placed in an aperture tapped by the tap device. In some embodiments, the tip portion may have a length of about 5 mm to 100 mm, with particular exemplary lengths of about 8 mm, 25 mm, and 50 mm, among others. The tip portion may have any suitable diameter, generally a diameter less than the diameter of the tap portion and less than the crest-to-crest diameter of a threaded shaft of a fastener to be placed in an aperture tapped by the tap portion. In some examples, the diameter of the tip portion may be less than about one-half the diameter of the tap portion. In some embodiments, the tip portion may have a diameter of about 1.5 mm to 4.0 mm, among others.


The reamer portion may be configured to widen a hole in bone followed and/or formed by the tip portion. Accordingly, the reamer portion may be included in the tip and/or tap portions or may be disposed between the tip portion and the tap portion (such as adjoining the tap portion), among others. The reamer portion may taper from the tap portion toward the tip portion, and thus may have a generally frustoconical shape. The reamer portion may include one or more cutting flutes extending, for example, generally axially on the tap device.


The tap portion may be used to form a thread in a bone plate aperture and/or in underlying bone. The tap portion may include an external thread or threaded region to guide cutting surfaces of the tap portion along a helical path to form an internal thread in the aperture and/or in the bone. The external thread or threaded region may have any suitable number of thread segments arrayed generally axially, such as at least one, two, three, or more. The tap portion may taper toward a distal section of the tap device (toward the tip portion), so that a thread cut by the tap portion becomes shallower toward the tip portion, particularly in bone. Accordingly, the external thread/threaded region of the tap portion may have flatter/shorter crests distally. The tap portion may include one or more cutting flutes intersecting the external thread or threaded region, for example, extending axially on the tap device. The cutting flutes of the tap portion may abut cutting flutes of the reamer portion. In some examples, the tap portion (or an adjacent, proximal region of the tap device) may include a stop structure, such as a widened region or a transverse extension, that contacts the bone plate, to restrict excessive advancement of the tap portion through the bone plate. In some examples, the stop structure may have an adjustable axial position.


The driven portion may be configured to be coupled to a driver so that the tap device can be rotated. The driver may include any suitable turning mechanism, such as a power-driven or manually operated driver, and/or a manually operable lever or hand crank, among others. The driven portion may include a shaft that extends proximally from the tap portion. The shaft may be cylindrical or noncylindrical. In some examples, the shaft may be at least as long as the tap portion, or at least twice as long, among others. The driven portion also may include, for example, a recess, a boss, a ridge, a groove, a thread, and/or a beveled/flattened section, among others, to facilitate engagement with the driver.


FIGS. 2 and 3A-C show various views of tap device 12 from FIG. 1. The tap device 12 may include a tip portion 42, a reamer portion 44, a tap portion 46, and a driven portion 48.


The tip portion 42 may be shaped to follow a pilot hole formed in bone. The tip portion 42 may include a rounded leading or distal end 50 and a cylindrical following or proximal section 52. The tip portion may be at least substantially or completely nonthreaded along its length.


The reamer portion 44 may flare outward as it extends away from the proximal section 52 of the tip portion. The reamer portion may abut the tap portion 46 and may share a plurality of axial flutes 54 with the tap portion. An edge of each flute may define a cutting edge 56 where the flute meets the reamer portion (or the tap portion). The flutes also may extend into the tip portion and/or the driven portion.


The tap portion 46 may include a thread (or threads) 60 having a plurality of adjacent thread segments 62. The thread segments may be grouped into segment sets 64 separated by flutes 54 (see FIGS. 3B and 3C). The thread may taper toward the tip portion. For example, distal thread segments, shown at 66, may be shorter and/or blunter than proximal thread segments, shown at 68 (see FIG. 3B).


The driven portion 48 may include a spacer or shaft 70 and an interface region 72 engaged by a driver (see FIG. 3A). The interface region 72 may include an annular groove 74 and/or a planar recess 76, among others.



FIG. 4 shows another exemplary tap device 80 for intraoperatively tapping an aperture of a bone plate. Tap device 80 may include a tip portion 82 configured as a drill bit, to form a hole in the bone (and/or bone plate) before and/during tapping performed by a tap portion 84 of the tap device.


II. Fasteners for Tapped Apertures


The systems of the present teachings may provide fasteners to be received in tapped apertures, particularly apertures tapped by a tap device as described in Sections I and III. The fasteners, such as bone screws, may include a head and a shank, each of which may be threaded or nonthreaded. The fasteners may be solid or partially or completely hollow (i.e., cannulated with an axial bore)


The head may have any suitable size and structure. For example, the head may have any suitable diameter, generally at least as great as, or greater than the diameter of the shank. The diameter may correspond to the diameter of a tapped aperture, so that at least a portion of the head fits closely into the tapped aperture. In some embodiments, the diameter of the head may be about 3 mm to 7 mm. The head may have any suitable length, measured axially on the fastener. For example, the length of the head may be less than, about the same as, or greater than the thickness of a bone plate for which the fastener is configured. In some embodiments, the head may have length sufficient for a proximal (or intermediate) region of the head to be disposed in a tapped aperture of the bone plate and for a distal region of the head to be disposed in bone. In some examples, a proximal portion of the head may protrude above the bone plate when the fastener is fully installed. In some embodiments, the length of the head may be about 2 mm to 6 mm, among others. The head may include tool engagement structure, such as a hexagonal socket, a linear slot, a cruciform slot (with or without a deeper central depression), or the like, so that a tool can engage the head and transmit torque to the head and shank. The head may include a thread(s) extending along any suitable portion of its length. The thread may be an external (male) thread configured to be threadably engaged with the internal (female) thread of a tapped aperture and/or underlying bone. The thread may include any suitable number of thread segments arrayed axially, generally at least two or more. In some examples, the head may include at least three or at least four of such thread segments. The thread segments may form a continuous thread and/or a discontinuous thread (for example, interrupted by axial flutes).


The head also may include a shoulder region, a cap region, and/or tapping structure. The shoulder region may join the head to the shank. The shoulder region may taper toward the shank, for example, so that the shoulder region is generally frustoconical, or may be nontapered. The shoulder region may be threaded or nonthreaded. A cap region may be disposed proximally on the head. The cap region may be configured to restrict excessive advancement of the head through a tapped aperture. Accordingly, the cap region may be nonthreaded and/or may have an increased diameter relative to an adjacent threaded region of the head. A tapping structure of the head may be configured to form and/or deepen a thread in the bone plate and/or adjacent bone. The tapping structure may be disposed, for example, at a leading (distal) section of the head. Exemplary tapping structure may include one or more flutes extending generally axially relative to the head and intersecting a threaded region thereof.


The shank may have any suitable size and structure. The shank may have any suitable length. For example, the shank may be shorter than, at least as long as, or longer than the head. In some examples, the shank may be at least twice as long as the head. In some embodiments, the shank may be about 5 mm to 100 mm in length, with particular exemplary lengths including 8 mm, 10 mm, 25 mm, 50 mm, or 70 mm, among others. The shank may be long enough to extend through bone to an opposing bone cortex (for a bicortical fastener), to extend into cancellous bone, and/or to terminate in the cortex adjacent the bone plate (for a unicortical fastener). In some embodiments, the shank may be absent from the fastener. The shank may include a thread(s) disposed along any suitable portion of the shank's length, such as at least substantially the entire length of the shank. The thread may have the same pitch as a thread on the head or may have a different pitch, that is, a smaller or larger pitch that is constant or variable. The shank may include tapping structure configured to form and/or deepen a thread in the bone, such as in a pilot hole used to guide a tap device. The tapping structure may be disposed, for example, at a leading (distal) section of the shank. Exemplary tapping structure may include one or more cutting flutes extending generally axially relative to the shank and intersecting a threaded region thereof.


