The present invention relates to a bone plug compression instrument for reshaping a bone plug from a first shape into a second shape. The invention also relates to a method of operating the compression instrument.
In orthopaedic interventions around a knee, soft tissue grafts are often retrieved from a harvesting site and transferred to a target site. An example surgical intervention process for such a transplantation is the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction process, during which autologous tissues, such as tendons and ligaments, are used. One example technique for ACL reconstruction uses a quadriceps tendon and a patellar bone plug in the reconstruction process. This arthroscopically performed surgery includes the following procedures.
Procedure 1: Quadriceps Tendon Graft Harvesting
A central piece of the quadriceps tendon graft having a length of e.g. approximately 5 cm including an attached proximal patellar bone plug having a length of e.g. approximately 2 cm is harvested. This graft will serve as a replacement for the torn anterior cruciate ligament.
To harvest a bone plug from the patellar bone, most often a hollow drill is used. A hollow drill has a thin wall thickness and allows an intact bone plug to be drilled out, which is only minimally smaller than the hole or tunnel created by the drill. These bone plugs typically have an outer diameter of 8-12 mm and a length of 10-25 mm. Specifically when retrieving a patellar bone plug using a hollow drill, the plug is retrieved from the top side of the patella, flush with the outer face of the bone. After drilling for example to a depth of 20 mm, a chisel is used to cut of the bone plug at its far end.
Procedure 2: Tibial Tunnel Creation
A tunnel is drilled from the anterior and proximal tibia towards the natural tibial foot-print of the ACL. Preferably, a hollow drill is used in order to retrieve a bone plug, which can be placed back in the tibial tunnel, at a later step during the surgery. The tibial tunnel is shaped as a through bore having of a diameter of approximately 10 mm.
Procedure 3: Femoral Tunnel Preparation
A guide wire is placed through a femoral bone, defining the intended anatomical direction of a femoral tunnel. Using a cannulated drill, the guide wire is over-drilled and the tunnel is created. The femoral tunnel is shaped as a blind hole having a diameter of approximately 8 mm and a length of approximately 25 mm.
Procedure 4: Graft Placement/ACL Reconstruction
The patellar bone plug including the quadriceps tendon as retrieved in procedure 1 is impacted into the femoral tunnel. Most often, the tip of the cylindrical graft is given a conical tip, using cutting pliers. The conical tip, which extends over approximately one third of the bone plug length, facilitates the insertion of the bone plug into the femoral tunnel. Typically the reshaped tip has an outer circumference which is smaller than the entry circumference of the femoral tunnel.
In a next step, the quadriceps graft is pulled over the joint space, and fixated in the tibial tunnel. Most commonly the tibial fixation may be carried out using a screw for suture attachment or an interference screw. A screw for suture attachment would be placed in the anterior side of the tibial bone, and suture is tied around the screw for fixation. Using an interference screw, a resorbable and thick screw is placed next to the ligament or tendon in the tibial tunnel, and it rigidly jams the tendon between the screw and the tunnel wall.
The success of the surgery greatly depends on the primary stability of the patellar bone plug in the femoral tunnel during the healing and osseointegration phase. This primary stability depends on the accuracy and reproducibility of the size and shape of the bone plug and the target hole. As described, currently the bone plug is reshaped manually, using pliers. This manual reshaping is not suitable for reproducibility and therefore the surgical outcome is less predictable. There is thus a need for an improved instrument for reshaping bone plugs.
It is an object of the present invention to overcome at least some of the problems associated with soft tissue graft fixation techniques, for instance in anterior cruciate ligament surgery. More specifically, an object of the present invention is to provide a medical instrument for preparation of a bone plug that allows the bone plug to be compressed and shaped in an accurate and reproducible manner.
According to a first aspect of the invention, there is provided a bone plug compression instrument as recited in claim 1.
The proposed novel bone plug compression instrument has the advantage that it can efficiently be used during a surgical intervention in which a bone plug is harvested and transferred to a target hole in a target bone. More specifically, the bone plug compression instrument allows a practitioner to intraoperatively resize and/or shape a bone plug in a controlled and reproducible manner. Therefore, the surgery becomes a standardised procedure providing reproducible and predictable results. Moreover, the surgery time can be reduced, and learning curves are reduced. The bone plug may be harvested using a hollow drill, circumferentially setting free the bone plug. As a result, the harvested bone plug typically has a cylindrical shape.
According to a second aspect of the invention, there is provided a kit comprising the bone plug compression instrument and a bone plug grafting instrument as recited in claim 19.
According to a third aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of operating the bone plug compression instrument as recited in claim 20.
