The invention relates to tools for bone stabilization systems, and more particularly to tools for inserting screws into bones.
The human spine provides a vast array of functions, many of which are mechanical in nature. The spine is constructed to allow nerves from the brain to pass to various portions of the middle and lower body. These nerves, typically called the spinal cord, are located in a region within the spine called the spinal canal. Various nerve bundles emerge from the spine at different locations along the lateral length of the spine. In a healthy spine, these nerves are protected from damage and/or undue pressure thereon by the structure of the spine itself.
The spine has a complex curvature made up of a plurality of individual vertebrae separated by intervertebral discs. These discs hold the vertebrae together in a flexible manner so as to allow a relative movement between the vertebrae from front to back and from side to side. This movement then allows the body to bend forward and backward, to bend from side to side, and to rotate about a vertical axis. Throughout this movement, when the spine is operating properly the nerves are maintained clear of the hard structure of the spine.
Over time, or because of accidents, the intervertebral discs loose height, become cracked, dehydrated, or herniated. The result is that the disc height is reduced leading to compression of the nerve bundles, causing pain and in some cases damage to the nerves.
Currently, there are many systems and methods at the disposal of a physician for reducing, or eliminating, the pain by minimizing the stress on the nerve bundles. In some instances, the existing disk is removed and an artificial disk is substituted therefore. In other instances, two or more vertebrae are fused together to prevent relative movement between the fused discs.
Often there is required a system and method for maintaining, or recreating, proper space for the nerve bundles that emerge from the spine at a certain location. In some cases a cage or bone graft is placed in the disc space to preserve, or restore, height and to cause fusion of the vertebral level. As an aid in stabilizing the vertebrae, one or more rods or braces are placed between the fused vertebrae with the purpose of the rods being to support the vertebrae, usually along the posterior of the spine, while fusion takes place. These rods are often held in place by anchors which are fitted into the pedicle of the vertebrae. One type of anchor is a pedicle screw, and such screws come in a variety of lengths, diameters, and thread types.
A polyaxial pedicle screw may include an anchor shaft and a separate polyaxial head movably attached to the anchor shaft. The polyaxial head attaches to the rods and the relative movement between the polyaxial head and anchor shaft facilitates alignment of the rods with the pedicle screws. Various instruments have been developed in an attempt to insert the rod, polyaxial head, and anchor shaft in a reliable and efficient manner. Once the rods and screws are positioned, a connecting mechanism, such as a locking cap may connect the rod, polyaxial head, and anchor shaft.
The present invention provides a surgical screw driver for bone anchors.
In one aspect of the invention, the surgical screw driver may include an elongated drive shaft engageable with the pedicle screw in torque transmitting relationship, a locking sleeve, and a sleeve locking member. The locking sleeve is mounted to the drive shaft and is engageable with the head of the pedicle screw. The sleeve locking member is mounted for relative motion between a first position in which it is simultaneously engaged with both the drive shaft and the locking sleeve in rotationally fixed relationship and a second position in which it is disengaged from the rotationally fixed relationship with at least one of the drive shaft and locking sleeve.
In another aspect of the invention, the surgical screw driver is operable to pretension a pedicle screw into axial engagement with the pedicle screw driver by drawing the screw head axially toward the drive shaft.
In another aspect of the invention, the pedicle screw driver includes an axially captured protective sleeve coaxially mounted to the pedicle screw driver for relative rotation. The protective sleeve is held stationary while the rest of the instrument rotates. The protective sleeve prevents abrasion, snagging, and wrapping up of objects adjacent the surgical site including the margins of the incision, surgical drapes, and the user's glove.
Various examples of the present invention will be discussed with reference to the appended drawings. These drawings depict only illustrative examples of the invention and are not to be considered limiting of its scope.
In the following discussion, numerous specific details are set forth to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. However, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the present invention may be practiced without such specific details. In other instances, well-known elements have been illustrated in schematic or block diagram form in order not to obscure the present invention in unnecessary detail. Additionally, for the most part, minor details have been omitted inasmuch as such details are not considered necessary to obtain a complete understanding of the present invention, and are considered to be within the understanding of persons of ordinary skill in the relevant art.
Embodiments of a screw driver may include a drive member engageable with the pedicle screw in torque transmitting relationship. For example, the drive member may include a drive shaft having a torque input end and a torque output end. The torque input end may have a handle able to be directly gripped by a user and rotated to transmit torque to the torque output end. The torque input end may have a drive adapter for coupling the drive member to another instrument in torque transmitting relationship. Such other instruments may include a handle, a ratcheting handle, a manually operated brace, a gear reduction mechanism, a powered rotary instrument, and/or other suitable instruments. For example, the torque input end may include a drive adapter for engaging a powered rotary driver in positive torque transmitting relationship.