Exemplary fastener sizes and pitches that may be suitable are included in the following patent application, which is incorporated herein by reference: U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/548,685, filed Feb. 26, 2004.



FIG. 5 shows an exemplary bone screw 110 that may be threadably engaged with an intraoperatively tapped aperture, for example, an aperture tapped with the tap devices of FIGS. 1-4. Bone screw 110 may include a head 112 and a shank 114.


The head 112 may include any suitable structures. For example, the head may include a threaded region 116 extending over a majority of the length of the head. The threaded region 116 may include a thread 118, which may be intersected by a plurality of flutes 120 to form tapping structures 122 each having a cutting edge 124. The head also may include a cap region 126 forming a proximal region of the head. Furthermore, the head may include a tool engagement structure 128 for imparting torque to the bone screw, and a shoulder 130 forming a transition between the head and the shank.


The shank 114 may include any suitable structures. For example, the shank may include a threaded region 132 having a thread 134. Furthermore, a distal end of the shank may include one or more flutes 136 to form one or more tapping structures 138 each having a cutting edge 139.



FIG. 6 shows bone screw 110 disposed in threaded engagement with a bone plate 140 and bone 142. A proximal region of the head 112 may be threaded into a tapped aperture 144 of the bone plate, shown at 146. The head may be flush with the outer surface of the bone plate, disposed below this outer surface, or may project somewhat above the outer surface of the bone plate, as shown in the present illustration. A distal region of the head may be threaded into a tapped cortical region of the bone, shown at 148. The shank 114 may extend into an underlying/opposing cortical, cancellous, and/or medullary region of bone 142, for example, to be disposed in threaded engagement with the bone.


III. Methods of Tapping Apertures and of Securing Bone Plates to Bones


The systems of the present teachings also provide methods of tapping apertures and/or of securing bone plates to bones. These methods may include, among other steps, any suitable combination of the following steps, performed in any suitable order, any suitable number of times: (1) selecting a bone plate, (2) positioning the bone plate on a bone, (3) connecting the bone plate to the bone, (3) forming a pilot hole in the bone, (4) tapping an aperture(s) of the bone plate, and/or (5) placing a fastener(s) into the aperture(s). These methods may permit a surgeon to determine, aperture by aperture, the spacing between the plate and bone, locked and nonlocked engagement of each fastener with the bone plate, and/or the angle(s) with which fasteners extend through the bone plate and into bone. Thus, the methods described herein may provide surgeons with more options for installation of bone plates, which may lead to more secure and/or appropriate fixation of the plates.



FIGS. 7-12 show exemplary configurations of a bone plate, a bone, and bone screws that may be created by performing exemplary steps of methods of tapping apertures and/or of securing bone plates to bones. These configurations are described in the following paragraphs relative to the method steps listed above.


A bone plate may be selected. The bone plate may be preshaped for a particular target bone or bone region, and/or may be shaped/adjusted intraoperatively. The bone plate may have any suitable number of apertures, including none, one, or more, and the apertures may be similar in shape and/or size, or may be of two or more different shapes and/or sizes to facilitate tapping intraoperatively and/or to direct placement of bone screws without intraoperative tapping. Apertures configured to be tapped may include a wall region (a land) extending generally orthogonal to a local length-by-width plane defined by the bone plate, such as a wall region forming a cylindrical bore. A counterbore may be disposed adjacent the wall region so that the aperture flares outward toward the outer surface of the bone plate.


The bone plate may be positioned on a bone. The bone plate may be disposed on a surface of the bone and may span a discontinuity in the bone, by extending axially and/or transverse to the bone. For example, FIG. 7 shows an axial sectional view of a bone plate 150 disposed on a surface of a bone 152 having a fracture 154. The plate may be disposed over a region of bone having a cortex 156 and a medullary canal 158 and/or may be spaced from the medullary canal of the bone (such as adjacent a metaphyseal region near an end of a bone).


The bone plate may be connected to the bone. This step of connecting may be performed to limit movement of the bone plate relative to bone during intraoperative tapping and/or subsequent fastener placement. Accordingly, the step of connecting may secure the bone plate to the bone so that the bone plate is fixed in position. The step of connecting may be performed with one or more fasteners, such as screws, pin, wires, etc., placed through apertures of the bone plate. For example, FIG. 7 shows bone plate 150 secured to bone 152 using bone screws 160 received in apertures 162 that flank an aperture 164 to be tapped. Any suitable aperture(s) may be selected for the step of connecting. The apertures selected may be tappable intraoperatively (or may have already been tapped intraoperatively), or may be sized/shaped so that they are not suitable to be tapped intraoperatively. Alternatively, or in addition, the bone plate may be secured with a clamp device, such as that described in Section V.


The bone plate may have at least one tappable aperture 164. The tappable aperture may include a generally orthogonal wall or a land 166 into which a thread(s) may be formed during intraoperative tapping. The land may define a lip of the aperture. In the present illustration, wall 166 defines a cylindrical region of the aperture. Aperture 164 also or alternatively may include a counterbore 168, such as the radiused or generally frustospherical counterbore shown here. Such a counterbore may be formed, for example, with a balling mill. In the present illustration, tappable aperture 164 has a distinct configuration relative to other apertures 162 of the bone plate. Accordingly, tappable apertures may be visibly distinct and/or may be marked with indicia to indicate that they are configured to be tapped. Alternatively, in some embodiments, all the apertures of a bone plate may be similar in structure and configured to be tapped.


A pilot hole may be formed in the bone. The pilot hole may be formed with a hole-forming tool such as a drill and/or by a tap device having a hole-forming structure. The pilot hole may be formed in alignment with an aperture of the bone plate, for example, generally centered below the aperture. The pilot hole may be formed orthogonal to the bone plate or at a selected angle relative to the bone plate. The angle of the pilot hole may determine a corresponding angle at which a bone screw will subsequently engage a newly tapped aperture. This angle thus may be selected by a surgeon during surgery, rather than being predetermined as in the case of a pre-threaded aperture. The pilot hole may have a diameter greater than the diameter of a tip portion of the tap device and less than the diameter of a shank of a bone screw to be placed in to the pilot hole. The pilot hole may have any suitable depth and may extend unicortically, bicortically, and/or into cancellous bone, among others.



FIG. 8 shows an exemplary configuration produced during a step of forming a pilot hole in the bone. A drill 172 may be driven rotationally, shown at 174, and advanced axially through tappable aperture 164 to form a pilot hole 178. The drill 172 may be disposed at a selected oblique angle (or orthogonally) relative to the bone surface. The drill 172 may be advanced through the cortex 156 and into the medullary canal 158 (and/or into cancellous bone and/or into/through an opposing cortex). The depth of hole formation may be determined, for example, by a stop disposed on the drill, by depth indicia on the drill or on a measuring device, by visual observation, and/or the like. In some examples, the drill may be guided by a guide device, such as a hand-held cannula 180 disposed in engagement with the bone plate around the tappable aperture 164.


