This application relates to and claims priority to corresponding Great Britain Patent Application No. 0510194.4, which was filed on May 19, 2005, and which is incorporated by reference herein.
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a knee prosthesis for fitting to a patient as a replacement knee joint.
2. Related Art
Modern total knee replacement involves the resurfacing of the femoral condyles with a metallic component, roughly approximating to the shape of the anatomical femoral condyles, and resurfacing the tibial plateau with a polyethylene component having a metallic base plate.
One problem with such total knee replacement relates to the matching of the interior surface of the femoral component of the implant with the resected distal anterior surfaces of the femur.
The present invention seeks to obviate or at least minimize this problem.
According to a first aspect of the invention there is provided a femoral component of a knee prosthesis comprising a femoral flange from which extend lateral and medial condyles with an intercondylar groove there between, the condyles defining respective co-planar interior flat surfaces aligned at opposite sides of said intercondylar groove to engage, in use, with respective flat lowermost surfaces of a resected femur, a part of the femoral flange extending to a free end of the femoral component having a flat internal surface angled relative to a plane which is normal to said flat surfaces and to the length of said intercondylar groove.
Preferably the part of the femoral flange is angled by a value in the range of approximately 3° to approximately 20°, and more preferably by 10°, relative to said plane. Desirably an internal surface of the femoral flange extending away from said flat surfaces at opposite sides of the intercondylar groove is formed as three flat sections at respective different angles relative to said plane. Conveniently the interior of the femoral component is formed as six discrete flat sections.
The invention also relates to a trial femoral prosthesis component.
The invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The invention relates to a femoral component of a knee prosthesis, the femoral component being shown alone in
As is well known, a knee prosthesis generally comprises a femoral component, a tibial component, and a meniscal or bearing component. Generally the femoral and tibial components are of metal with the bearing component being of plastics material such as polyethylene and fitting between the femoral and tibial components. In the accompanying drawings the tibial component is not shown, but it is to be understood that this would generally be of conventional form, such as in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,387,240 and 5,658,342 having a flat upper surface in use, on which the flat lower surface of the bearing component engages, and a depending lower fixing stem. In
The knee replacement device shown in the drawings is of bicondylar form, with the femoral component 10 being a bicompartmental component. This is generally of known form defining a pair of spaced ‘rounded’ surfaces corresponding substantially to the condyles of the normal femur, i.e. the medial and lateral condyles thereof, the component 10 being a single one-piece construction.
The femoral component 10 is generally C-shaped, as shown in
As can be seen from
Interconnecting the two condylar parts 13, 14, is a box-like bridging part 20 which is made up of a pair of vertical parallel spaced flat side walls 21, 22 respectively at the respective inner edges of the condylar parts adjacent the intercondylar groove. Bridging part 20 is provided with a flat top wall 23 which, in this embodiment, is parallel to the third flat sections 19 of the interior surface of the condylar parts. However the top wall 23 is formed with a central elongate slot 24 which is open at the open end of the intercondylar groove adjacent the respective free ends of the condylar parts. It will he noted that the wall 23 can either be complete, have a perforation/slot therein, or be absent.
The intercondylar groove extends into and centrally divides a fourth flat section 25 of the internal surface of the femoral flange 12, the flat section 25 extending outwardly and upwardly from the third flat section of each condylar part by an obtuse angle. The side walls 21, 22 substantially terminate at the upper part of this flat section 25 which extends into a fifth flat section 26 which extends upwardly from the section 25 and slightly inwardly therefrom. Part of the top wall 23 can terminate at this fifth flat section 26 as shown in
As described, the femoral component has its internal surface formed with a number of discrete flat sections with the junction lines between respective sections lying parallel to one another. This is the conventional shape of the interior surface of a femoral component, and is shown, for example, in British Patent Specification No. 2351236 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,413,279. With each of these prior art femoral components, the internal surface thereof is formed as five discrete flat sections with the first and fifth sections lying parallel to one another. With the femoral component 10 of
With conventional femoral components, as hereinbefore described, the part of the femoral flange which extends inwards from the free extremity thereof has a flat inner surface which is parallel to the respective flat inner surfaces at the respective free extremities of the condylar parts. As described in relation to
The above described ‘angling’ or ‘twisting’ of the inner surface of the upper extremity of the femoral flange overcomes this problem in that it compensates for the difference in size between the outer and inner condyles at the lower extremity of the femur, thereby providing a much better securement and fit of the femoral component on the resected end of the femur.
