MRI devices provide excellent soft tissue images. It is therefore reasonable to perform interventions or surgical procedures in soft tissue under MRI control. Several soft tissue regions, however, such as the brain, spinal duct, or parts of the intervertebral disks, are covered by bones in a way that one has to bore through these obstacles. However, an MRI compatible drill-operation device is not yet known until today. The invention presented herein aims at placing a minimally-invasive access into such regions by means of an actuation unit based on an ultrasound motor.
The subject invention pertains to a method and apparatus for placing a minimally-invasive access with respect to a patient's bone or other non-soft tissue. The subject invention can use a drilling machine incorporating an ultrasound motor. The subject drilling machine can be applied to sample, for example, bone biopsies under MRI control. In a specific embodiment, the subject ultrasound motor can be completely manufactured of non-magnetic materials, such as plastics, titanium, and titanium alloy, or ceramics and piezoceramics. The subject drilling apparatus can be placed into an MRI near field without influencing the image quality, and without the drilling apparatus itself being disturbed by the MRI magnet, gradient, or high-frequency field.
The subject invention can incorporate good shielding with the subject drilling apparatus use of these materials, and can achieve minimal, if any, image distortions or so-called artifacts. Thus, the subject invention can involve the problem by use of non-magnetic materials of low magnetic susceptibility for the design of an actuation unit.
The invention presented herein shall be described in detail with the following figures:
The subject actuation unit can incorporate a control unit 2 and the driving unit 1 (see
The transformation of electrical energy into mechanical energy can occur by piezoelectric effect, eliminating a magnetic field that is typically produced by conventional electric motors. Additionally, the use of non-magnetic materials can produce an MRI image with minimal distortion.
The subject driving unit can incorporate a hollow shaft through which an instrument can pass and can be applied to the bone or other tissue being drilled. In a specific embodiment, the driving unit can be separated from the hollow shaft, allowing the hollow shaft to remain in the drilled hole and serve as minimally-invasive access to the respective tissue region.
The subject invention can also allow the application of so-called spike and Kirschner wires 13. As
It is possible to design the driving unit with markers that can be identified by a navigation system and allow the orientation of the device by means of such navigation system. The markers can be designed as reflectors or active optical light-emitting diodes. For application under MRI, the markers can be manufactured of a material which is actively or passively depictable under MRI. In a specific embodiment, the markers can be filled with a signal-emitting liquid. Such markers can be, for example, put onto the device or be integrated into the device structure.
The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/366,832, filed Feb. 14, 2003, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/357,208, filed Feb. 14, 2002, both of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entirety, including any figures, tables, or drawings.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60357208 | Feb 2002 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10366832 | Feb 2003 | US |
Child | 12035312 | US |