The present invention relates to a bone screw having a screw shank that has a tip and is concentric to a longitudinal axis of the screw and that is to be anchored in a bone or part of a bone, and having a screw head that is secured on the screw shank and has engagement means.
Bone screws of this kind have long been known. They are used, for example, for bone fixation by osteosynthesis. Such screws are used in particular to anchor a plate or a connecting rod to a spinal column. The screws are subject to substantial loads, for example by a clamped connection between the screw and a connecting rod or to a plate. A bone screw of this kind has been disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,466,237 for example. This screw is used to secure a connecting rod to a spinal column. The connecting rod is firmly clamped between the screw head and a nut.
EP 0 507 162 A discloses a bone screw used to secure a bone plate to a spinal column. The bone screw is held in the bone plate by means of a sleeve.
EP 1 191 891 A discloses a bone screw having an axially two-part screw head. This is intended to make it easier to insert a screwdriver into the screw head.
Said bone screws are made of metal, in particular titanium. They have a high degree of strength, such that they can be subjected to high loads when being screwed in and connected to an implant. A disadvantage, however, is the lack of transparency to X-rays.
The object of the invention is to make available a bone screw of the type mentioned that has great transparency to X-rays, at least in some areas, but is still functionally reliable.
In a bone screw of the type in question, the object is achieved by the fact that the screw shank is made substantially of a plastic transparent to X-rays, and that at least one load-bearing area has a part, wherein this part is made of another material than that of a core substantially forming the screw shank. The X-ray transparency of the bone screw according to the invention is achieved by producing the screw shank from a plastic that is transparent to X-rays, for example PEEK or fiber-reinforced PEEK. Fiber-reinforced PEEK and PEEK are transparent to X-rays and relatively strong. However, fiber-reinforced PEEK is at the same time relatively brittle. A screw shank made of fiber-reinforced PEEK is nevertheless possible despite this brittleness, since at least one load-bearing area has a part made of another material. This material is metal or PEEK. This part is preferably arranged on the screw head and has said engagement means. If said part is made of metal, the bone screw lacks transparency to X-rays only in the area of the screw head. Such a screw can, like a conventional screw made of titanium, be screwed in by means of a screwdriver on the screw head and also clamped. A load-bearing area is an area that is subjected particularly to loads, in particular the screw head and/or the screw tip.
According to a development of the invention, said part is arranged on the tip of the screw shank. This part is provided in particular with a thread and permits good drilling and thread-cutting properties. The drill tip can additionally be self-tapping. Nevertheless, the bone screw according to the invention is substantially transparent to X-rays in the area of the screw shank.
According to a development of the invention, said part is sleeve-shaped. A sleeve-shaped part of this kind can be connected to the screw shank by a press fit or by adhesive bonding, for example. According to a development of the invention, the sleeve is provided in order to improve the shear strength. This sleeve is preferably arranged in a central area of the screw shank between the screw head and the tip.
The part is preferably arranged on the screw head.
However, an embodiment is also conceivable in which a first part is arranged on the screw head and a second part on the tip of the screw shank. This provides, on the one hand, very good drilling and thread-cutting properties and, on the other hand, a high load-bearing capacity of the bone screw at the screw head. In this case too, the screw shank is substantially transparent to X-rays.
Illustrative embodiments of the invention are explained in more detail below with reference to the drawing, in which:
A head 14, which has a sleeve-shaped part 5, is arranged at the opposite end of the shank 15 from the tip 13. This part 5 is connected fixedly to the core 3, for example by means of a press fit or by adhesive bonding. This part 5 is made of a metal, for example of titanium or steel. If the core 3 is made of carbon-fiber-reinforced PEEK, the part 5 can be made of PEEK. Reinforcing fibers are in this case provided only in the core 3. The part 5 is the load-bearing area, for example, in the case of clamping to a plate or a connecting rod. For screwing the screw 1 into a bone or a bone part, the head 14 has an inner engagement socket 6, for example in the form of a polygonal depression. However, engagement can also be made in principle on the outside of the part 5.
The screw head 14′ is here formed by a sleeve 5′, which is likewise made of another material than the core 3′. The sleeve 5′ is fixedly connected to the core 3′. It is made, for example, of metal, in particular titanium or, in the case of a core 3′ made of fiber-reinforced PEEK, it is made of PEEK. The sleeve 5′ is provided with an inner engagement socket 6′. The screw head 14′ has a conical thread 31, which is suitable for securing in a corresponding opening of a plate (not shown here).
The core 3′″ has a further recess 18, into which a sleeve 5′″ is inserted and fixedly connected to the core 3′″. The sleeve 5′″ forms a head 14′″, which has a spherical outer surface 29 and an inner engagement socket 6′″. This screw 11 is preferably designed as a self-tapping screw. Between the tip 7′″ and the head 14′″, it is transparent to X-rays. The head 14′″ is suitable, for example, for polyaxial mounting in a peticular system. For example, the head 14′″ can be mounted and firmly clamped in a corresponding recess in a plate. The sleeve 5′″ is made, for example, of titanium or a suitable steel.
Coatings are also conceivable, for example of titanium or hydroxyapatite.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
08405311.5 | Dec 2008 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2009/008743 | 12/8/2009 | WO | 00 | 6/20/2011 |