The torque output end may include a male portion that engages a female portion of the pedicle screw, a female portion that engages a male portion of the pedicle screw, and/or any other suitable torque transmitting engagement mechanism. The engagement may include a positive torque transmitting geometry such as a rotationally keyed interfering geometry. For example, the engagement may include male/female geometric pairs. Examples include blade and slot engagements, triangular engagements, square engagements, pentagonal engagements, hexagonal engagements, and/or any suitable polygonal engagement with any number of sides. The engagement may include a regular polygonal shape, star shapes, splines, and/or any other suitable torque transmitting shape. For example, the pedicle screw may include a male star-shaped portion and the driver may include a corresponding female star-shaped portion.
The screw driver may include a second member engageable with a polyaxial head to align the polyaxial head generally axially parallel to the anchor shaft during insertion of the pedicle screw. The second member may engage the polyaxial head in threaded, snap-fit, press-fit, taper fit, and/or other suitable engagement. The second member may engage the polyaxial head in axial force transmitting engagement. The second member may be mounted coaxially, non-coaxially, parallelly, transversely, and/or otherwise mounted relative to the drive member. The second member may include a solid rod, a hollow tube, and/or other suitable structures. For example, the second member may include a sleeve mounted coaxially over the drive shaft and having a threaded portion engageable with the polyaxial head in axial force transmitting relationship to align the polyaxial head coaxially with the anchor shaft and draw the pedicle screw and drive shaft together to lock the drive shaft to the anchor shaft in torque transmitting relationship.
The second member may include a locking mechanism to prevent disengagement of the second member from the polyaxial head. The locking mechanism may lock the second member rotationally and/or axially relative to the drive member. The locking mechanism may include a sleeve locking member that simultaneously engages both the drive member and the second member to prevent relative movement between them. For example, the sleeve locking member may be releasably engageable with both the drive member and second member in torque transmitting relationship to prevent relative rotation of the drive member and the second member. The engagement between the sleeve locking member and the other members may include a frictional engagement and/or a positive engagement. A positive engagement may include polygonal, splined, and/or any suitable positive torque transmitting engagement. The sleeve locking member may be movable between a position in which it is engaged with both the drive member and the second member and a position in which it is disengaged from one or both of the drive member and second member. For example, the sleeve locking member may be mounted for axial translation between a first position in which it positively engages both the drive member and second member in torque transmitting relationship and a second position in which it is disengaged from at least one of the drive member and second member.
The screw driver may include an outer portion that remains stationary relative to the surgical site to isolate the rotating drive member from the surgical site. For example, the drive shaft may be coaxially mounted for relative rotation inside an outer sleeve. The outer sleeve may form a surface grippable by a user.
The polyaxial head member 24 may include a generally cylindrical hollow body 50 having an axial through bore 52 extending from a proximal opening 54 to a distal opening 56. The through bore 52 may also define an internal spherical seating surface 58 adjacent to the distal opening 56. The through bore 52 may further define an internal, female, screw thread 60 at the distal opening 56. The through bore 52 may define an internal, female, screw thread 62 adjacent to the proximal opening 54. A transverse channel 64 may extend through the polyaxial head member 24 intermediate the proximal and distal openings 54, 56. The transverse channel 64 may receive the rod 18. The screw thread 62 adjacent to the proximal opening 54 may receive a set screw 66 (
The anchor member 22 and the polyaxial head member 24 may be assembled by engaging the female screw thread 60 at the distal opening 56 of the polyaxial head member 24 with the male screw thread 38 of the anchor member head 34. The polyaxial head member 24 may be threadably advanced until the female thread 60 passes completely over the male thread 38 to a fully assembled position. In the fully assembled position, the spherical outer surface 36 of the anchor member head 34 is articulable on the spherical seat 58 of the polyaxial head member 24 to permit varying the angle between the anchor member 22 and polyaxial head member 24. The angular movement of the polyaxial head member 24 relative to the anchor member 22 may increase the difficulty of maintaining axial alignment and control during insertion of the anchor member 22.
