BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 illustrates a side view of a medical device showing the force limiting spring, trigger, and moveable bottom jaw.
FIG. 2 depicts a cross-sectional view of the medical device showing the force limiting spring, inner tube, and activation tube.
FIG. 3 presents a cross-sectional view of the moveable bottom jaw and fixed jaw/inner tube according to an embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 4 presents a cross-sectional view of the moveable bottom hook and fixed hook.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
FIG. 1 depicts a medical surgical instrument in the form of a gripping tool 1. The gripping tool 1 has an activation tube 6 which is a hollow cylindrical shaft that extends along its lateral length. On the proximal end 28 of tube 6, a hand manipulator including activation trigger 16 and an optical imaging system 24 with a light source 30 are located.
On the distal end 26 of the activation tube remote tool parts, for example jaws 8, 10 or hooks 42, 44 [FIG. 4], are arranged in the form of two open-ended sections which can be activated via the activation trigger 16 of the gripping tool 1. The trigger 16 moves the activation tube 6 along a line of displacement. The tool includes a fixed jaw 10 and a moveable jaw 8.
Because a hand can exert considerably greater force than 150 N, the gripping tool 1 depicted has a force-limiting spring 2. The force-limiting spring 2 is there to prevent undue excess force being exerted onto the jaws 8, 10 via the activation tube 6 which can lead to damage or even fracturing of the jaws 8, 10.
FIG. 2 presents a cross-sectional view of the proximal end 28 showing the activation trigger 16 and the limit stop 18 that limits the trigger 16 movement and therefore prevents the outer activation tube 6 from moving the moveable jaw 8 too closely to fixed jaw 10 during closure, see FIG. 3. The trigger 16 is fixedly attached to activation tube 6, such that when activation trigger 16 is moved toward limit stop 18 by the operator's hand, force-limiting coil spring 2 is compressed by activation tube 6. Activation tube 6 slides laterally along inner tube 4, as presented in FIG. 2. When the closing force is released from trigger 16, force-limiting coil spring 2 urges the activation tube 6 toward the distal end 26, thereby causing movable jaw 8 to move away from fixed jaw 10, thereby opening the jaws and releasing a retained device [not illustrated]. Fixed jaw 10 is preferably immovably attached to inner tube 4 at distal end 26.
The force-limiting coil spring 2 produces linearly increasing force that opposes closure force from activation trigger 16, which could damage an expensive microstimulator implant device. Until trigger 16 contacts limit stop 18, closure force that is transmitted to moveable jaw 8 is limited by force-limiting coil spring 2.
The spring-like elasticity of the coil spring 2 can be adapted and determined by way of the type and number of spring coils as well as the choice of material for the coil spring 2.
Activation tube 6 is guided through a bearing 20, which physically stabilizes the tube 6 position and non-axial movement during operation. It is preferred that bearing 20 be comprised of resinous plastic such as Delrin® from E.I. Du Pont. As activation tube 6 is slidably urged along inner tube 4, the moveable jaw 8 rotates around a fixed pivot 12 by force from a swivel pin 22, which slidably passes through activation tube 6.
The fixed jaw 10 and moveable jaw 8 are preferably shaped to conform to the shape of a cylindrical tube as presented by a known microstimulator, such as a Bion having a 6 mm diameter. This curvature minimizes or prevents contact damage during the gripping operation due to stress concentration at the contact point between the microstimulator and the jaws 8, 10. Further, in a preferred embodiment, the gripping surface of the jaws 8, 10 are provided with a roughened or knurled surface 32 to provide a non-slip surface for contact with the microstimulator being gripped.
In an alternate embodiment, an optical imaging system is included. This may be a fiberscope, which comprises an eyepiece at one end and a lens at the other and which may contain a light source, including fiber optics 14 to carry light from the light source 30 at the proximal end 28 to the distal end 26 to provide illumination at the distal end 26 during a gripping operation. The fiber optics 14 pass along the central axis of the inner tube 4 and provide an optical view at the distal end 26 of gripping tool 1. The fiber optics 14 also pass through the movable jaw 8, as illustrated in FIG. 3, and the fiber optics 14 are bent slightly as the movable jaw 8 produces an opening and closing motion.
The force-limiting spring 2 depicted in FIGS. 1 and 2 is distinguished by being simple and cost effective to manufacture without additional components.
In another alternative embodiment as depicted in FIGS. 2 and 3, a port 34 is integral with the gripping tool 1 and is attached to conical fitting 38 to supply saline via tube 36 for a saline flush of the implant location, which passes along gripping tool 1 to the distal end 26, as presented in FIG. 3. Tube 36 releases the saline at the distal end 26 of activation tube 6. The tube 36 can also be used to drain biofluid, for example, from the distal end 26.
An alternative embodiment, FIG. 4, utilizes a fixed hook 42 and a moveable hook 44 to capture an implanted device by its eyelet. If the microstimulator has an eyelet, this lends itself to removal by the hooks presented and further reduces damage to the living tissue or the implant itself.
Obviously, many modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.