In humans and many other animals, cartilage is present on the surface of bones that form articular joints to facilitate articulation of the joint and protect and cushion the bones. However, defects may develop in the cartilage from various causes such as abrupt trauma or prolonged wear. A number of techniques have been attempted to treat such cartilage defects. One such technique is the transplantation of fresh osteochondral allografts.
In this procedure, an allograft plug, also known as a osteochondral plug or core, is harvested from a condyle or rounded joint-forming portion of a donor bone. Intact on the surface of the allograft plug, on a portion of the bone known as the cartilage plate, is healthy cartilage. The allograft plug may also have attached to the cartilage plate cancellous tissue, which is the porous inner material that is present in many bones. In the recipient patient, the cartilage defect and the corresponding portion of underlying bone are cutaway and removed from the joint. The allograft plug is then inserted and attached to the cutaway portion so that the cartilage plate and healthy cartilage of the allograft plug align with the cartilage on the surface of the host bone.
One problem that arises with osteochondral allografts is that the recipient may adversely respond or reject the allograft plug. This can happen primarily because of the antigenic material contained in the cancellous bone of the allograft plug. Occurrence of such an adverse response may result in the recipient site reforming or healing in such a manner that the allograft plug becomes walled off from the host bone thereby delaying or preventing incorporation of the allograft. In addition, physically attaching and securing the allograft plug to the recipient site presents difficulties.
The invention provides methods and instruments for preparing and transplanting osteochondral allografts to repair articular cartilage defects. According to one aspect of the invention, an allograft plug having a cartilage plate and cancellous bone tissue attached thereto is removed from a donor bone. The allograft plug is further shaped by removing or cutting away cancellous bone tissue to form a cancellous stalk extending from the cartilage plate. The formed cancellous stalk can have any suitable shape including cylindrical, conical, and rectilinear. According to another aspect of the invention, in what will become the host bone of the patient, a recipient site is prepared by forming a cutout corresponding to the cartilage defect. The shape of the cutout generally corresponds to the shape of a provided allograft plug from which cancellous material has been removed to form a cancellous stalk. The allograft plug is inserted into the cutout such that the cancellous stalk is retained in the host bone and the cartilage plate aligns with the condyle surface of the host bone. Removing and shaping the allograft plug can be performed separately or together with preparing a recipient site by forming a cutout and inserting the allograft plug into the cutout.
To prepare the recipient site, a template can be attached to the host bone in a location corresponding to the cartilage defect. In an aspect of the invention, the template can include a guide aperture disposed therein. To facilitate alignment of subsequent operations, an elongated guide pin is inserted through the guide aperture and into the host bone. Cannulated drill bits having the desired shape can be slid over the guide pin and driven into the host bone to form the shaped cutout. In another aspect of the invention, the template can include a plurality of cut slots disposed therein. A cutting device can then be inserted through the cut slots and into the host bone to form the shaped cutout.
To remove and shape the allograft plug from the donor site, a second template specially adapted to attach to the donor bone can be used. One advantage of employing a template to remove the allograft plug is that template may facilitate simultaneous shaping of the allograft plug at the time of removal. In other embodiments, the allograft plug can initially be a piece of cylindrically or otherwise shaped bone material removed from the donor bone and subsequently shaped to produce the finished allograft plug.
It should be recognized that various aspects of the invention may also be applicable to preparing and transplanting an osteochondral autograft plug, a process which involves removing a plug from a first location and transplanting the plug into a second location within the same patient.
The invention provides one or more of the following advantages: An advantage of the invention is that it provides a osteochondral allograft plug that has a reduced amount of cancellous tissue and is therefore less likely to be rejected by a recipient. Another advantage is that it provides a specially shaped osteochondral allograft plug that can be fit and anchored into a correspondingly shaped cutout at the recipient site. These and other advantages and features of the invention will be apparent from the detailed description and the accompanying drawings.
