The subject of the present invention is medical instruments, and methods for their manufacture, as well as the use thereof.
Recent studies on patients with implants/prostheses have shown that in the postprosthetic tissue traces of iron could be detected. This finding is surprising insofar as iron could be detected even when implants/prostheses of absolutely iron-free materials have been used and the explanation of the implants/prostheses and the analysis of the periprosthetic tissue was performed with iron-free research instruments. Even in the case of explantates made of absolutely iron-free materials—for example even in the case of titanium prostheses—iron was detected by such studies in the periprosthetic tissue in amounts of up to 1 mg/g of tissue.
The induction effect of iron on fibroblasts, for example, is known. About 30% of the so-called “exchange operations” are made necessary predominantly by particles in the periprosthetic tissue which are responsible for the loosening of implants/prostheses (“particle disease”). Iron, on the one hand an essentially necessary element for the organism, on the other hand exercises evidently massive deleterious effects in the environment of implants/prostheses, e.g., on the ingrowth performance of osteosynthesis plates, implants, prostheses, screws, etc.
Results obtained on the basis of the use—due to the special research methodology—of absolutely iron-free instruments, the iron detected in the periprosthetic tissue of iron-free implants/prostheses must consequently have insinuated themselves during the operation.
Many operational techniques in orthopedics or surgery call for the use of scalpels, scissors, saws, drills, thread cutting tools, centering tools, bushings, templets and other such instruments made of materials containing iron. Consider here, for example, the article, “Semiconstrained Total Elbow Replacement for the Treatment of Post-Traumatic Osteoarthrosis” by A. G. Schneeberger et al., The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Vol. 79-A, No. 8, August 1997, p. 1211 ff.
Surprisingly, in studies of these instruments after their use, definite traces of wear were found. Wear results from the attrition of the ferrous material and sometimes can be seen with the naked eye. This iron-containing detritus created during the operation evidently collects in the periprosthetic tissue and thus can be blamed at least partially for the loosening of the prostheses.
The present invention was therefore aimed at reliably preventing detritus of iron particles from forming in operations.
It was therefore one objective of the invention to make available tools and instruments which, when used in surgical operations, for example in the cutting of bone and in the insertion of implants, will produce no iron particles, in order thus to keep osteolytically active iron out of the tissues.
The problem to which the present invention is addressed was attained according to the invention by the use of biocompatible bioinert materials for the manufacture of medical/surgical instruments and by the use of medical/surgical instruments made from biocompatible bioinert materials in surgical operations.
According to the invention, medical/surgical instruments are prepared from biocompatible bioinert materials.
a and 2b are a comparison between a conventional drill of metal and a drill according to the present invention made of biocompatible bioinert ceramic.
The use of biocompatible bioinert materials is of decisive importance for the solution according to the invention. Such biocompatible bioinert materials include ceramics. Examples to mention here are high-strength technical ceramics, such as those on a basis of aluminum oxide, zirconium oxide or silicon nitride. Especially preferred are so-called Y-TZP ceramics or also ZPTA ceramics. ZPTA ceramics consist of a matrix material which is composed of an aluminum oxide/chromium oxide mixed crystal and is platelet-reinforced in situ. Such ceramics are described for example in EPA 0 542 815. These are ceramics in which zirconium dioxide containing stabilizing oxides is embedded in a matrix material of a sintered body formed of an aluminum oxide/chromium dioxide mixed crystal, the amount of the stabilizing oxides being so chosen that the zirconium dioxide is predominantly tetragonal. In addition to these ceramics, however, other ceramics can also be used. It must only be assured that they are biocompatible and bioinert. Such ceramics have long been known in medical technology. They include, among other things, the ceramics from which implants are made, for example, and which are sold by the applicant under the names Biolox® and Ziolox®.
From these high-strength technical ceramics scalpels, scissors, saws, drills, thread cutting tools and centering tools, drill-jig bushings, templets and other such instruments can be made.
The production of the ceramics needed for these instruments is performed in a manner known to the practitioner of the art. It is to be noted, however, that the ceramic required for these instruments must be sharp-edged for use according to the invention in medicine or surgery, and must contain no phase of the kind used in ceramics for cutting metal.
A drill according to the invention is obtained, for example, by first producing a cylinder, from a ceramic according to EPA 0 542 815, for example, into which the shape necessary for use as a cutting instrument is ground.
A scalpel according to the invention or a scissors according to the invention can be obtained basically according to DE 43 13 305, for example, while the cutting blades of the scissors according to the invention can have either different hardnesses or the same hardness.
According to the invention it is likewise possible to coat known medical/surgical instruments with biocompatible bioinert materials.
In all cases, the appearance, the shape, the geometry, the size of the medical/surgical instruments of the invention can correspond to the medical/surgical instruments used heretofore.
By the use according to the invention of biocompatible bioinert materials for the production of medical/surgical instruments or the use of the medical/surgical instruments consisting of biocompatible bioinert materials in surgical operations it is thus possible for the first time reliably to avoid the entry of iron-containing particles into the tissue. The medical/surgical instruments according to the invention can therefore be used in operations, for example, to avoid the production of any osteolytically active ferrous particles due to the cutting of bone.
The medical/surgical instruments according to the invention have an extremely great resistance to wear and accordingly high mechanical qualities. It is furthermore advantageous that the cutting characteristic of the medical/surgical instruments according to the invention is substantially better than the cutting characteristic of conventional instruments of the same geometry.
Due to the better cutting characteristic of the medical/surgical instruments of the invention better performance can generally be assumed. Table 1 and
Of especial, particularly economical importance is furthermore the possibility of being able to use the medical/surgical instruments of the invention more often than once. Conventional instruments of metal can and are, as a rule, used only once. On account of their surface chemistry the medical/surgical instruments of the invention can also be re-sterilized after use, without problems; even if the medical/surgical instruments according to the invention are autoclaved they are superior in performance to the conventional instruments (cf.
Of especial advantage is furthermore the use of the medical/surgical instruments of the invention in connection with new operation techniques, such as so-called “roboting” or so-called “imaging.” For example, the use of nuclear spin tomography in the operating room makes it necessary to use nonmetallic instruments. Whereas images of metallic instruments are blurred in nuclear spin tomography, the medical/surgical instruments of the invention are imaged with sharp contours.
In connection with this invention, when medical/surgical instruments are mentioned, this is to be understood as including instruments and tools which consist at least in part of biocompatible bioinert materials and are used in medicine/surgery and are intended for the same purpose as the medical/surgical instruments.
*)with protein-dissolving cleaning agent
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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199 16 149.6 | Apr 1999 | DE | national |
This is a divisional application of U.S. Ser. No. 09/937,722, incorporated herein by reference, which is a §371 of PCT/EP00/03240 filed Apr. 1, 2000 and claims priority from DE 199 16 149.6 filed Apr. 11, 1999.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09937722 | Mar 2002 | US |
Child | 11706097 | Feb 2007 | US |