The present invention relates to reamers and, more specifically, to reamers having expandable reaming heads.
Reamers are typically used for enlarging the diameter of a bore which has been drilled or otherwise cut in a material. Reamers generally include a shank for driving the reamer and a reamer body that includes cutting edges. Hand or powered rotation of a reamer cuts or shaves the material surface defining the bore, removing material and increasing the diameter of the bore.
Certain reaming applications require the reaming of a cavity that is larger in diameter than an aperture allowing access to the cavity. One known expandable reamer used for spinal surgical procedures provides an elongated shaft assembly having a pair of opposing blades rotatably mounted in a scissor-like fashion at the distal end of the shaft assembly. After insertion of the distal end of the shaft assembly through an aperature leading to a bore in a bone structure, the blades may be rotated radially outwardly to increase the effective cutting diameter of the reamer. After reaming a cavity of the desired size, the reamer blades may be rotated to a position in which the outer diameter of the blades is less than the aperature diameter to allow for withdrawal of the reamer from the bone structure.
Orthopedic procedures for the replacement of all, or a portion of, a patient's joint generally require an open procedure wherein an incision is made through the skin and the underlying muscle and other tissue to fully expose the relevant joint. While this approach provides surgeons with an excellent view of the bone surface and open access for various sized and shaped instruments such as cutting and reaming instruments, the underlying damage to the soft tissue, including the muscles, can lengthen a patient's healing and rehabilitation time after surgery. Therefore, it is desirable to minimize the size of the incision and the damage to the underlying muscle.
What is needed in the art is a method and device for reaming bone cavities which are larger than the incision of the soft tissue and/or aperture into the bone, and without requiring expensive and separate boring and reaming instruments.
The present invention provides a method and device for cutting a cavity in a structure, the cavity having a greater diameter than the aperture providing access to the cavity. The method and device of the present invention may be used, for example, for cutting a cavity in a bone structure using minimally invasive surgical procedures, for example, for performing a minimally invasive total hip arthroplasty.
An exemplary embodiment of an expandable reamer according to the present invention may include a cannulated shaft and a plurality of straight cutting blades coupled to the cannulated shaft and having deformation points. The blades of this form of the present invention are outwardly deformable between a contracted position and an expanded position. In the contracted position, the blades are substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis of the cannulated shaft and, in the expanded position, the blades have at least a portion oriented radially outward from the longitudinal axis of the cannulated shaft, thereby forming a larger diameter cutting surface in the expanded position than in the contracted position.
The blades may be formed from a portion of the cannulated shaft by milling, etching, stamping, or otherwise forming longitudinally oriented slots through the wall of the cannulated shaft, the slots serving as flutes dividing the cutting edge and trailing edge of each adjacent blade. Each blade may be segmented along its length, the segments separated at a point of deformation. The location of deformation points provide a desired shape to the cutting surfaces when the reamer body is placed in the expanded position.
The reamer may be expanded by drawing the distal end of the reamer blades toward the proximal end of the blades, and may be contracted by advancing the distal end of the blades away from the proximal end of the blades. Advantageously, the expandable reamer may be used for cutting a cavity in a bone or other structure that is larger than the diameter of the soft tissue incision and aperture into the bone and greater than the diameter of the contracted reamer.
In one exemplary embodiment, an expandable reamer of the present invention includes a cannulated shaft defining a shank and a reamer body. The reamer body defines a plurality of blades having longitudinally extending slots therebetween and an end cutter disposed at the distal end of the reamer body. Distal ends of the blades may be coupled to a ring on which the end cutter is positioned. Proximate ends of the blades are coupled to the shank. The blades may be deformable at the point of coupling with the ring and shank. The length of the blade may be divided into two or more segments, the segments separated by a deformation point.
By proximally drawing the ring and distal end of the blades toward the proximate end of the blades, deformation of the blades at the deformation points allows the segments to extend radially outward from the longitudinal axis of the reamer, thereby increasing the diameter of the reamer body. Distally advancing the distal ring along the longitudinal axis away from the proximate end of the blades will cause the blades to contract radially inward toward the longitudinal axis, thereby returning the reamer body to its original diameter and the blades to a contracted position substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis of the reamer.
In one exemplary embodiment, the deformation points at which the blades are coupled to the distal ring and to the shank and which separate adjacent blade segments may be defined simply by exterior or interior circumferential reliefs or grooves which reduce the material thickness and therefore reduce resistance of the blades to bending at the various desired points. The deformation points may also be further defined by radially oriented arcuate cuts which intersect the circumferential reliefs.