Other aspects of the invention are recited in the detailed description and dependent claims attached hereto.
Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following description of a non-limiting example embodiment, with reference to the appended drawings, in which:
An embodiment of the present invention will now be described in detail with reference to the attached figures. The embodiment is described in the context of a bone plug compression instrument configured to at least partially reshape a cylindrical bone plug by means of compression, but the teachings of the invention are not limited to this environment. The teachings of the present invention are equally applicable to differently shaped bone plugs as well. Identical or corresponding functional and structural elements which appear in the different drawings are assigned the same reference numerals.
The advantage of the toggle clamp mechanism, is that it works according to the knee lever principle and can be operated with little expenditure of force. Furthermore, locking or self-restriction is guaranteed if the dead centre position (alignment of the three hinges or points of the joint) is exceeded. Very high clamping forces can be achieved with toggle clamps. In theory, at the moment of alignment of the first and second levers, an infinite compression force is present.
The first compression mould element 20 comprises a first compression or mould cavity 21 defining a first central or longitudinal axis A1 (first cavity central axis). The first mould cavity 21 is in this example sized and shaped as a partially tapered cavity, including a first constant diameter cavity portion 22 and a first converging or tapering cavity portion 23 with a tapering angle α1 with its smallest circumference (or more precisely its smallest virtual circumference as the first mould cavity does not extend over the full 360° rotation) referred to as a second inner circumference IC2. In the present example, when a shape is said to converge or partially converge, then it is understood that the shape outline(s) or its/their virtual extension(s) (or side profile outlines or their virtual extensions) converge. In the present example, the converging cavity portion 23 starts converging in the middle third portion of the first mould cavity 21. Alternatively, the converging portion can start at any position along the first cavity depth or length D1 or can extend over the full cavity depth D1. In the present description, by a converging cavity or surface is meant that a first cavity end has a smaller circumference length compared to a second, opposite cavity end. The converging effect may take place by a tapering effect along a straight curve, but it may instead take place along a curved or irregular curve, or along any combinations of them. The converging effect provides a reduction of the average circumference. The converging effect can also be created by an incrementally stepped shape of the cavity.
Similarly to the first compression mould element 20, also the second compression mould element 40 comprises a second compression or mould cavity 41 defining a second central or longitudinal axis A2 (second cavity central axis). In the present example, the shape and size of the second mould cavity is complementary or is a mirror image to the shape and size of the first mould cavity. In other words, the second mould cavity 41 is sized and shaped as a stepped cavity, including a second constant diameter cavity portion 42 and a second converging or tapering cavity portion 43 with a tapering angle α2 with its smallest circumference (or more precisely its smallest virtual circumference as the second mould cavity does not extend over the full 360° rotation) referred to as a third inner circumference IC3. In the present example, the converging cavity portion 43 starts converging in the middle third of the second mould cavity 41. Alternatively, the converging portion can start at any position along the second cavity depth or length D2, or can extend over the full cavity depth D2. In the present example, the first cavity depth D1 substantially equals the second cavity depth D2. The first and second compression mould cavities may extend at least 120° relative to their respective central or rotation axis A1, A2 or more specifically between 160° and 200°. As a result of the compression step as will be explained later, and thanks to the converging cavity shapes, any compressed bone plug end has a smaller circumference length compared with the opposite end. To allow compressing the bone plug, at least one of the second and third inner circumferences 102 and 103 is smaller than the first inner circumference IC1 of the grafting instrument, and/or the first outer diameter OC1 of the bone plug. It is to be noted that in the present description the word circumference is used to describe the enclosing boundary (or its length) of a curved geometric figure or object. More specifically, the word outer circumference may be used to describe the circular enclosing boundary of a cylinder, while the inner circumference may be used to describe the inner boundary of a tube. Although in the present example, the uncompressed bone plug is of a cylindrical shape, the word circumference is not limited to a circular boundary, but also defines a general distance around an object, such as a perimeter, border, boundary, periphery, etc. For instance, according to an example, the word circumference may describe the boundary of an oval-shaped element or cavity. Other shapes such as polygons, or irregular shapes also have an (average) external or internal boundary forming a circumference.
In the present example, at least one of the mould cavities 21, 41 comprises at least one spike 25 for fixation of the bone plug. In this example, the spikes are oriented substantially orthogonally with respect to the first and second cavity axes A1, A2. The purpose of the spike(s) is to penetrate the bone plug during the transition from the first configuration into the second configuration as depicted later. During this transition, both mould cavities are configured to compress the bone plug from the opposite sides. As a reaction to the compression forces, and to the creation of the converging tip on the bone plug, the bone plug may tend to translate out of the mould cavities. The spikes are designed to inhibit this unwanted movement.
