The invention concerns an instrument for severing or removing body tissue by means of electrotomy and sclerosing body tissue or staunching hemorrhaging by means of electrocoagulation.
The use of electrosurgical methods for tissue severing or tissue removal (electrotomy) has already been a routine procedure in surgery for decades. Such methods afford the advantage that the tissue is severed in the form of what is referred to as a melt cut in which a spark discharge emanates from the cutting electrode, the spark discharge causing vaporisation of the tissue in the immediate environment of the cutting electrode and immediately closing small capillary vessels so that an almost blood-free tissue cutting procedure is possible. That method is used in all surgical and other medical disciplines for tissue severing or tissue removal.
Electrosurgical sclerosing of tissue or staunching of hemorrhages by means of high frequency current is also a method which is established in surgery and other medical disciplines. The instruments used for that purpose are in the form of gripping instruments such as for example tweezers or forceps. Mounted at the distal ends of the limbs of the gripping instrument are large-area electrodes which are at a different potential (bipolar) or the same potential (monopolar). Both in the monopolar and the bipolar application of the gripping instrument the piece of tissue to be sclerosed or the end of the blood vessel to be closed off is between the electrodes at the distal end of the gripping instrument. In the monopolar procedure the high frequency current flows between those electrodes and a return electrode fixed to the patient at another location. In the bipolar procedure the high frequency current flows between the two electrodes at the distal ends of the limbs of the gripping instrument.
Cutting by means of wire or lancet electrodes disposed at the end of a handle and coagulation with gripping instruments are the high frequency-surgical procedures which are most widespread. In the state of the art at the present time the situation is such that the cutting electrode and the coagulation gripping instrument are two different instruments which, during an operative intervention, often have to be exchanged or operated by two operators.
In the case of operations in the open abdomen area that is not a major problem but in the case of minimally invasive interventions such as laparoscopy or in the case of operations in the oral cavity or the pharynx area that represents a major problem. In laparoscopy a trocar must be fitted for each instrument. If there is a wish to dispense with additional trocars the instruments often have to be changed during the intervention, and that is a time-consuming aspect in laparoscopy.
Interventions in the oral cavity and the pharynx area are carried out only by one operator because of the small angle of view available into that natural body opening. That means that, when changing over from cutting to coagulation, in the presentday state of the art, an instrument change is necessary. The situation is often that, when carrying out a high frequency cut and when severing a major blood vessel, the coagulating property of the coagulated incision edge is not sufficient and in addition the hemorrhaging has to be stopped with a bipolar or monopolar gripping instrument. In such a case a very fast change from the cutting instrument to the coagulating instrument is highly important.
The object of the invention is to provide an application device for electrotomy, which as far as possible avoids the disadvantages of the state of the art.
In accordance with the invention that object is attained by an electrosurgical instrument which is in the form of a gripping instrument and which combines the functions of cutting, coagulating and gripping in one instrument.
For that purpose the instrument is in the form of a gripping instrument having two gripping arms which are movable relative to each other and which each have at their distal end at least two respective electrodes, namely at least one coagulation electrode and at least one cutting electrode.
Preferably a respective cutting electrode is in the form of a wire which is arranged at the outside of a respective distal end of a gripping arm and which thus acts as a cutting wire. In that way the gripping instrument, with the gripping arms closed, can be used in a manner to which the doctor is accustomed, like a monopolar or bipolar cutting instrument of conventional structure.
The coagulation electrodes are preferably in the form of conducting surfaces on mutually facing inside faces at the distal ends of the gripping arms. A mechanical travel limitation for the movement of the gripping arms preferably prevents mutual contact of the conducting surfaces forming the coagulation electrodes, and thus unwanted short-circuiting. The mechanical travel limitation is preferably formed by a projection on an inside surface of a gripping arm, the projection being directed in the direction of the respective other gripping arm.
Preferably at least one of the gripping arms has a suction passage with a suction intake opening in the region of the distal end of the gripping arm, which is to be connected to a suction removal system and is adapted to remove by suction fluid in the region of the distal end of the gripping arm. The suction passage serves to suck away blood or other body fluid which collects at the location of the intervention.
In addition preferably at least one of the gripping arms has a flushing passage which opens in an open end in the proximity of the distal end of the gripping arm and is so adapted that it is to be connected with its proximal end to a source for flushing fluid and flushing fluid can issue by way of its open mouth opening at the distal end. The location of intervention can be flushed with flushing fluid by means of such a flushing passage.
The cutting electrodes are preferably connected in mutually parallel relationship. In addition the application device preferably has a separate neutral electrode which is to be connected to another pole of a cutting current generator, from the two cutting electrodes. In that way the application device operates as a monopolar cutting instrument.
