This invention relates to elastomeric resilient sleeves for handles and, particularly, for handles of surgical instruments such as a rongeur.
Many types of surgical instruments have handles so that a surgeon can apply force through the instrument to produce a desired surgical result. These kinds of surgical instruments can result in repetitive motion injuries to the hands and wrists of surgeons due to the repetitive movements involved in applying force to the handles. Conventional surgical instruments have handles that provide inadequate tactile control for certain surgical procedures. In addition, the smooth surfaces of conventional handles require surgeons to expend energy squeezing the handle with his or her palm and fingers to maintain adequate control of the surgical instrument while making incremental surgical movements.
The surgeon's need for comfort and precision has led to an increased focus on the ergonomics of surgical instruments. Hand size has been shown to be an important variable when designing surgical hand tools (Surg Endosc. 2004 Mar;18(3):508-12). Women surgeons experience more discomfort in their hands than their male counterparts (Surg Endosc. 2014 Apr;28(4): 1051-5).
Comfort grips are used in craftsman hand tools and in sports equipment. However, these grips are permanent and are usually composed of polymers that are relatively rigid. They are designed with grooves and ridges to improve maneuverability and grip force. These types of grips are not suitable for surgical instruments because they do not provide adequate tactile control for surgical manipulations and are vulnerable to inadequate cleaning and contamination, leading to surgical site infection.
An ergonomic surgical scalpel sleeve is known for use with microsurgical instruments (U.S. Pat. No. 5,578,050). This sleeve is a straight hollow tube open at both ends and is made of silicone or thermoplastic material. This sleeve is useful only for instruments manipulated with the thumb and forefinger and would not be useful for an instrument such as a bone rongeur.
The elastomeric sleeve for a handle is formed of a hollow tube having a first side, a second opposite side, a top end, and a bottom end, wherein the top end is open the the bottom end is closed. The second opposite side has a slit extending from the top end towards the bottom end. The slit may have an opening to accommodate structural features that extend outward from the handle. The sleeve is made, preferably, of compressible material. The sleeve may have a cover for a horn member on a handle. The cover may have a flange at a base of the cover, wherein the flange forms a cushion for engaging the upper thenar eminence. The sleeve may also have a thumb support, wherein the thumb support, preferably, extends from the base of the cover.
An advantage of the elastomeric handle sleeve of the present invention is that the sleeve can be easily slipped on and off the surgical handle and can be disposed of after use.
Another advantage is a handle sleeve that is remarkably comfortable.
Another advantage is a handle sleeve that reduces hand fatigue from operating the handles of a surgical instrument.
Another advantage is a handle sleeve that increases the surgeon's accuracy in the manipulation of the surgical instrument.
Another advantage is a cover on the handle sleeve for the horn member of a rongeur, wherein the cover reduces or eliminates fatigue and trauma to the thenar muscles and surrounding nerves, thereby eliminating repetitive motion injuries resulting from operating the rongeur.
Another advantage is handle sleeve that fully engages the space of the thenar eminence, especially at the junction of the thumb and forefinger so that the user can more effectively keep a ronguer remarkably steady during surgical use.
While the following description details the preferred embodiments of the present invention, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of the method described herein, since the invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced in various ways.
The invention is an elastomeric resilient sleeve in the shape of a hollow tube that is contoured to the shape of a surgical instrument handle. The sleeve increases tactile control of the surgical instrument while reducing repetitive motion injuries and cumulative trauma. The sleeve also reduces the amount of pressure required to be exerted by the surgeon's hand to maintain control of the surgical instrument. The sleeve can also be sterilized and reused.
The thickness of the walls of the sleeves 21 and 22 is, preferably, 6-25 mm to provide a comfortable grip and to assist in the application of manual force to the handle or handles of a surgical instrument. Sleeves having a wall thickness of 3-5 mm may also be used. The walls of the sleeve are compressible, preferably, to 30% to 60% of resting wall thickness. This characteristic of the elastomeric material allows the elastomeric material to conform to the shape of the fingers, palm, and thumb just sufficiently to distribute manual force evenly over the fingers, palm, and thumb. As a result, force generated in operating a surgical handle or handles is not directed unacceptably more to any one area of the palm, fingers, or thumb. The elastomeric polymer may be formulated to withstand sterilization up to 300 degrees centigrade. The elastomeric resilient handle sleeve is made of a liquid molding polymer, preferably SterAlloy FDG (Hapco, Inc., Hanover, Mass. Innovative polymers, Inc., Saint John, Mich.) having a durometer ranging from 20 to 70.
The thenar eminence 40 is the body of muscle on the palm 35 of the human hand 34 just beneath the thumb 37. The thenar eminence 40 often takes the brunt of thumb overuse and repetitive strain. There are at least two reasons for this: First, because the thenar eminence contains the primary muscles of finger-to-thumb gripping, activities or occupations that involve repeated or prolonged use of small instruments or fine tools, such as a rongeur, can be associated with thenar eminence fatigue, pain, and overdevelopment. Secondly, since its three constituent muscles (abductor pollicis brevis, flexor pollicis brevis, and opponens pollicis) are some of the thumb's bulkiest, the thenar eminence also provides the lion's share of palm-to-thumb grip strength when using hand held tools. Two possibilities that cause pain at this fleshy area of the thenar eminence are an inflammation of the flexor tendon to the thumb (flexor tenosynovitis) or a compression of the median nerve at the level of the pronator teres muscle in the forearm. A flexor tenosynovitis of thumb tendons may manifest as pain or locking of the thumb after flexing it.
The horn 27 of a rongeur 10 engages the junction 42 between the thumb 37 and the forefinger 43 when a user grasps the handle 12 of the rongeur 10 (see
Several embodiments of the handle sleeve of this invention may be constructed and may be used on any device having a handle. The elastomeric material may be formed in different colors, reflective or glowing for ease of identification during a surgery. The handle sleeve may have an indicator strip that will change color after the handle sleeve is released from a sterile environment and may be coated with an antibacterial agent. The elastomeric material may be formulated to decompose after more than one sterile cleaning to ensure only one use or it may be formulated to be reprocessed for multiple uses. The handle sleeve may contain a sensor to determine the number of contractions of the handle (ie. cuts of the rongeur), a sensor which measures the amount of force applied to the handle, a battery for an attached light, camera or other electrical attachment, or a combination thereof. The handle sleeve can be contoured for use on a ring handle, a grooved handle, a hollow handle, or a handle with a horn. Besides being useful on the handles of a rongeur, the handle sleeve can be used on the handles of forceps, mallets, rasps, files, chisels, curettes, saws, bone cutters, lancets, osteotomes, retractors, scissors, surgical spoons, surgical hooks, tweezers, elevators, bone awls, or tamps. The handle sleeve can be contoured for use on any type of rongeur, including rongeurs wherein the surgical handle style is style I ring, style II kerrison, style III love-kerrison, style IV improved love-kerrison, style V ferris-smith kerrison, or style VI ferris-smith kerrison ring.
The foregoing description has been limited to specific embodiments of this invention. It will be apparent, however, that variations and modifications may be made, by those skilled in the art, to the disclosed embodiments of the invention, with the attainment of some or all of its advantages and without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
This application claims priority of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 62/276,697 filed Jan. 8, 2016, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62276697 | Jan 2016 | US |