In one exemplary embodiment of the invention, the blades are easily and inexpensively formed from a reamer body having a polygonal cross-section, such as a hexagon. The slots may be milled parallel to and coincident with the apex formed between adjacent sides of the polygon. By locating the slots in this way, each apex and the milled face which extends radially inward form cutting edges, and the opposite milled face of the slot forms the trailing edge, or flute, of an adjacent blade. Formed in this fashion, the cutting edge, being the former apex of the polygon, has a greater radius than the trailing edge. Thus, only the cutting edge contacts the surface being reamed.
The expandable reamer of the present invention is an inexpensive and possibly disposable device. The deformation points of the reamer body of the present invention can be positioned to form predefined complex shapes for boring and reaming a cavity in a bone as part of a minimally invasive orthopedic surgery. Such procedures include, for example, those disclosed in “Method and Apparatus for Reducing Femoral Fractures,” U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/155,683, filed May 23, 2002; U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/266,319, filed Oct. 8, 2002; U.S. Pat. No. 10,358,009, filed Feb. 4, 2003; and “Method and Apparatus for Performing a Minimally Invasive Total Hip Arthroplasty,” U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/558,044, filed Apr. 26, 2000; U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/992,639, filed Nov. 6, 2001, and published as U.S. Publication No. US 2002/0099447 A1; U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/053,931, filed Jan. 22, 2002, and published as U.S. Publication No. US 2002/0116067 A1, on Aug. 22, 2002, and U.S. Pat. No. 10,357,948, filed Feb. 4, 2003; the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein.
In order to ream a cavity in a bone that is larger than the incision in the soft tissue and the entry aperture into the bone, the expandable reamer is first inserted through the incision and the aperture in the bone. Then, the reamer is expanded during rotation by drawing a distal end of the reamer body toward the proximate end of the reamer body. Upon achieving the desired expansion diameter and thereby cavity size, the distal end of the expandable reamer may be advanced away from the proximate end of the reamer body, thereby collapsing the diameter of the expandable reamer so that it may be removed from the cavity and withdrawn through the entry aperture and incision.
Other embodiments of the expandable reamer are also envisioned. One such embodiment includes a reamer having blades that are uncoupled at a distal end, thus providing a larger cavity diameter at the distal end of the cavity. Another embodiment includes reamer blades that are flexibly biased to the expanded position, thereby providing a reamer that will expand and cut less dense or cancellous bone while contracting away from more dense cortical bone. Yet another embodiment expands to one of various predefined shapes according to the blade segment length and deformation members coupling the blade segments.
In one embodiment, a reamer according to the present invention includes a shank, a reamer body having a longitudinal axis, and a blade formed in said reamer body, the blade deformable between a contracted position and an expanded position.
In another embodiment, a reamer according to the present invention includes a shank, a reamer body having a longitudinal axis, a blade formed in the reamer body, and deformation means for deforming the blade between a contracted position and an expanded position.
In another embodiment, a reamer according to the present invention includes a cannulated shaft having a wall, a proximate end and a distal end and defining a longitudinal axis, the cannulated shaft having a plurality of slots therethrough, the plurality of slots extending from the distal end toward the proximate end, and a plurality of blades, each one of the plurality of blades defined by the wall between adjacent ones of the plurality of slots.
In yet another embodiment, a method of reaming a cavity in a bone according to the present invention includes providing an expandable reamer having blades moveable between a contracted position and an expanded position, boring an opening in the bone, the opening having a diameter at least as large as a diameter of the expandable reamer in a contracted position, inserting the expandable reamer into the opening, the expandable reamer being in the contracted position, rotating the expandable reamer while moving the blades to the expanded position, contracting the expandable reamer to the contracted position, and removing the expandable reamer from the cavity.
Advantageously, the present invention provides a low-cost and potentially disposable reamer that provides a predefined reamer body shape which is expandable after insertion into the bone structure, which includes deformable blades that are secured at both a distal and a proximate end, and which may include a distal end cutter for boring the initial bore into the bone structure.
The above mentioned and other features and objects of this invention, and the manner of attaining them, will become more apparent and the invention itself will be better understood by reference to the following description of embodiments of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views. Although the drawings represent embodiments of the present invention, the drawings are not necessarily to scale and certain features may be exaggerated in order to better illustrate and explain the present invention. The exemplification set out herein illustrates embodiments of the invention, in several forms, and such exemplifications are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.