The invention is described in greater detail hereinafter by means of embodiments by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
a and 4b show a diagrammatic view in section on an enlarged scale by way of example of a variant with a short-circuit protection which provides that even when the limbs are closed a minimal gap still remains between the contact faces (contact faces 1 and 2) and thus prevents them from being able to touch each other,
a, 5b and 5c show diagrammatic views in section on an enlarged scale by way of example of various variants with differently mounted contact faces or integrated contact faces or let-in contact faces,
a through 9e show a high frequency surgery generator (9a) and various application devices to be connected thereto, including the circuitry of the respective electrodes,
That arrangement thus affords a surgical instrument with a total of four electrodes (two small-area wire electrodes 1 and 3 and two large-area electrodes 2 and 4). The following circuitry configurations/current paths can be envisaged for those four electrodes 1 through 4, as are also graphically shown in
Cutting Operation:
S1) contact wire 1 to contact wire 2
S2) contact wire 1 to contact face 1
S3) contact wire 1 to contact face 2
S4) contact wire 1 to contact faces 1 and 2
S5) contact wire 2 to contact face 2
S6) contact wire 2 to contact face 1
S7) contact wire 2 to contact faces 2 and 1
S8) contact wires 1 and 2 to contact face 1
S9) contact wires 1 and 2 to contact face 2
S10) contact wires 1 and 2 to contact faces 1 and 2
S11) contact wire 1 to separate return electrode
S12) contact wire 2 to separate return electrode
S13) contact wires 1 and 2 to separate return electrode.
Coagulation Operation:
K1) contact face 1 to contact face 2
K2) contact faces 1 and 2 to separate return electrode.
The electrosurgical instrument (also referred to as the application device) forms a combination instrument provided with a connection which permits an electrical connection to be made to a plurality of outputs of a high frequency surgery generator 16 (Electro Surgical Unit; see
output for monopolar cutting for: S11 through S13
output for monopolar coagulation for: K2
output for bipolar cutting for: S1 through S10
output for bipolar coagulation for: K1.
The high frequency surgery generator 16 of
In addition the high frequency surgery generator 16 has a connection 23 for the connection of a neutral electrode (see
d and 9e respectively show in particular neutral electrodes suited for the monopolar tissue cutting operation, more specifically
In bipolar coagulation with a forceps-like tool there is then in principle the risk of a short-circuit if, in the bipolar mode of operation, two electrodes such as for example the cutting wires or the large-area electrodes at the insides of gripping arms touch each other. A short-circuit occurs for example when direct metallic contact between the two contact faces 2 and 4 occurs and the current thus no longer flows by way of the tissue 9. In that case tissue coagulation no longer occurs.
a and 4b show a preferred variant in which the instrument is provided with a short-circuit protection 11. That short-circuit protection 11 provides a mechanical travel limiting effect and provides that, in the closed condition of the instrument, a minimal gap still remains between the two contact faces 2 and 4 and thus direct metallic contact between the two contact faces 2 and 4 does not take place. The mechanical travel limiting means can be arranged both directly beside the contact faces 2 and 4 and also at any other location on the movable limbs 5 and 6.
a through 5c show various variants of the arrangement of the contact faces. In
In the case of open surgical operations, tissue injuries mean that fluids and secretions specific to the body can be liberated, which then collect at the location to be operated upon and thus have an interfering effect on the operating procedure or OP. In accordance with a conventional method, in such a situation a suction removal instrument is guided to the location to be operated on, in addition to the actual surgical instrument, and that suction removal instrument on the one hand takes up space at the location to be operated on and impedes the OP while on the other hand it also has to be guided separately, possibly by a further person. Under some circumstances the OP even has to be interrupted for sucking away the fluids, as there is not sufficient space for suction removal and OP instruments to be used simultaneously at the OP location.
In electrocoagulation the tissue can dry out during the treatment. The consequence is that the transfer resistance from the tissue to the electrosurgical instruments and also the resistance of the tissue itself rise with increasing drying-out and the procedure no longer operates satisfactorily. At that moment the procedure has to be interrupted to wet the tissue with an ionising, body-compatible fluid (for example sterile physiological saline solution).
It is specifically in tonsillectomy that the combination of high frequency cutting and high frequency coagulation in one instrument affords enormous advantages. By means of a plurality of HF incisions by the cutting wires 1 or 3 the tonsil is slowly released from its capsule. In that procedure the operator advances slowly in depth, around the tonsil, between the tonsil and the tonsil capsule. During the cutting operation the tonsil is pulled with tweezers in a median direction out of the tonsil bed. The pincers can at the same time perform the function of a return electrode (see
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP07/05569 | 6/8/2007 | WO | 00 | 4/9/2009 |