An aperture of the bone plate may be tapped to form a thread in the aperture. The aperture may be tapped using a tap device. The aperture may be tapped with the plate positioned away from the bone (such as with the plate disposed on a rack or frame), and/or it may be tapped in situ, with the plate positioned adjacent the bone. A tip portion of the tap device may be received in a pilot hole to guide a tap portion of the tap device to an aperture. The tip portion may follow a pre-formed pilot hole, may form the pilot hole, and/or may widen the pilot hole. For example, FIG. 9 shows tip portion 42 of tap device 12 being advanced axially along pilot hole 178, shown at 182. The tap device may be rotated so that the tap portion 46 taps a wall of the aperture and, optionally, underlying bone, particularly cortical bone. The tap device may tap the aperture at least substantially symmetrically, for example, evenly tapping the walls of a circular aperture, allowing for up to full threaded engagement of a fastener with the aperture. Alternatively, the tap device may tap the aperture asymmetrically, for example, tapping an end, and optionally the adjacent sides, of an elongated aperture, leaving the other end, and optionally the adjacent sides, untapped, allowing for partial threaded engagement of a fastener with the aperture. For example, FIG. 10 shows tap device 12 with tap portion 46 in engagement with the bone plate and underlying cortical bone, to form a thread 184 in aperture 164 and extending into the bone, shown at 186. Because the tap portion may be tapered, the thread formed in bone may be shallower than in the bone plate. The reamer portion 44 of the tap device may widen the pilot hole and/or the aperture of the bone, shown at 188. Tapping may be terminated based a visible position of the tap device and/or a marking(s) thereon, using a stop mechanism, based on image (such as X-ray) analysis, trial placement of a fastener, and/or the like.


The tap device may be removed after the aperture has been tapped. For example, FIG. 11 shows a tapped bore 192 formed by the tap device. The tapped bore may include a tapped aperture 194 of the bone plate and tapped bone 196 formed adjacent the tapped aperture. The tapped bore also may narrow distally, shown at 198, as it joins the pilot hole 178. Alternatively, the tap device may be left in position after the aperture has been taped, for example, when a bone screws taps the aperture of the bone plate.


A fastener may be placed into the tapped aperture and into the bone. The fastener may be advanced rotationally into the tapped bore and pilot hole, to lock the fastener to the bone plate and to engage bone. For example, FIG. 12 shows bone screw 110 in threaded engagement with tapped aperture 194 and cortical bone 156, through the head 112 of the bone screw. Accordingly, the head may be placed into threaded engagement with a pre-existing thread in both the bone plate and the bone. The shank of the bone screw may be in threaded engagement with adjacent/opposing bone, such as the same cortex and/or the opposing cortex of the bone.


Fasteners then may be placed into other apertures of the bone plate. These fasteners may be placed into intraoperatively tapped apertures and/or into nontapped apertures.


IV. Bone Plates


Bone plates for intraoperative tapping generally comprise any relatively low-profile (or plate-like) fixation device configured to stabilize at least one bone by attachment to the bone. The fixation device may be configured to span any suitable bone discontinuity (or discontinuities) so that the fixation device fixes the relative positions of bone pieces/fragments (and/or bones) disposed on opposing sides of the bone discontinuity (or discontinuities). Alternatively, or in addition, the fixation device may reinforce a bone lacking a discontinuity.


Suitable discontinuities may occur naturally and/or may result from injury, disease, and/or surgical intervention, among others. Accordingly, exemplary discontinuities for use with the fixation devices described herein may include joints, fractures (breaks in bones), osteotomies (cuts in bones), and/or nonunions (for example, produced by injury, disease, or a birth defect), among others.


The bone plates to be tapped intraoperatively may be configured for use on any suitable bone, in any suitable species, including human, equine, canine, and/or feline species, among others. Exemplary bones may include bones of the arms (radius, ulna, humerus), legs (femur, tibia, fibula, patella), hands/wrists (e.g., phalanges, metacarpals, and carpals), feet/ankles (e.g., phalanges, metatarsals, and tarsals), vertebrae, scapulas, pelvic bones, cranial bones, ribs, and/or clavicles, among others.


Each bone plate may be configured to be disposed in any suitable position relative to its target bone. The bone plate (or a plate portion) may be configured to be disposed in contact with an exterior surface of the bone and thus may be positioned at least substantially (or completely) exterior to the bone. Alternatively, the bone plate may be configured to be disposed at least partially interior to a bone, that is, apposed to (normally) interior bone surfaces when secured to the bone. The interior surfaces of the bone may be accessed during installation of the bone plate (such as by punching the bone plate through the exterior bone surface) and/or may be accessible due to a break, a cut, and/or the like.


The bone plates may be formed of any suitable material(s). The bone plates may be of a sturdy yet malleable construction. Generally, the bone plates should be stiffer and stronger than the section of bone spanned by the plates, yet flexible (e.g., springy) enough not to strain the bone significantly. Suitable materials for forming the bone plates may include metal, polymer, plastic, ceramic, composite, and/or the like. Suitable materials may include biocompatible materials. Exemplary biocompatible materials may include metals/metal alloys (for example, titanium or titanium alloys; alloys with cobalt, chromium, and/or molybdenum; stainless steel; etc.) and/or bioresorbable materials (such as polygalactic acid (PGA), polylactic acid (PLA), polycaprolactones, polydioxanones, copolymers thereof, etc.), among others. The materials may be specially selected and/or treated (e.g., by annealing) to facilitate tapping, for example, being softer than at least the cutting portion of the tap, and potentially being softer than regular bone plates (although still hard enough to perform the desired function).


The bone plates may be configured to reduce irritation to the bone and surrounding tissue. For example, the bone plates may be formed of a biocompatible material, as described above. In addition, the bone plates may have a low and/or feathered profile to reduce their protrusion into adjacent tissue and rounded, burr-free surfaces to reduce the effects of such protrusion.


The bone plates described herein may be sized and shaped to conform to particular portions of a bone (or bones). The plates may be generally elongate, with a length L, a width W, and a thickness T. Here, length L≧width W>thickness T. In use, the long axis of the bone plates (or of a plate portion) may be aligned with the long axis of the corresponding bone, and/or may extend obliquely and/or transversely relative to the bone's long axis. The length and/or width of the bone plates may be varied according to the intended use, for example, to match the plates with a preselected region of bone(s) and/or a particular injury to the bone. For example, the plates may be generally linear for use on the shaft of a long bone and/or may have a nonlinear shape, such as for use near an end of a bone and/or for transverse placement on the shaft, among others. In some examples, the plates may be configured to wrap at least partially around a bone, so that portions of each plate are disposed on distinct sides and/or generally opposing sides/surfaces of a bone. In some embodiments, the bone plates may be configured for use on both sides of the body/skeleton, such as when the bone plates are bilaterally symmetrical. In some embodiments, the bone plates may be asymmetrical and configured for use on either the left or the right side of the body/skeleton.