The screw driver 100 may include a tubular member, or locking sleeve 120, coaxially mounted over the drive shaft 102 for rotation relative to the drive shaft 102. The locking sleeve 120 may include a proximal end portion 122, a distal end portion 124, and an axis 126 extending therebetween. The locking sleeve 120 may include a through bore 121 defining an internal shoulder 128 that abuts an external shoulder 130 on the drive shaft 102 which may limit axial translation of the locking sleeve 120 relative to the drive shaft 102. The abutting shoulders 128, 130 may cause the distal end portion 106 of the drive shaft 102 to extend at least a predetermined distance 132 from the distal end portion 124 of the locking sleeve 120. The locking sleeve 120 may define a locking sleeve grip member 134 adjacent the proximal end portion 122 of the locking sleeve 120 to facilitate rotating the locking sleeve 120. In the illustrative embodiment, the grip member 134 may include a flattened cylinder coaxially mounted to the locking sleeve 120. The grip member 134 may be permanently or rigidly joined to the locking sleeve 120 to form a single member. The through bore 121 of the locking sleeve may extend completely through the grip member 134. An axial counter bore 136 (
The screw driver 100 may include a locking mechanism for releasably locking the rotational position of the locking sleeve 120 relative to the drive shaft 102. The locking mechanism may include a sleeve lock 140 (
The screw driver 100 may include an elongated hollow protective sleeve 170 coaxially mounted or positioned over the locking sleeve 120 for rotation relative to the locking sleeve 120. The protective sleeve 170 may include a proximal end 172, a distal end 174, and a longitudinal axis 176 extending therebetween. The protective sleeve may define a longitudinal through bore 178 having a diameter smaller than the grip member 134 of the locking sleeve 120 and smaller than the polyaxial head engaging threads 137 of the locking sleeve 120. The protective sleeve 170 may mounted on the locking sleeve 120 with the proximal end 172 of the protective sleeve 170 distal to the grip member 134 and the distal end 174 of the protective sleeve 170 proximal to the thread 137 such that the protective sleeve is captured on the locking sleeve 120. The outer surface 181 of the protective sleeve 170 may flare outwardly proximally to match the minor diameter of the grip member 134 and smooth the transition between the protective sleeve 170 and the grip member 134. The illustrative protective sleeve 170 may be assembled from a proximal piece 182 and a distal piece 184 permanently joined into a unitary sleeve to reduce waste during manufacture. The protective sleeve 170 may also include optional elongated openings 186 through the sidewall of the sleeve 170 to facilitate cleaning debris from the screw driver 100 and to improve a user's grip on the protective sleeve.
In the fully assembled screw driver 100 (
In use, the distal end 106 of the drive shaft 102 may be pressed axially into engagement with the drive mechanism 40 of the pedicle screw 10. The sleeve lock 140 may have a first position and a second position. For example, the sleeve lock 140 may be retracted proximally to a first or unlocked position of
The pedicle screw driver 100 may be coupled to a drive handle or other instrument via the drive adapter 116. The screw driver 100 may be at least partially inserted through the incision 20 and rotated to drive the pedicle screw 10 into the vertebra 14. During insertion, the user may grip the protective sleeve 170. The protective sleeve 170 remains stationary while the drive shaft 102 and pedicle screw 10 rotate thereby preventing abrasion, snagging, and/or wrapping up of objects adjacent the surgical site including the margins of the incision, surgical drapes, and the user's glove. The protective sleeve 170 may be leveraged against the incision margins to displace the incision while preventing the drive shaft 102 from abrading the incision margins. The tension created by the locking sleeve 120 keeps the drive shaft 102 engaged with the pedicle screw 10 even while the protective sleeve 170 is leveraged against the incision.
When the pedicle screw 10 is fully inserted, the sleeve lock 140 may be slid proximally into the unlocked position, the locking sleeve 120 is unthreaded from the polyaxial head member 24, and the screw driver 100 is removed.
Although examples of a screw driver and its use have been described and illustrated in detail, it is to be understood that the same is intended by way of illustration and example only and is not to be taken by way of limitation. Accordingly, variations in and modifications to the screw driver and its use will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art, and the following claims are intended to cover all such modifications and equivalents.
This application relates to, and claims the benefit of the filing date of, co-pending U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/889,402 entitled Pedicle Screw Driver, filed Feb. 12, 2007, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference for all purposes. This application also relates to, and claims the benefit of the filing date of, co-pending U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/889,797 entitled Pedicle Screw Driver, filed Feb. 14, 2007, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60889402 | Feb 2007 | US | |
60889797 | Feb 2007 | US |