In the first configuration, the first and second mould cavities 21, 41 are spaced apart to receive the bone plug of the first size and/or shape. This means that the open or separated cavities provide enough clearance for placement of the bone plug within or between the cavities. As can be seen in the figures, at least one of the compression mould elements 20, 40 (in this example the first compression mould element) has an enlarged space next to the respective mould cavity so that the bone plug of the first size can fit in this space before its compression. In the second configuration, the combined cavity volume of the first and second mould cavities 21, 41 is smaller than the volume of the uncompressed bone plug. This enables reshaping and resizing the bone plug while it is being compressed. In the second configuration, the first and second mould cavities form a combined mould cavity defining a third central axis A3 or combined cavity central axis, which in this example coincides with the first or second cavities axes (in the second configuration). In the present example, the relative movement of the mould cavities 21, 41 is a linear motion (i.e. a translational motion) along a straight path. To facilitate this motion, the base element 60 and the second compression mould element 40 comprise a first guide element 61 and a second guide element 45, respectively, which have complementary shapes and are configured to engage with each other. More specifically, the base element 60 in this example comprises a rail 61 arranged to engage an engaging element (having a complementary shape to the shape of the rail) on the second compression mould element to allow the engaging element to slide along the rail. In the present example, only one translational degree of freedom is present. Alternatively, the second guide element 45 would form the rail, and the first guide element would have a complementary shape to the shape of the rail.
Alternatively or in addition, the first and second compression mould elements may be connected with a hinge, providing a connection means allowing opening and/or closing the combined cavity.
To provide accuracy of placement, at least one of the first and second mould cavities 21, 41 includes a back wall 26, functioning as a depth reference for correctly positioning the uncompressed bone plug. An opening or window 27 functions as an extra aid during the placement step, as depicted later with reference to
In this example, the first and second moulds 21, 41 are engaged in a sliding manner having a direction of movement DOM.
The flow chart of
The compression instrument according to the present embodiment is designed as a table-top instrument. This means that the instrument can be statically placed on an instrumenting table. For this reason the instrument includes the large and stable base element 60. Alternatively, the bone plug compression instrument 60 may be a hand-held instrument, shaped for example as a pair of pliers.
As depicted above, the compression instrument includes the first and a second mould cavities 21, 41, which have a smooth inner surface. Alternatively, the inner surface of at least one of the cavities may include a rough structure and/or axial, concentric or oblique ribs, etc. to improve friction between the bone plug and the cavity surfaces. i.e. the compression surfaces.
To summarise, it was described above a bone plug compression instrument 15 for reshaping a bone plug 90. The bone plug compression instrument 15 in one example comprises: a first compression element 20 comprising a first cavity 21; a second compression element 40 comprising a second cavity 41; and a base portion 60 for supporting the first compression element 20 and the second compression element 40. At least one of the first compression element 20 and the second compression element 40 is configured to move relative to the other compression element 20, 40 or relative to each other between a first position and a second, different position of the respective compression element(s) 20, 40. In the first position the bone plug compression instrument 15 forms an open configuration, in which the first and second cavities 21, 41 are spaced apart from each other allowing the bone plug 90 in a substantially uncompressed state to be inserted in a space between the first and second cavities 21 or their respective compression surfaces, 41, and in the second position the bone plug compression instrument 15 forms a closed configuration, in which the first and second cavities 21, 41, or the first and second compression elements, are configured to be pressed against or towards each other to form a third, combined cavity for compressing the bone plug received in the combined cavity. The combined cavity has at least partially tapered or converging/convergent shape. The combined cavity has a compression surface configured to be in direct or intimate contact with a bone plug, the compression surface extending over at least 300° or 340°, preferably substantially 360° in relation to its combined cavity central axis A3.
While the invention has been illustrated and described in detail in the drawings and foregoing description, such illustration and description are to be considered illustrative or exemplary and not restrictive, the invention being not limited to the disclosed embodiment. Other embodiments and variants are understood, and can be achieved by those skilled in the art when carrying out the claimed invention, based on a study of the drawings, the disclosure and the appended claims. For example, it is possible to arrange the compression instrument so that both the first and second compression elements could move with respect to each other. Further embodiments may be obtained by combining the teachings of at least two design variants.
In the claims, the word “comprising” does not exclude other elements or steps, and the indefinite article “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality. The mere fact that different features are recited in mutually different dependent claims does not indicate that a combination of these features cannot be advantageously used.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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00990/19 | Aug 2019 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2020/057002 | 7/24/2020 | WO |