The bone plates may include inner (bone-facing) and outer (bone-opposing) surfaces. One or both of these surfaces may be contoured generally to follow an exterior surface of a target bone (or bones) for which a bone plate is intended, so that the bone plate maintains a low profile and fits onto the bone(s). For example, the inner surface of a plate may be generally complementary in contour to the bone surface. The outer surface of the plate also may correspond in contour to the bone surface and may be generally complementary to the inner surface of the plate. The bone plates may be partially and/or completely precontoured, at the time of manufacture, allowing practitioners to apply them to bone(s) with little or no additional bending at the time of application. Preshaping the plates allows the inner or bone-facing surface of the plate to follow and substantially match the three-dimensional contour of a bone, along the length of the plate and/or across the width of the plate. For example, the plates may include curved, bent, twisted, and/or tubular inner surfaces that are adapted to face bone and to guide the plates to set onto the bones, initially to enhance fixation and/or to template reduction of bone, and subsequently to increase stability, by grabbing and holding bone fragments. In some embodiments, the plates may be somewhat undercontoured along their long axes, for example, to accommodate soft tissue between a portion of the plate and the bone, or to allow additional custom contouring pre- or intraoperatively, among others. Alternatively, or in addition, the bone plates may be custom-contoured by practitioners before and/or during installation onto bone.


The thickness of the bone plates may be defined by the distance between the inner and outer surfaces of the plates. The thickness of the plates may vary between plates and/or within the plates, according to the intended use. For example, thinner plates may be configured for use on smaller bones and/or on bones or bone regions where soft tissue irritation is a greater concern. Thickness may be varied within the plates. For example, the plates may become thinner as they extend over protrusions (such as processes, condyles, tuberosities, and/or the like), reducing their profile and/or rigidity, among others. Alternatively, or in addition, the thickness may vary as an interior portion of the bone plate extends into bone, for example, becoming thinner to facilitate insertion of this interior portion or thicker to increase structural stability. The thickness of the plates also may be varied to facilitate use, for example, to make the plates thinner where they typically need to be deformed by bending and/or twisting the plates, such as at a junction (or bridge region) between plate portions. In this way, the plates may be thicker and thus stronger in regions where they may not need to be contoured, such as along the shaft of the bone.


The bone plates generally include a plurality of openings (apertures). The openings may be adapted to receive fasteners for securing the plates to bone. Alternatively, or in addition, one or more of the openings may be configured to alter the local rigidity of the plates, to permit the plates to be manipulated with a tool (such as an attachable handle), to facilitate blood flow to bone regions where the bone plates are installed, to promote healing, and/or the like. These openings may extend through the bone plates (between inner and outer surfaces) and/or may extend at least substantially parallel to the inner and/or outer surfaces of the bone plates.


The openings may have any suitable positions, sizes, and/or densities within each portion of a bone plate. The openings may be arrayed generally in a line along a portion of the plate, for example, centered across the width of the plate. Alternatively, the openings may be arranged nonlinearly, for example, disposed in an arcuate, staggered, or other two-dimensional (or three-dimensional) arrangement.


The openings may have any suitable shape and structure. Exemplary shapes may include circular, elongate (such as elliptical, rectangular, oval), etc. The openings may include counterbores. The counterbores may be configured, for example, to receive a head of a bone screw, to reduce or eliminate protrusion of the head above the outer surface of the plate. The openings may be threaded or nonthreaded, and each bone plate may include one or more threaded and/or nonthreaded openings. Threaded openings may be used to position at least a portion of a bone plate away from the bone, as described above, so that the periosteum, neurovascular bodies, and the like, may pass under the plate without being pinched or damaged.


Openings to be tapped (tappable apertures) may have any suitable shape and structure. Tappable apertures may be round, elliptical, oval, and/or the like. Tappable apertures may include a lip (a land) having a Wall extending generally parallel to a thickness axis of the plate. The lip may be disposed adjacent the inner (bone-facing) surface of the bone plate (and spaced from the outer surface of the bone plate). Accordingly, with a circular tappable aperture, the lip or land may define a cylindrical region of the aperture to be tapped. Tappable apertures may include or lack a counterbore, generally disposed adjacent the outer (bone-opposing) surface of the bone plate (and spaced from the inner surface of the bone plate). The counterbore may have any suitable shape including frustoconical, radiused (such as a generally frustospherical), and/or a combination thereof, among others. In some examples, a concave radiused (such as frustospherical) counterbore may be preferred over a frustoconical counterbore, because a thread may be formed by removing less material from the bone plate during intraoperative tapping.


In some embodiments, the plates may include one or a plurality of elongate openings (for example, oval openings) extending axially, obliquely, and/or transversely within each bone plate. The elongate openings may be compression slots that include tapered counterbores to provide compression when heads of bone screws are advanced against the counterbores. Alternatively, or in addition, the elongate openings may be used to adjust the position of bone plates and/or plate portions relative to bone before the plates are fully secured to the bone. In some examples, some or all of the elongate openings may be configured to be tapped intraoperatively, as discussed above. In other examples, some or all of the elongate openings may not be configured to be tapped intraoperatively, whereas at least one or more circular openings in the bone plate may be configured to be tapped intraoperatively.


In some examples, the bone plates may include one or more projections. The projections may extend, for example, generally orthogonal from the inner surface of the bone plates toward bone. The projections may be sharp or blunt according to their intended use. For examples, sharp projections may be configured as prongs that penetrate bone to restrict movement of the bone plates. Prongs may be used in place of, or in addition to, bone fasteners, for one or more portions of each bone plate. Blunt (or sharp) projections, such as ridges or knobs, may be configured as spacing members that elevate the bone plates from the bone surface.


The bone plates may have at least one, and generally two or more, plate portions (or anchor portions) configured to be secured to different regions of a bone (or bones). Each plate portion may be structured for a specific region of a bone. For example, the bone plates may include a proximal plate portion for attachment to a more proximal region of a bone, and a distal plate portion for attachment to a more distal region of the same bone. Alternatively, or in addition, the bone plates may include an exterior plate portion configured to fit against an exterior surface region of bone adjacent a bone discontinuity, and/or an interior plate portion configured to be received in an interior (e.g., recessed, resected, and/or excavated) region of bone adjacent the bone discontinuity.


The plate portions of a bone plate may have any suitable connection. In some examples, the plate portions may be formed integrally, so that one piece of the bone plate includes the plate portions. Alternatively, plate portions may be formed as separate pieces. The separate pieces may be connected by any suitable connection and/or joint, including a fastener(s), welding, a hinge joint, a ball-in-socket joint, and/or the like. Further aspects of bone plates having adjustable joints are described in the following patent application, which is incorporated herein by reference: U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/716,719, filed Nov. 19, 2003.


The plate portions of a bone plate may have any suitable relative disposition. The plate portions may be disposed such that they are substantially collinear and/or parallel, oblique, or substantially transverse to one another. The relative disposition may be fixed and/or adjustable. In some examples, the plate portions may be connected integrally by a deformable bridge region, so that the bone plate can be bent pre- or intraoperatively to adjust the relative disposition of the plate portions. Alternatively, the plate portions may be distinct pieces connected, for example, through an adjustable joint, as described above.


V. Guide Devices


The systems of the present teachings may include one or more guide devices. A guide device may include any structure, other than the bone plate or bone, that guides hole formation in bone (and/or in the bone plate), thread formation in the bone plate (and/or bone), and/or fastener placement.


The guide device may form a channel along which a fastener, a tap device, a reamer, and/or a drill may be guided. The channel may have any suitable structure, such as linear or nonlinear. The channel may be generally cylindrical or noncylindrical. The channel may be hollow (such as a tube with an axial bore) and/or may be solid (such as a guide wire).


The guide device may be held in position during its use by any suitable mechanism. For example, the guide device may be held manually, such as through a handle and/or other graspable portion. Alternatively, or in addition, the guide device may be held with an auxiliary device, such as a positioning jig, and/or it may be secured directly to the bone plate and/or bone, such as with a fastener(s), a clamp, and/or the like.