The embodiments disclosed below are not intended to be exhaustive or limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed in the following detailed description. Rather, the embodiments are chosen and described so that others skilled in the art may utilize their teachings.
First exemplary expandable reamer 20, shown in
Expandable reamer 20 is useful for cutting a chamber or cavity in a structure, the cavity having a greater diameter than the entry aperture into the structure and a greater diameter than shaft 22. Referring to
After blades 140 of expandable reamer 120 are located with bore 54, blades 140 may be extended to an expanded position while rotating reamer 120, thereby forming cavity 62 in bone structure 56. For example, such a procedure using reamer 120 may be used to remove neck 64 and head 66 of femur 58.
Referring to
Referring to the cross-sectional end view shown in
Because slot 74 is located coincident to two adjoining sides of the hexagonal shape of reamer body 30, cutting edge 72 has a greater radius relative to longitudinal axis 26 than any other point along land 80. Thus, clearance angle 83, defined as the difference in radius between cutting edge 72 and trailing edge 78, is provided so that cutting edge 72 of each blade 40 is the only portion of blades 40 that will be in contact with the material being reamed. First exemplary reamer 20 shown in
Referring now to
Additionally, proximal segment 88 of each blade 40 is joined to shank 28. Deformation points 87 are formed by proximal exterior circumferential relief 94 cut in land 80 of each blade 40. Similarly, deformation points 87 are located in blade 40 where distal segment 90 of each blade 40 is connected to distal ring 42 of reamer body 30. Deformation points 87 may be formed by distal exterior circumferential relief 96 cut in each land of blade 40. Additionally, radially oriented arcuate notches 95 (
Referring to
Referring to
As shown in
Referring to
Reamer body 130 includes blades 140 which are divided into multiple blade segments 188, 190, 192, and 194. Advantageously, the relative length and locations of segments 188-194 and deformation members 186 joining them may be designed to provide a specific desired shape and diameter of reamer 120 when in the expanded position shown in
Referring to
In certain orthopedic procedures, it is necessary to cut large diameter cavity 62 in bone structure 56, which may be, for example, femur 58. After bore 54 is formed in bone structure 56, reamer 120 may be inserted through incision 50 and aperture 60 into bore 54. While driven rotationally, blades 140 are expanded so that blades 140 ream bore 54 to an increased diameter, thus forming cavity 62. Cavity 62, having been formed by reamer 120 in an expanded position, has a larger diameter than the diameter of aperature 60 and incision 50. After cavity 62 is reamed to the desired diameter, blades 140 of reamer 120 may be contracted to their original diameter as described above, and reamer 120 removed through aperture 60 and incision 50. Debris from removed bone structure 56 may then be flushed or otherwise removed from cavity 62 in hole 64.
The inventive reamer may also be used for other procedures requiring reaming and cutting. For example, for a minimally invasive total hip arthroplasty, rather than cutting cavity 62, reamer 120 may be used, as above, to remove a complete portion of bone structure 56, for example, neck 64 and head 66 of femur 58.
Referring to
Expansion member 250 has a larger diameter than the interior diameter between circumferentially located blades 240 adjacent proximate end 244; therefore, as expansion member 250 is drawn proximally from distal end 246 to proximal end 244 of blades 240, distal ends 246 extend radially outward about deformation points 286, as shown in
Blades 240 may return to the original position by the force applied by the structure being reamed as reamer 220 is withdrawn from the cavity formed. For example, as reamer 220 is withdrawn from the cavity, blades 240 may contact the structure walls forming the aperature leading into the cavity because blades 240 form a diameter between proximate end 244 and distal end 246 that is greater than the diameter of the aperature. Thus, blades 240 will be deformed to the contracted position as reamer 240 is withdrawn from the cavity and through the aperature. Blades 240 may also be spring loaded or otherwise biased to their original contracted positions. Alternatively, reamer 220 may include engagement devices (not shown) coupled to expansion member 250. The engagement devices draw blades 240 radially inward as member 250 extends distally from proximate end 244 toward distal end 246 of blades 240.
Referring again to
In addition, blades 40, 140, and 240, which are deformable from a contracted position to an expanded position, may be spring loaded or otherwise biased to an expanded position. Return to a contracted position may be controlled by the amount of force applied to the blade surfaces. For example, blades 40 may be normally biased to the expanded position as shown in
While this invention has been described as having an exemplary design, the present invention may be further modified within the spirit and scope of this disclosure. This application is therefore intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the invention using its general principles. Further, this application is intended to cover such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practice in the art to which this invention pertains.