This invention relates in general to a laser video endoscope for use in ophthalmology operations and more particularly to one in which the operating probe has a small diameter so that, for example, it can be passed through a 23 gauge sleeve such as a trocar sleeve.
Laser video endoscopes are known and examples are described in Applicant's issued U.S. Pat. No. 5,121,740 issued on Jun. 16, 1992 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,997,868 issued on Feb. 14, 2006. Disclosures of these two patents are incorporated herein by reference. These endoscopes used in ophthalmology operations are either disposable or reused after autoclaving or sterilization. Reuse is important because of the expense of the endoscope. These prior art endoscopes are employed with the probe passing through a 20 gauge tissue incision during ophthalmological surgery. A 20 gauge incision has been a standard in the art and is used for entry by instruments employed during an ophthalmological surgical routine.
However, a smaller 23 gauge sleeve has been employed more recently. This sleeve, such as a trocar sleeve is a tube implanted in a body wall which permits insertion and removal of a surgical instrument without touching the body wall tissue. The value of the 23 gauge sleeve is that it involves a smaller incision and therefore quicker recovery time. The 23 gauge sleeve provides an opening smaller than the 20 gauge incision and thus requires the probes thereof to be smaller in diameter so that they can fit through the 23 gauge sleeve. One problem is that a 23 gauge probe is so small in diameter (25 mils) that it is fragile and tends to break. This breakage problem becomes a major concern when using a laser video endoscope because of the cost of these endoscopes. These laser video endoscopes are used in glaucoma, retinal and vitrectomy operations.
Accordingly, it is a major purpose of this invention to provide a design for a laser video endoscope that will permit the probe to be designed so that it can be inserted through a 23 gauge sleeve and will maintain sufficient robustness so as to minimize the amount of breaking and provide the possibility for reuse of the instrument.
It is a further purpose of this invention to achieve this small probe in a design for an endoscope with which the surgeon is familiar and in a design that avoids significant added costs. This familiarity of use and reasonable cost will enhance the likelihood of use.
One embodiment of the surgical instrument of this invention employs a stainless steel probe having a distal portion and a proximal portion. The distal portion has an OD that is less than 25 mils (thousandths of an inch) with a two mil wall thickness. Thus it can be inserted through a 23 gauge sleeve. The proximal portion of the probe, exiting from the hand piece, has a 31 mil OD and a wall thickness of five mils. The distal 25 mils diameter portion has a length of 710 mils. This combination of three design features provides a probe that can fit through a 25 mil (23 gauge) sleeve yet be robust enough to minimize the risk of breaking. Most breakage occurs at the juncture between the hand piece and the probe.
In addition the laser video endoscope has the known elements of a source of illumination, source of laser energy and camera assembly. All of these three elements are coupled by optical fibers through the hand piece and then through the surgical probe to provide illumination, image transmission and laser operating energy.
However the instrument of this invention provides a trade-off between the size of the optical cabling used for the three functions of illumination, imaging and delivering laser energy. A particular trade-off is required to meet the dimensional limitations of the 23 gauge probe and yet adequately provide these three functions. The trade off made by this invention between adequate functioning and dimensional limitations is one that results in a 100 micron laser fiber, a 6,000 fiber image bundle having a 14 mil diameter circular configuration and an illumination bundle having 210 fibers that fills the 21 mil inner diameter of the distal portion of the probe 28.
The small diameter laser fiber requires laser energy that is well collimated, having little dispersion so that no laser energy is wasted. A so called green laser having a wavelength of 532 nanometers is used.
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The length of the proximal portion 30 of the probe is 120 mils and the length of the distal portion 32 is 710 mils for a probe length of 830 mils. The distal portion 32 of the probe 28 has an outer diameter of 25 mils and will be able to extend through a 23 gauge sleeve to provide illumination and laser energy delivery within the eye during a surgical procedure and to transmit image from the eye. This distal portion 32 has a wall thickness of two mils and a length of 710 mils. The 710 mil length is long enough for most applications and short enough to minimize breaking. It has been found that this short a length for the distal portion 32 contributes to the robustness of the probe 28. These dimensional values can be varied slightly to provide a probe that can be used with other small size sleeves.
This 25 mil diameter probe has to meet the need of providing enough light and enough laser energy while maintaining an adequate image guide. In order to obtain a useable viable surgical instrument that provides adequate illumination energy, imaging and laser energy, trade-off s are made of these various light fiber functions that will provide something useable by the surgeon. What Applicant has done is to provide a particular trade-off of dimensions for each of these light fibers.
Essentially, the trade-off involves a standard minimum size image guide 36, a very much reduced laser guide 38 having a 100 micron diameter instead of a 200 micron diameter and a illumination light bundle 40 having only 210 fibers. This is all contained within the distal portion 32 of the probe 28 having an outside diameter of approximately 25 mils, a two mil wall thickness and an inner diameter of 21 mils.
This small diameter probe 28 is fragile and risks breaking off at the juncture of the hand piece 34. It has been found that the probe will be robust enough to minimize breakage by a combination of (a) a rigid, preferably metallic, probe 28, (b) a probe 28 having the two diameter design at 30 and 32 and (c) a distal segment 32 limited in length to no more than about 710 mils. Thus the embodiment shown and tested has the following three features. The proximal portion 30 of the probe 28 has a 35 mil outside diameter that extends through the hand piece 34 and that has at least a five mil wall thickness. The distal portion of the probe 28 has a 25 mil outer diameter with a two mil wall 33 thickness.
It has been found that such a design provides sufficient illumination to illuminate a 90 degree field. One of the compromises made in order to get a small diameter probe was to reduce the laser guide 38 fiber diameter from 200 microns to 100 microns. It became important, as part of the tradeoffs involved herein, to use a 532 nanometer (nm) laser which is also known as a green laser. This 532 nm laser is more coherent and less divergent than the wavelengths now currently used such as the 810 nm laser. Accordingly, the use of this 532 nm laser in combination with the reduced size of the laser fiber 36 provides a reasonable amount of laser energy for the ophthalmological operations involved. This ultimately makes possible the small diameter probe.
The imaging bundle 34 is 6,000 fibers. It is a standard 14 mil diameter off the shelf imaging bundle having adequate resolution of the image for use by the surgeon. A gradient index lens having a 14 mil diameter could be used instead of the fiber optic bundle.
However, the illumination guide 38 is reduced from approximately 220 fibers to about 70 fibers thereby materially contributing to the smaller diameter probe.
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This invention has been described in connection with an embodiment that permits use with a 23 gauge sleeve. It should be understood that variations could be made to adapt the design described to use with sleeves having variations on the 23 gauge or to be used without a sleeve. This invention is in the combination of a number of features and trade-offs designed to work together to provide an operable and useful laser video endoscope having a small probe that provides access for eye operations with minimum trauma and reduced healing time.