FIG. 13 shows an exemplary guide device 210 clamped to a bone 212 and a bone plate 214. The guide device may define a path 216 through an aperture 218 of the bone plate and into the bone. The path may be defined between positions of opposing engagement of the guide device with bone and/or the bone plate. The guide device may include a frame 220 that holds or includes a clamp portion 222, a clamp release mechanism 224, a guide portion 226, and a handle portion 228.


The clamp portion 222 may be configured to apply a compressive force to the bone plate and the bone. The compressive force may restrict slippage of the clamp device and/or the bone plate. The clamp portion may include a pincer formed by opposing (first and second) pincer members 230, 232. First pincer member 230 may be included in an arm 234 extending from the frame 220 to an opposing surface of the bone. The first pincer member may indicate a location where a pilot hole, tap device, and/or fastener would exit the bone opposite the plate. Thus, the first pincer member may serve as an indicator that shows the linear extension from the guide portion, along path 216, through the bone. This may enable a surgeon to choose more precisely a suitable angle at which in to form a pilot hole, tap the bone plate, and/or place a fastener. Second pincer member 232 may be threadably coupled to the frame, so that rotation of the second pincer member adjusts the spacing between the pincer members, and thus how tightly the bone and bone plate are engaged.


The clamp release mechanism 224 may include a threaded block or retainer 238 biased into threaded engagement with the second pincer member 232. The retainer may be biased with a biasing mechanism 240 including a spring 242 or other biasing element. A switch, such as a lever or trigger 244, may be coupled to the biasing mechanism 240, and may be operable to release second pincer member 232 from engagement with retainer 238, to allow release and/or repositioning of the clamp portion.


Guide portion 226 may be formed at least partially by the second pincer member 232. The guide portion 226 may include an axial bore 246 sized to receive a drill, a tap device, and/or a fastener, among others.


VI. Kits


The systems of the present teachings may provide kits for tapping apertures intraoperatively. These kits may include (1) one or more tap devices, (2) one or more bone plates, (3) fasteners such as bone screws, (4) a guide device, and/or (5) instructions for their use, among others.


The kits may include one or more tap devices. Tap devices included in a kit may be of various sizes, including tap devices with different lengths, diameters, thread pitches, and/or thread depths, to be used in conjunction with various bone plates and/or fasteners for fixation of various types of fractures. For example, the tap devices may have tap portions of various lengths to accommodate bone plates of different thicknesses, and they may have tap portions of various diameters to accommodate bone plate apertures of different sizes. The tap devices in a kit also may have tap portions of various thread patterns, to tap apertures for engaging various sizes/types of bone screws. The tap devices also may have tip portions of different lengths and/or diameters, to follow and/or form pilot holes of different depths and/or diameters, for example, according to the length and/or diameter of bone screws to be placed into the tapped apertures. A kit may include a plurality of interchangeable tap portions and/or a plurality of interchangeable tip portions, to accommodate various combinations of bone plate thickness, aperture diameter, thread pattern, pilot hole diameter, and/or pilot hole depth, among others.


Bone plates provided in kits (or selected otherwise) may be sized and/or shaped to conform to particular regions of bone, or to different portions of the same region of bone, among others. In particular, the plates may be preshaped (preformed) to fit an average target anatomy, such as a population-averaged shape of a particular anatomical region. The average anatomy may be a human (or other animal) anatomy averaged over any suitable set, such as, for example, adults, adult males, adult females, people that fall within a particular size range, children of a given age, and so on. The bone plates may include one or more apertures, such as one or more circular and/or oval apertures. In some examples, the kits may include at least one bone plate having a circular aperture corresponding generally in diameter to the root-to-root diameter of a tap portion of a tap device in the kits.


Fasteners, such as bone screws, provided in kits (or selected otherwise) may be sized and/or shaped in correspondence with one or more tap devices included in the kits. For example, the kits may include bone screws with a head configured to be threadably engaged with a thread formed by a tap device of the kit, and/or with a shank configured to be threadably engaged with bone surrounding a pilot hole formed and/or followed by the tap device. The kits also may include one or more additional fasteners configured to be placed into bone from nonthreaded apertures of the bone plates.


The kits also may include additional tools and/or consumable surgical supplies that may be required for carrying out the connective tissue repair, substantially as described above, such as additional clamps and/or other surgical tools that may facilitate grasping and/or positioning the connective tissue that is being repaired.


The kits may be constructed or assembled for single and/or multiple use. For example, the kits, or components thereof, may be configured, in some embodiments, for a single use, such as tapping a single aperture, a single plate, or a set of plates during a single surgical procedure. These embodiments optionally may be prepackaged in a sterile wrapper. Thus, as needed, components of the kit could be removed from the sterile wrapper, used to tap and install one or more plates, and then discarded. Alternatively, the kits, or components thereof, may be configured, in other embodiments, for effecting multiple repairs, during the same or different surgical procedures. In these cases, reusable components may be configured to reduce contamination (e.g., via smooth surfaces) and/or to facilitate sterilization, such as by washing and autoclaving (e.g., through choice of material, such as metal).


VII. EXAMPLES

The following examples describe selected aspects and embodiments of the present teachings, as a series of ordered paragraphs. These examples are included for illustration and are not intended to limit or define the entire scope of the invention.


1. A kit for internally fixing a discontinuity in a bone, comprising: a drill tap, including (1) a tapping portion including a plurality of external threads configured to intraoperatively form internal threads in the aperture of a bone plate; and (2) a guidance tip, attached to the tapping portion, configured to follow and/or form a pilot hole in a bone.


2. The kit of paragraph 1, wherein the guidance tip is detachable from the tapping portion.


3. The kit of paragraph 1, wherein the drill tap further comprises a shaft portion adapted to engage with a turning mechanism.


4. The kit of paragraph 1, wherein the drill tap further comprises a tapered portion, disposed between the tapping portion and the guidance tip, for forming a tapered region of the pilot hole.


5. The kit of paragraph 1, further comprising:


a clamp guide, including a bone clamp portion for holding the bone plate to the bone; and a drill guide portion configured to provide alignment for the drill tap.


6. The kit of paragraph 5, wherein the clamp guide further comprises an indicator configured to indicate a linear extension of the drill tap through the bone.


7. The kit of paragraph 5, further comprising a bone plate having at least one threadable aperture.


8. The kit of paragraph 1, further comprising a bone plate having at least one threadable aperture.


9. A method of internally fixing a discontinuity in a bone, comprising: (1) selecting a bone plate having at least one threadable aperture; (2) positioning the plate on a surface of the fractured bone; (3) threading intraoperatively at least one of the threadable apertures; and (4) attaching the plate to the bone by inserting a threaded fastener into one or more of the intraoperatively threaded apertures.


10. The method of paragraph 9, the threaded fastener being a bone screw, wherein threads of the bone screw engage threads of the aperture.


11. The method of paragraph 10, further comprising drilling a pilot hole in the bone for engaging a shaft portion of the bone screw.


12. The method of paragraph 11, wherein the steps of drilling a pilot hole and intraoperatively threading at least one of the threadable apertures are performed sequentially.


13. The method of paragraph 11, wherein the steps of drilling a pilot hole and intraoperatively threading at least one of the threadable apertures are performed at least partially simultaneously.


