The current invention relates to the field of surgical implantation of spinal fixation devices and method, with applications for spinal fusion systems and all-level plate fixation. Fixation tools are of utmost necessity to a variety of pathologies, including elderly patients, those suffering from spinal disc degenerative diseases, the treatment of cervical disc herniations requiring fusion, the treatment of cervical instabilities resulting from trauma or degenerative disc diseases, or in the treatment of metastatic cancers invasive to the spine. The present invention and method is described, so one of ordinary skill in the art may understand the functionality and application of the present invention.
It is common practice for surgical medical professionals to attempt and correlate between the large variety of technological enhancements in the field of spinal fusion devices and procedures. It is largely understood by specialized medical audience such technologies do not always offer the desired ease of implementation. Many techniques of spinal fusion have improved the implantation of cervical fixation devices so patients may benefit from increased mobility and a certain degree of alleviation of their ailments. Spinal fusion is a surgical procedure used to “fuse” together the small sections of the vertebrae, so that motion between the vertebral sections is eliminated and the healing process proceeds as a single vertebral bone. Modular inter body spacers are known to have become yet another preferred device for surgical use while conducting spinal surgery. Modular spacers are designed primarily to accommodate the vascular anatomy or provide a method of containment of bone graft material and further facilitate spinal fusion procedures conducted by medical personnel (See, U.S. Pub. No. 2009/0306779).
The invented device represents an inter body fusion device. It is one element of an anterior spinal plating system. It is designed for anterior and lateral application to the spine (See, U.S. Pat. No. 7,306,605). Such characteristics of the present invention demonstrate a high level of applicability over the cervical spinal region, primarily, as well as ease of surgical implantation. The device can also be implanted and is applicable to the thoracic and lumbar spine. The present invention is an improvement over the prior art and inter-body fusion devices (See U.S. Pat. No. D 582,040, U.S. Pat. No. 7,641,701, U.S. Pat. No. 2010/0249937). The present invention promotes the safe spinal implantation and can be paired with a multiplicity of spinal fusion systems, including auto graft, allograft and synthetic (or metallic) cages. As a modular unit its design is easily customizable to accommodate a multiplicity of inter-body implant procedures and plate sizing. This allows the cervical fixation device to be paired with a variety of plate designs including static and dynamic plates hereby incorporated and attached, as well as fixed or variable angled screws. Because of the plate-graft relationship, a predictable and reproducible alignment of the plate with the spine is achieved by the present invention. A variety of plate lengths allows for screw fixation through the plate at either corner of the anterior cortex of the vertebral body. The pivoting plate and graft holder join and allow the plate to nestle itself in an anatomically acceptable position matching a variety of anatomical variations, and the assembled implant, once impacted, requires no pre-drilling. The plate can be used with either static or multi-axial screws. Additionally, the plate can be designed to mate with a variety of screw plate-looking mechanisms.
A method and tool are provided for facilitating the sizing, orientation and implantation of spinal devices that are minimally invasive of the anatomic characteristics of spinal bones such as the vertebrae. Said method and tool are designed to aid in the placement of implantable cervical plates and cervical grafts at virtually all spinal levels.
In an alternate embodiment, the instant invention is designed so the surgeon determines the specific graft limitations of the patient during surgery. Further, micro adjustments are performed by the surgeon based on a previous routine discectomy or corpectomy procedure to determine ideal graft positioning.
Further, because specific features of a patient's spinal anatomy can vary significantly from patient to patient, an implantable spinal device will be configured to be patient-specific in order to accommodate the specific features of the patient's spinal anatomy.
The foregoing and other advantages of the invention and related methods will be appreciated more fully through consideration of the accompanying drawings wherein:
As observed through a method and tool for facilitating the sizing, orientation and implantation of spinal devices is provided. Said invention and methods are minimally invasive and non-invasive of the anatomic characteristics of bones such as the vertebrae.
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Furthermore, there is no motion between the stalks of the graft holder and the plate, there is motion through the articulation between the graft holder and the stalks, and there is also motion between the base plate of the graft holder attached to the graft and the stalks. The degree of rotation through this articulation can be mechanically fixed by stabilizing the graft stalks with a small cross bar, the lengths of the stalks coming in a variety and multiplicity of sizes to match the variety of anatomical requirements. Another characteristic permits for the stalks to become telescopic to allow for a variable graft depth, pre-determined implantation (See,
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The surgical procedure comprises a routine discectomy or corpectomy while intervertebral pre-fabricated spacers which allow variable depth are used as trials. Said spacers will determine ideal graft positioning, wherein the total depth from the edge of the vertebral body is measured and a bone graft and graft holder are selected to match the identical depth using a construction tray. The above mentioned process will allow attachment of the graft holder to the graft. Further, the plate length is selected based on trials and surgeon's preference, and then become attached to the graft holder; the implant is completely assembled and positioned, whilst the screw sites are prepared. Said screws are placed into the vertebral bodies and a locking mechanism stabilizes the screws to the plate.
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A novel relationship is distinguished between an inter body device (referred to as a bone graft), an articulating member (referred to as graft holder), and an anterior spinal plate. The plate can be considered a typical anterior spinal plate, which can be static or dynamic. It is distinguished by the center of the plate facing the spine having a single or dual receptacle that allows attachment of the graft holder. Once the graft dimensions are determined from the surgical patient during surgery, a specific graft is selected from available grafts and attached to the graft holder. The graft and graft holder are then attached to the plate. The plate graft is impacted into position on the front of the cervical spine; micro adjustments in graft depth can be performed at that time and evaluated at the time of the surgery.
The inventive device can be utilized in discectomy and corpectomy applications. A single implant can be used at each spinal level independent of the adjacent level so that multiple implants can be used in a single operation. As an alternative, one can visualize a long plate with multiple graft holder articulations with an element of vertical adjustment to allow variable distance between the grafts to accommodate a multi-level application. As another alternative, a long plate can be mated to a single graft holder where only a single level accepts the graft holder, and the remainder of the plate acts as a buttress in a multi-level application.
In summary, the proposed advantages of the current invention are:
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. provisional patent application No. 61/387,484 filed on Sep. 29, 2010 titled FIXATION DEVICE FOR THE CERVICAL SPINE.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61387484 | Sep 2010 | US |