A posterior cut on the femur parallel to either PM-PL or EM-EL is made according to surgeon preference, but because of the angled anterior cut then the surgeon can miss the lateral femoral flare at point AL and still make contact with the medial femoral anterior flare at point AM. As to the desirable angle for this anterior cut, it is thought that surface 17 and surface 28 should he at an angle of about 10° to each other, but this angle could be within a range of 3°-20°. The angle could be different with different sizes of component.
It will also be understood that the proportion of the interior surface of the femoral flange which is so ‘twisted’ can also be varied as required, particularly depending upon the nature and type of the resecting of the femur which is employed.
In an alternative embodiment, it is possible to provide the angled part of the femoral flange as part of a femoral component with the normal five surfaces, i.e. for use with the normal five cuts. Instead of angling surface 28, a compromise surface combining surfaces 26 and 28 is angled. The angled junction line 29 would replace the line 27 in such a configuration.
It is still however preferred to provide the six cuts, and thus to provide sixth surface 28 for the angled anterior cut from the viewpoint of surgical implantation. If the operation were to be performed with five conventional cuts, the cutting block would have to be used to cut the combined angled surface 26 and 28. Having cut an angled anterior surface there is then no scope for altering the medio-lateral position of the implant on the prepared femur.
Extending across the open end of the slot 24 in the bridging part 20 and being connected at its respective opposite ends to respective facing sides of the condylar parts 13 and 14 is a cam in the form of a cylindrical rod 30. This rod 30 extends normally from said parallel facing sides of the condylar parts, and it thus effectively lies parallel to the junction line 27.
The meniscal or bearing component 11 is of generally known shape, being of similar shape, in plan view, to the tibial component, not shown, with which the bearing component is associated. The bearing component has a planar undersurface 31 which serves, in use, as an articulatory bearing surface engaged with the upper flat planar surface of the tibial component. The upper surface of the bearing component provides bearing surfaces 15, 16 described above to match the exterior surfaces of the condylar parts 13, 14 respectively. Centrally of the component 11, but towards the convex front peripheral side surface is formed a peg 32, with the opposite rear peripheral side surface of the bearing component being of dished or concave form, with the cam terminating short thereof.
As can be seen from
In use, the component 36 can be applied to the femur and adjustment made for the precise medio-lateral position of the component on bone. Having decided on the position, the surgeon then cuts the angled anterior femur to match surface 28 through an angled slot in the trial implant. The trial implant is also used to cut the intercondylar region of the femur to accept the metallic box-like bridging part of the actual femoral component of the prosthesis.
Accordingly the sixth cut is made through angled slot 37, the saw being inserted therethrough and producing the angle on the flat sixth cut.
Although the inventive feature of this application can be used independently of the inventive feature of my co-pending U.S. patent application titled “Knee Prosthesis”, Ser. No. 11/351,529, filed concurrently herewith, it is advantageous if they are used together, thereby producing a greatly improved congruent knee prosthesis.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0510194.4 | May 2005 | GB | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5116375 | Hofmann | May 1992 | A |
5387240 | Pottenger et al. | Feb 1995 | A |
5658342 | Draganich et al. | Aug 1997 | A |
5702460 | Carls et al. | Dec 1997 | A |
5824100 | Kester et al. | Oct 1998 | A |
6168629 | Timoteo | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6364911 | Schmotzer et al. | Apr 2002 | B1 |
6413279 | Metzger et al. | Jul 2002 | B1 |
6503254 | Masini | Jan 2003 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0773756 | Oct 2002 | EP |
WO2004069104 | Aug 2004 | EP |
2387546 | Dec 2004 | GB |
WO2004158108 | Jul 2004 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060265078 A1 | Nov 2006 | US |