14. The method of paragraph 13, wherein the steps of drilling a pilot hole and intraoperatively threading at least one of the threadable apertures are performed by a drill tap comprising: (1) a tapping portion including a plurality of external threads configured to form internal threads in the aperture of a bone plate; and (2) a guidance tip, rigidly attached to the tapping portion, configured to follow and/or form a pilot hole in a bone.


15. The method of paragraph 9, further comprising clamping the bone plate to the bone, prior to the step of intraoperatively threading.


16. The method of paragraph 15, further comprising selecting an angle for threading the threadable aperture.


17. The method of paragraph 16, further comprising aligning a drill tap at the selected angle with a clamp guide.


18. The method of paragraph 9, wherein the step of intraoperatively threading at least one of the threadable apertures comprises: (1) tapping the at least one of the threadable apertures to create threads using a drill tap; and (2) removing the drill tap from the at least one of the threadable apertures, so that the aperture is accessible to a fastener.


The disclosure set forth above may encompass multiple distinct inventions with independent utility. Although each of these inventions has been disclosed in its preferred form(s), the specific embodiments thereof as disclosed and illustrated herein are not to be considered in a limiting sense, because numerous variations are possible. The subject matter of the inventions includes all novel and nonobvious combinations and subcombinations of the various elements, features, functions, and/or properties disclosed herein. The following claims particularly point out certain combinations and subcombinations regarded as novel and nonobvious. Inventions embodied in other combinations and subcombinations of features, functions, elements, and/or properties may be claimed in applications claiming priority from this or a related application. Such claims, whether directed to a different invention or to the same invention, and whether broader, narrower, equal, or different in scope to the original claims, also are regarded as included within the subject matter of the inventions of the present disclosure.

Claims
  • 1. A method of tapping a bone plate intraoperatively, comprising: selecting a bone plate having an aperture;placing the bone plate on a bone;forming a thread in the aperture using a tap device with the bone plate disposed on the bone;forming a hole in the bone, the hole being in alignment with the aperture;widening the hole adjacent the aperture to create a counterbore in the bone; andadvancing a fastener into threaded engagement with the thread after removal of the tap device from the aperture.
  • 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of placing includes a step of attaching the bone plate to the bone.
  • 3. The method of claim 2, the aperture being a first aperture, wherein the step of attaching includes a step of inserting a fastener through a second aperture and into the bone.
  • 4. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of forming a hole also forms a thread in the bone.
  • 5. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of forming a hole is performed at least substantially before the step of forming a thread.
  • 6. The method of claim 5, wherein the step of forming a thread is performed with a tap device having a tap portion and a tip portion, and wherein the step of forming a thread includes a step of inserting the tip portion into the hole so that the tap portion is guided to the aperture.
  • 7. The method of claim 1, further comprising a step of selecting an angle for the step of forming a thread.
  • 8. The method of claim 7, wherein the step of selecting an angle includes a step of disposing a guide device at least substantially at the angle.
  • 9. The method of claim 7, wherein the step of forming a hole in the bone includes a step of forming a hole at least substantially at the angle.
  • 10. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of selecting a bone plate includes selecting a bone plate formed at least substantially of metal.
  • 11. The method of claim 10, wherein the step of selecting a bone plate includes selecting a bone plate formed at least substantially of titanium.
  • 12. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of forming a thread includes a step of cutting the thread.
  • 13. The method of claim 1, wherein the counterbore is defined in the bone by a wall, and wherein the step of advancing includes a step of disposing the fastener in threaded engagement with the wall.
  • 14. The method of claim 13, wherein the fastener has a head with a threaded region, and wherein the step of advancing a fastener includes a step of advancing the threaded region into threaded engagement with the thread in the aperture and with the wall.
  • 15. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of widening the hole includes a step of creating a counterbore having a thread for engagement with the fastener.
  • 16. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of advancing a fastener includes a step of tapping the counterbore.
  • 17. The method of claim 1, wherein the bone plate has a thickness, and wherein the step of advancing is performed with a fastener having a head that is longer than the thickness of the bone plate.
  • 18. The method claim 1, wherein the step of widening is performed at least partially during the step of forming a thread.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO PRIORITY APPLICATION

This application is based upon and claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/480,529, filed Jun. 20, 2003, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all purposes.