Now referring to the drawings, wherein like reference numbers refer to like elements, there is illustrated various processes and instruments for preparing and transplanting an osteochondral allograft in accordance with the various embodiments of the invention. Referring first to
To produce an allograft plug, a donor bone 120 or a portion thereof having on its surface healthy cartilage is received between the clamp pads 106, 108 and the clamp pads are moved together to grasp and hold the donor bone in alignment with the crown saw 104. Preferably, the donor bone 120 can be received in the clamp assembly 102 such that a condyle 122 corresponding to a donor site on the donor bone 120 is positioned towards the crown saw 104. The rotating tubular crown saw 104 is moved towards and into the donor site 122 to form a cylindrical cut into the donor bone 120, after which the crown saw can be removed. The cylindrically shaped bone material 124 produced by the cylindrical cut and that will correspond to the allograft plug can then be removed from the remainder of the donor bone 120 by, for example, transecting the donor bone with a saw or by propagating a crack through the donor bone with a tamp or similar device.
The removed cylindrical shaped bone material 124 has a cartilage plate 126 corresponding to the outer surface of the donor bone 120 and on which healthy cartilage is located. Extending from the cartilage plate 126 is cancellous bone tissue 128 from the interior portion of the donor bone 120. As will be appreciated by those of skill in the art, when making the cut into the donor site 122, the donor bone 120 and the crown saw 104 are preferably arranged so that the contour of the cartilage plate 126 corresponds to the portion of the host bone which is to be repaired.
Once the cylindrically cut bone material has been removed, it can be shaped by any variously suitable subsequent shaping operation to remove cancellous bone tissue and form a cancellous stalk extending from the cartilage plate. Removing cancellous bone tissue results in the cancellous stalk having a reduced cross section compared to the cross-section of the cartilage plate.
Because the cancellous bone tissue on the allograft plug could contain antigenic material, reducing the amount of cancellous bone tissue transplanted to the host reduces the possibility of an adverse reaction within the host. Another advantage of shaping the allograft plug to form a cancellous stalk is that the stalk provides an anchor-like structure that assists in anchoring the allograft plug into a recipient site on the host bone. A related advantage is that, by removing cancellous tissue from the cancellous stalk, the amount of cancellous tissue that must be accommodated by the host bone during transplantation is reduced. Accordingly, the size of the cutout that must be formed into a recipient site on the host bone is likewise reduced thereby requiring less trauma to the host bone.
The finished allograft plug can have any suitable shape. For example, referring to
Referring to
Referring to
To prepare a recipient site in a host bone for receiving the allograft plug, special instruments can be used to form a cutout corresponding in shape to the allograft plug. Such special tools can include, for example, a template 170 as illustrated in
When preparing a recipient site with the template, referring to
To form the cutout that removes the cartilage defect and receives the shaped allograft plug, a shaped drill bit, burr, or cutting disc can be employed. The shape and dimensions of the drill bit, burr or cutting disc, which will determine the shape and dimension of the formed cutout, may correspond to the allograft that is to be transplanted. An embodiment of such a drill bit 200 is illustrated in
In use, referring to
Referring to
While inserting the allograft with a tamp is a common method, any other suitable method can be employed. For example, referring to
Preparing the recipient site and removing and shaping an allograft plug for transplanting into the recipient site can occur simultaneously or, in some embodiments, the allograft plug can be removed and shaped in advance of preparing the recipient site. Moreover, the preparation of an allograft plug can occur at a different location than the where the insertion of the allograft plug is to occur. To preserve an allograft plug prior to insertion, the allograft plug can be cryogenically preserved. This is an alternative to preparing and transplanting a fresh allograft plug.
