1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a hip joint prosthesis comprising a socket part and a head or ball rotatably supported in the socket part.
2. Description of the Related Art
Hip joint prostheses that are known in practice have a socket part or cup provided for being pressed into the optionally widened natural hip socket. The surface of the socket part on the side facing away from the head or ball is provided with a rough coating that stimulates ingrowth of the bone tissue. When pressing the socket part into place, permanent deformations of the spherical surface of the socket part receiving the head can occur; this impairs the proper function of the hip joint prosthesis.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a new hip joint prosthesis of the aforementioned kind whose socket part can be implanted in a load-free way.
In accordance with the present invention, this is achieved in that the socket part on the side facing away from the head has a gliding surface for rotatably supporting the socket part in the natural hip socket.
According to the invention, no fixed anchoring of the socket part in the hipbone takes place. The socket part that is polished on both sides to provide gliding surfaces can be inserted into the natural hip socket without there being the risk of deformation. By providing an outer gliding surface on the socket part, loading of the cartilage layer in the hip socket is prevented.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the invention, a stop limiting the rotation of the socket part in the natural hip socket is formed; the stop prevents that the socket part will project too far from the hip socket and will damage with its edge the surrounding tissue.
Such a stop for limiting the rotation of the socket part can be provided on the head and/or on the hipbone.
In the latter case, the socket part has preferably a flange-like angled edge portion for striking against the hipbone at the edge of the hip socket. In particular, this angled edge portion can be arranged within an edge depression formed on the hip socket. The shoulder that is formed by this edge depression then forms the stop for limiting the rotation of the socket part in the hip socket.
Preferably, the socket part extends across such an angle that in any rotational position, in which the angled edge portion strikes against the shoulder, the angled edge portion remains completely within the edge depression.
In a further embodiment, the stop limiting the rotation of the socket part can be formed by a widened, in particular, angular, portion of the outer surface of the spherical joint cap of the head. For this purpose, the spherical surface of the joint cap can pass into a cylindrical or conical surface.
In an alternative embodiment, the stop for limiting the rotation of the socket part is formed by the rim of a cutout in the outer surface of the spherical joint cap of the head against which a projection projecting from the inner surface of the socket part strikes.
In a reverse arrangement, such a stop can also be formed by a projection projecting from the outer surface of a spherical joint cap of the head against which the rim of a cutout provided on the inner surface of the socket part will strike.
In the drawing:
The hip joint illustrated in
The spherical outer surfaces 7 of the spherical cap 5 is polished for increasing the gliding properties. When the hip joint prosthesis is implanted, the outer surface 7 rests against a spherical polished inner surface 8 of the socket part 1.
The spherical outer side 9 of the socket part 1 facing away from the head is also polished so that a gliding surface is formed with which the implanted socket part 1 rests against the cartilage layer 10 in the hip socket 4.
As illustrated in
For forming the edge depression 12, a milling head 15 illustrated in
The socket part 1 of the implanted prosthesis can glide on the cartilage layer 10 of the hip socket 4 and is thus rotatable according to the double arrows 26 within the hip socket; this movability is limited by a stop formed by the annular shoulder 13 for the angled edge portion 11. This prevents that the socket part 1 that can glide and thus rotationally move on the cartilage layer 10 can move out of the hip socket 4 and can cause injuries in the surroundings of the hip joint which would cause ailments and, in the end, would require another surgical procedure.
In the illustrated embodiment, the socket part, in any rotational position in which it rests with its angled edge portion 11 against the annular shoulder 13, does not project at any location from the hip socket 4 that is provided with the depression, i.e., the location of the angled edge portion 11 diametrically opposed to the stop location remains within the edge depression 12. In this way, injuries in the surroundings of the implant can be substantially precluded.
In the following Figures, same parts or parts that act in the same way are identified with the same reference numerals as in
The socket part 1a of the hip joint prosthesis illustrated in
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
In the embodiment according to
In the embodiment according to
In the embodiment according to
While specific embodiments of the invention have been shown and described in detail to illustrate the inventive principles, it will be understood that the invention may be embodied otherwise without departing from such principles.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 103 36 541.9 | Aug 2003 | DE | national |
| 103 38 420.0 | Aug 2003 | DE | national |