US Referenced Citations (328)
Number Name Date Kind
820503 Krengel et al. May 1906 A
869697 Eilhauer et al. Oct 1907 A
1105105 Sherman Jul 1914 A
1345425 Wells Jul 1920 A
1789060 Weisenbach Jan 1931 A
1889239 Crowley Nov 1932 A
2406832 Hardinge Sep 1946 A
2443363 Townsend et al. Jun 1948 A
2489870 Dzus Nov 1949 A
2494229 Collison Jan 1950 A
2500370 McKibbin Mar 1950 A
2526959 Lorenzo Oct 1950 A
2580821 Nicola Jan 1952 A
2583896 Siebrandt Jan 1952 A
2737835 Herz Mar 1956 A
3025853 Mason Mar 1962 A
3072423 Charlton Jan 1963 A
3171518 Bergmann Mar 1965 A
3244170 McElvenny Apr 1966 A
3346894 Lemelson Oct 1967 A
3386437 Treace Jun 1968 A
3488779 Christensen Jan 1970 A
3489143 Halloran Jan 1970 A
3593709 Halloran Jul 1971 A
3604414 Borges Sep 1971 A
3716050 Johnston Feb 1973 A
3741205 Markolf et al. Jun 1973 A
3842825 Wagner Oct 1974 A
3866458 Wagner Feb 1975 A
3867932 Huene Feb 1975 A
3900025 Barnes, Jr. Aug 1975 A
3901064 Jacobson Aug 1975 A
3939497 Heimke et al. Feb 1976 A
3965720 Goodwin et al. Jun 1976 A
4119092 Gil Oct 1978 A
4187840 Watanabe Feb 1980 A
4187841 Knutson Feb 1980 A
4201215 Crossett et al. May 1980 A
4364382 Mennen Dec 1982 A
4388921 Sutter et al. Jun 1983 A
4408601 Wenk Oct 1983 A
RE31628 Allgower et al. Jul 1984 E
4457307 Stillwell Jul 1984 A
4484570 Sutter et al. Nov 1984 A
4493317 Klaue Jan 1985 A
4506681 Mundell Mar 1985 A
4513744 Klaue Apr 1985 A
4565192 Shapiro Jan 1986 A
4565193 Streli Jan 1986 A
4573458 Lower Mar 1986 A
4651724 Berentey et al. Mar 1987 A
4683878 Carter Aug 1987 A
4703751 Pohl Nov 1987 A
4705031 Wolter Nov 1987 A
4718413 Johnson Jan 1988 A
4730608 Schlein Mar 1988 A
4736737 Fargie et al. Apr 1988 A
4743261 Epinette May 1988 A
4750481 Reese Jun 1988 A
4757810 Reese Jul 1988 A
4759350 Dunn et al. Jul 1988 A
4760843 Fischer et al. Aug 1988 A
4794918 Wolter Jan 1989 A
4800874 David et al. Jan 1989 A
4823780 Odensten et al. Apr 1989 A
4867144 Karas et al. Sep 1989 A
4892093 Zarnowski et al. Jan 1990 A
4893619 Dale et al. Jan 1990 A
4903691 Heinl Feb 1990 A
4905679 Morgan Mar 1990 A
4923471 Morgan May 1990 A
4926847 Luckman May 1990 A
4943292 Foux Jul 1990 A
4955886 Pawluk Sep 1990 A
4957497 Hoogland et al. Sep 1990 A
4963153 Noesberger et al. Oct 1990 A
4964403 Karas et al. Oct 1990 A
4966599 Pollock Oct 1990 A
4973332 Kummer Nov 1990 A
4988350 Herzberg Jan 1991 A
5002544 Klaue et al. Mar 1991 A
5006120 Carter Apr 1991 A
5013315 Barrows May 1991 A
5015248 Burstein et al. May 1991 A
5021056 Hofmann et al. Jun 1991 A
5041113 Biedermann et al. Aug 1991 A
5042983 Rayhack Aug 1991 A
5049149 Schmidt Sep 1991 A
5053036 Perren et al. Oct 1991 A
5085660 Lin Feb 1992 A
5113685 Asher et al. May 1992 A
5129899 Small et al. Jul 1992 A
5133718 Mao Jul 1992 A
5139497 Tilghman et al. Aug 1992 A
5147361 Ojima et al. Sep 1992 A
5151103 Tepic et al. Sep 1992 A
5161404 Hayes Nov 1992 A
5176685 Rayhack Jan 1993 A
5190544 Chapman et al. Mar 1993 A
5190545 Corsi et al. Mar 1993 A
5197966 Sommerkamp Mar 1993 A
5201737 Leibinger et al. Apr 1993 A
5234431 Keller Aug 1993 A
5254119 Schreiber Oct 1993 A
5269784 Mast Dec 1993 A
5290288 Vignaud et al. Mar 1994 A
5304180 Slocum Apr 1994 A
5314490 Wagner et al. May 1994 A
5364398 Chapman et al. Nov 1994 A
5364399 Lowery et al. Nov 1994 A
5380327 Eggers et al. Jan 1995 A
5413577 Pollock May 1995 A
5413579 Du Toit May 1995 A
5423826 Coates et al. Jun 1995 A
5443516 Albrektsson et al. Aug 1995 A
5468242 Reisberg Nov 1995 A
5474553 Baumgart Dec 1995 A
5487741 Maruyama et al. Jan 1996 A
5487743 Laurain et al. Jan 1996 A
5522902 Yuan et al. Jun 1996 A
5527311 Proctor et al. Jun 1996 A
5531745 Ray Jul 1996 A
5534027 Hodorek Jul 1996 A
5545228 Kambin Aug 1996 A
5564302 Watrous Oct 1996 A
5578036 Stone et al. Nov 1996 A
5586985 Putnam et al. Dec 1996 A
5591166 Bernhardt et al. Jan 1997 A
5601553 Trebing et al. Feb 1997 A
5607426 Ralph et al. Mar 1997 A
5643261 Schafer et al. Jul 1997 A
5643265 Errico et al. Jul 1997 A
5647872 Gilbert et al. Jul 1997 A
5658283 Huebner Aug 1997 A
5662655 Laboureau et al. Sep 1997 A
5665088 Gil et al. Sep 1997 A
5665089 Dall et al. Sep 1997 A
5674222 Berger et al. Oct 1997 A
5676667 Hausman Oct 1997 A
5681313 Diez Oct 1997 A
5702396 Hoenig et al. Dec 1997 A
5707372 Errico et al. Jan 1998 A
5707373 Sevrain et al. Jan 1998 A
5709682 Medoff Jan 1998 A
5709686 Talos et al. Jan 1998 A
5718704 Medoff Feb 1998 A
5718705 Sammarco Feb 1998 A
5720502 Cain Feb 1998 A
5722976 Brown Mar 1998 A
5722978 Jenkins, Jr. Mar 1998 A
5730743 Kirsch et al. Mar 1998 A
5733287 Tepic et al. Mar 1998 A
5735853 Olerud Apr 1998 A
5741258 Klaue et al. Apr 1998 A
5741259 Chan Apr 1998 A
5749872 Kyle et al. May 1998 A
5749873 Fairley May 1998 A
5752958 Wellisz May 1998 A
5772662 Chapman et al. Jun 1998 A
5807396 Raveh Sep 1998 A
5810823 Klaue et al. Sep 1998 A
5810824 Chan Sep 1998 A
5853413 Carter et al. Dec 1998 A
D404128 Huebner Jan 1999 S
5855580 Kreidler et al. Jan 1999 A
5871548 Sanders et al. Feb 1999 A
5879389 Koshino Mar 1999 A
5902304 Walker et al. May 1999 A
5904683 Pohndorf et al. May 1999 A
5916216 DeSatnick et al. Jun 1999 A
5919195 Wilson et al. Jul 1999 A
5928234 Manspeizer Jul 1999 A
5931839 Medoff Aug 1999 A
5938664 Winquist et al. Aug 1999 A
5941878 Medoff Aug 1999 A
5951557 Luter Sep 1999 A
5954722 Bono Sep 1999 A
5964763 Incavo et al. Oct 1999 A
5968046 Castleman Oct 1999 A
5968047 Reed Oct 1999 A
5973223 Tellman et al. Oct 1999 A
6001099 Huebner Dec 1999 A
6004323 Park et al. Dec 1999 A
6004353 Masini Dec 1999 A
6007535 Rayhack et al. Dec 1999 A
6022350 Ganem Feb 2000 A
6027504 McGuire Feb 2000 A
6053915 Bruchmann Apr 2000 A
6077266 Medoff Jun 2000 A
6077271 Huebner et al. Jun 2000 A
6093188 Murray Jul 2000 A
6096040 Esser Aug 2000 A
6113603 Medoff Sep 2000 A
6117160 Bonutti Sep 2000 A
6123709 Jones Sep 2000 A
6129728 Schumacher et al. Oct 2000 A
6129730 Bono et al. Oct 2000 A
6139548 Errico Oct 2000 A