Though the foregoing procedures for preparing and transplanting a shaped allograft plug can be conducted with any common medical instruments, in a further aspect of the invention, various special instruments and tools, in addition to the template and the shaped drill bit, burr, or cutting discs, are provided. For example, to produce the shaped allograft plug illustrated in
In use, the guide plate 240 with the second guide cylinder 250 inserted is attached to the donor bone 242 on a surface diametrically opposite of the donor site 243. The teeth 254 help attach the guide plate to the donor bone 242 and can be inserted into the donor bone by thumb pressure or a light tamp. To produce a first cut into the donor bone 242, a tubular crown saw having a diameter slightly less than diameter of the second hollow bore 252 of the guide plate 240 is inserted through the second hollow bore and into the donor bone. Preferably, the first cut is made into the donor bone 242 from the location of the guide plate 240 opposite the donor site 243 to a point a proximate the cartilage plate of the donor site and more preferably only a few millimeters from the cartilage plate. The second, smaller guide cylinder 250 is then removed from the guide plate 240. A second crown saw, larger than the first crown saw but with a diameter adapted to be slidably received into the first hollow bore 248 of the guide plate 240 is inserted through the first hollow bore and across the donor bone 242, thereby detaching a portion of bone tissue 258 from the donor bones The detached bone tissue can then be trimmed to a desired length, for example, as measured from the cartilage plate to the cancellous tissue, to produce the allograft plug 130 having the cylindrical cancellous stalk 134 as illustrated in
To produce an allograft plug having a conical shaped cancellous stalk, as illustrated in
In order to utilize the cannulated feature of the burring shell to facilitate proper shaping of the conical stalk, referring to
To handle a shaped allograft plug, especially a cylindrically or conically shaped plug, a pair of specially configure forceps can be provided. Referring to
Formed at the working ends of the first and second lever arms 282, 284 are curved or semicircular clamps 294, 296. The clamps 294, 296 can be joined to the respective lever arms 282, 284 at any suitable angle such as, for example, in-line with the lever arms or at right angles with the lever arms. To prevent damaging the allograft plug, a suitable soft material 298 such as an elastomer can be coated onto the clamps 294, 296. Preferably the elastomer material can be silicone rubber. Hence, when handling a cylindrical or conical allograft plug, the curved clamps 294, 296 can be placed around the cartilage plate or cancellous stalk with the elastomer 298 protecting the bone tissue.
To produce a rectilinear shaped allograft plug, such as the rectangular plug illustrated in
To actually remove the allograft plug, there is disposed through the plate 302 and within the perimeter outlined by the sharp teeth 304 a plurality of elongated cut slots 310 that are adapted to accommodate a osteotome, chisel, oscillating saw, or other cutting device. To produce a rectangular allograft plug, the illustrated cut slots 310 are arranged rectangularly. However, in other embodiments, to produce other shaped allograft plugs, such as triangular, the cut slots can be arranged in other patterns, such as triangularly. The cut slots 310 are furthermore disposed into the template 300 on a converging angle such that, when a cutting device is inserted through the cut slots and into the donor bone, the cuts being made will intersect at a point in the cancellous bone tissue. Intersecting the cuts will detach the allograft plug from the donor bone and simultaneously shape the allograft plug and its cancellous stalk. Hence, locating the cut slots 310 within the outline of the teeth 304 enables insertion of the teeth into the donor bone without damaging the healthy cartilage on allograft plug.
To prepare a recipient site for receiving an rectilinear allograft plug, a template 320 as illustrated in
As will be appreciated from the foregoing, the procedures and instruments described may also be applicable to the preparation and transplantation of a shaped autograft plug. For example, the removal, shaping, and insertion of an autograft plug from a host site and into a recipient site within the same patient is readily applicable with respect to rectilinear autograft plugs and can be performed using the same instruments.
All references, including publications, patent applications, and patents, cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each reference were individually and specifically indicated to be incorporated by reference and were set forth in its entirety herein.
The use of the terms “a” and “an” and “the” and similar referents in the context of describing the invention (especially in the context of the following claims) are to be construed to cover both the singular and the plural, unless otherwise indicated herein or clearly contradicted by context. The terms “comprising,” “having,” “including,” and “containing” are to be construed as open-ended terms (i.e., meaning “including, but not limited to,”) unless otherwise noted. Recitation of ranges of values herein are merely intended to serve as a shorthand method of referring individually to each separate value falling within the range, unless otherwise indicated herein, and each separate value is incorporated into the specification as if it were individually recited herein. All methods described herein can be performed in any suitable order unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context. The use of any and all examples, or exemplary language (e.g., “such as”) provided herein, is intended merely to better illuminate the invention and does not pose a limitation on the scope of the invention unless otherwise claimed. No language in the specification should be construed as indicating any non-claimed element as essential to the practice of the invention.
Preferred embodiments of this invention are described herein, including the best mode known to the inventors for carrying Out the invention. Variations of those preferred embodiments may become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art upon reading the foregoing description. The inventors expect skilled artisans to employ such variations as appropriate, and the inventors intend for the invention to be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein. Accordingly, this invention includes all modifications and equivalents of the subject matter recited in the claims appended hereto as permitted by applicable law. Moreover, any combination of the above-described elements in all possible variations thereof is encompassed by the invention unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context.
This patent application is a divisional application of copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/259,749, filed Oct. 26, 2005, the disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11259749 | Oct 2005 | US |
Child | 11677414 | US |