6152927 Farris et al. Nov 2000 A
6159213 Rogozinski Dec 2000 A
6179839 Weiss et al. Jan 2001 B1
6183475 Lester et al. Feb 2001 B1
6193721 Michelson Feb 2001 B1
6197028 Ray et al. Mar 2001 B1
6221073 Weiss et al. Apr 2001 B1
6224602 Hayes May 2001 B1
6228087 Fenaroli et al. May 2001 B1
6235033 Brace et al. May 2001 B1
6235034 Bray May 2001 B1
6238396 Lombardo May 2001 B1
6258092 Dall Jul 2001 B1
6261291 Talaber et al. Jul 2001 B1
6273889 Richelsoph Aug 2001 B1
6283969 Grusin et al. Sep 2001 B1
6290703 Ganem Sep 2001 B1
6302883 Bono Oct 2001 B1
6302884 Wellisz et al. Oct 2001 B1
6302887 Spranza et al. Oct 2001 B1
6306136 Baccelli Oct 2001 B1
6312431 Asfora Nov 2001 B1
6315779 Morrison et al. Nov 2001 B1
6322562 Wolter Nov 2001 B1
6325803 Schumacher et al. Dec 2001 B1
6331179 Freid et al. Dec 2001 B1
6336927 Rogozinski Jan 2002 B2
6338734 Burke et al. Jan 2002 B1
6342055 Eisermann et al. Jan 2002 B1
6342075 MacArthur Jan 2002 B1
6355036 Nakajima Mar 2002 B1
6355042 Winquist Mar 2002 B2
6358250 Orbay Mar 2002 B1
6364881 Apgar et al. Apr 2002 B1
6364882 Orbay Apr 2002 B1
6364883 Santilli Apr 2002 B1
6379354 Rogozinski Apr 2002 B1
6379364 Brace et al. Apr 2002 B1
6402756 Ralph et al. Jun 2002 B1
6413259 Lyons et al. Jul 2002 B1
6428542 Michelson Aug 2002 B1
6436103 Suddaby Aug 2002 B1
6440135 Orbay et al. Aug 2002 B2
6454769 Wagner et al. Sep 2002 B2
6454770 Klaue Sep 2002 B1
6458133 Lin Oct 2002 B1
6503250 Paul Jan 2003 B2
6508819 Orbay Jan 2003 B1
6514274 Boucher et al. Feb 2003 B1
6520965 Chervitz et al. Feb 2003 B2
6527775 Warburton Mar 2003 B1
6533789 Hall, IV et al. Mar 2003 B1
6547790 Harkey et al. Apr 2003 B2
6565570 Sterett et al. May 2003 B2
6592578 Henniges et al. Jul 2003 B2
6595993 Donno et al. Jul 2003 B2
6602255 Campbell et al. Aug 2003 B1
6623486 Weaver et al. Sep 2003 B1
6623487 Goshert Sep 2003 B1
6682531 Winquist et al. Jan 2004 B2
6682533 Dinsdale et al. Jan 2004 B1
6689139 Horn Feb 2004 B2
6695846 Richelsoph et al. Feb 2004 B2
6706046 Orbay et al. Mar 2004 B2
6712820 Orbay Mar 2004 B2
6719759 Wagner et al. Apr 2004 B2
6730090 Orbay et al. May 2004 B2
6730091 Pfefferle et al. May 2004 B1
6736819 Tipirneni May 2004 B2
6767351 Orbay et al. Jul 2004 B2
6793658 LeHuec et al. Sep 2004 B2
6821278 Frigg et al. Nov 2004 B2
6858031 Morrison et al. Feb 2005 B2
6866665 Orbay Mar 2005 B2
6893444 Orbay May 2005 B2
6955677 Dahners Oct 2005 B2
6974461 Wolter Dec 2005 B1
20010011172 Orbay et al. Aug 2001 A1
20020004660 Henniges et al. Jan 2002 A1
20020032446 Orbay Mar 2002 A1
20020055741 Schlapfer et al. May 2002 A1
20020128654 Steger et al. Sep 2002 A1
20020143336 Hearn Oct 2002 A1
20020143338 Orbay et al. Oct 2002 A1
20020147453 Gambale Oct 2002 A1
20020151899 Bailey et al. Oct 2002 A1
20020156474 Wack et al. Oct 2002 A1
20020173794 Happonen et al. Nov 2002 A1
20020183752 Steiner et al. Dec 2002 A1
20030018337 Davis Jan 2003 A1
20030040748 Aikins et al. Feb 2003 A1
20030055429 Ip et al. Mar 2003 A1
20030105461 Putnam Jun 2003 A1
20030149434 Paul Aug 2003 A1
20030153918 Putnam et al. Aug 2003 A1
20030233093 Moles et al. Dec 2003 A1
20040073218 Dahners Apr 2004 A1
20040102775 Huebner May 2004 A1
20040102776 Huebner May 2004 A1
20040102777 Huebner May 2004 A1
20040102778 Huebner et al. May 2004 A1
20040116930 O'Driscoll et al. Jun 2004 A1
20040127901 Huebner et al. Jul 2004 A1
20040127903 Schlapfer et al. Jul 2004 A1
20040153073 Orbay Aug 2004 A1
20040193164 Orbay Sep 2004 A1
20040193165 Orbay Sep 2004 A1
20040220566 Bray Nov 2004 A1
20040260292 Orbay et al. Dec 2004 A1
20040260293 Orbay et al. Dec 2004 A1
20040260294 Orbay et al. Dec 2004 A1
20040260295 Orbay et al. Dec 2004 A1
20050015089 Young et al. Jan 2005 A1
20050065520 Orbay Mar 2005 A1
20050065522 Orbay Mar 2005 A1
20050065523 Orbay Mar 2005 A1
20050065524 Orbay Mar 2005 A1
20050065528 Orbay Mar 2005 A1
20050085818 Huebner Apr 2005 A1
20050085819 Ellis et al. Apr 2005 A1
20050131413 O'Driscoll et al. Jun 2005 A1
20050159747 Orbay Jul 2005 A1
20050165395 Orbay et al. Jul 2005 A1
20050165400 Fernandez Jul 2005 A1
20050171544 Falkner Aug 2005 A1
20050182405 Orbay et al. Aug 2005 A1
20050182406 Orbay et al. Aug 2005 A1
20050187551 Orbay et al. Aug 2005 A1
20050192578 Horst Sep 2005 A1
20050234458 Huebner Oct 2005 A1
Foreign Referenced Citations (68)
Number Date Country
8975091 Feb 1992 AU
474 344 Aug 1969 CH
611 147 May 1979 CH
613 617 Oct 1979 CH
2515430 Nov 1975 DE
26 21 122 Nov 1977 DE
26 21 123 Nov 1977 DE
26 21 124 Nov 1977 DE
26 21 125 Nov 1977 DE
26 25 529 Dec 1977 DE
27 33 428 Feb 1979 DE
28 32 555 Feb 1980 DE
29 47 839 Jul 1981 DE
29 47 885 Jul 1981 DE
4201531 Jul 1993 DE
4343117 Jun 1995 DE
196 29 011 Jan 1998 DE
198 58 889 Jun 2000 DE
199 62 317 Mar 2001 DE
103 09 090 Sep 2004 DE
0 053 999 Jun 1982 EP
0 242 842 Oct 1987 EP
0 410 309 Jan 1991 EP
0415837 Mar 1991 EP
0471418 Feb 1992 EP
0362049 May 1992 EP
1 143 867 Oct 2001 EP
1 211 993 Jun 2002 EP
1 211 994 Jun 2002 EP
1 250 892 Sep 2003 EP
1 250 892 Sep 2003 EP
742.618 Mar 1933 FR
2 254 298 Jul 1975 FR
2367479 May 1978 FR
2405705 May 1979 FR
2405706 May 1979 FR
2406429 May 1979 FR
2472373 Jul 1981 FR
2674118 Sep 1992 FR
2245498 Jan 1992 GB
2 406 056 Mar 2005 GB
2 419 096 Apr 2006 GB
610518 Jun 1978 SU
718097 Feb 1980 SU
862937 Sep 1981 SU
897233 Jan 1982 SU
1049054 Oct 1983 SU
1130332 Dec 1984 SU
1192806 Nov 1985 SU
1223901 Apr 1986 SU
1225556 Apr 1986 SU
1544406 Feb 1990 SU
1630804 Feb 1991 SU
1644932 Apr 1991 SU
1683724 Oct 1991 SU
1711859 Feb 1992 SU
1734715 May 1992 SU
WO8201645 May 1982 WO
WO8702572 May 1987 WO
WO8803781 Jun 1988 WO
WO9629948 Oct 1996 WO
WO 9747251 Dec 1997 WO
WO 0036984 Jun 2000 WO
WO0121083 Mar 2001 WO
WO0162136 Aug 2001 WO
WO 03105712 Dec 2003 WO
WO 2004112587 Dec 2004 WO
WO 2006007965 Jan 2006 WO
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20040260291 A1 Dec 2004 US
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60480529 Jun 2003 US