All publications and patent applications mentioned in this specification are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety to the same extent as if each individual publication or patent application was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to methods and apparatus for modifying tissue in a patient.
Many pathological conditions in the human body may be caused by enlargement, movement, displacement and/or a variety of other changes of bodily tissue, causing the tissue to press against (or “impinge on”) one or more otherwise normal tissues or organs. For example, a cancerous tumor may press against an adjacent organ and adversely affect the functioning and/or the health of that organ. In other cases, bony growths (or “bone spurs”), arthritic changes in bone and/or soft tissue, redundant soft tissue, or other hypertrophic bone or soft tissue conditions may impinge on nearby nerve and/or vascular tissues and compromise functioning of one or more nerves, reduce blood flow through a blood vessel, or both. Other examples of tissues which may grow or move to press against adjacent tissues include ligaments, tendons, cysts, cartilage, scar tissue, blood vessels, adipose tissue, tumor, hematoma, and inflammatory tissue.
One specific example of a condition caused by tissue impingement is spinal stenosis. Spinal stenosis occurs when neural tissue and/or vascular tissue in the spine become impinged by one or more structures pressing against them (“neural and/or neurovascular impingement”), causing one or more symptoms. This impingement of tissue may occur in one or more of several different areas in the spine, such as in the central spinal canal (the vertical passage through which the spinal cord and cauda equina extends), the lateral recesses of the spinal canal, or one or more intervertebral foramina (the openings through which nerve roots branching from the spinal cord pass).
For explanatory purposes,
One common cause of spinal stenosis is buckling and thickening of the ligamentum flavum (one of the ligaments attached to and connecting the vertebrae), as shown in
In the United States, spinal stenosis occurs with an incidence of between 4% and 6% of adults aged 50 and older and is the most frequent reason cited for back surgery in patients aged 60 and older. Conservative approaches to the treatment of symptoms of spinal stensosis include systemic medications and physical therapy. Epidural steroid injections may also be utilized, but they do not provide ling lasting benefits. When these approaches are inadequate, current treatment for spinal stenosis is generally limited to invasive surgical procedures to remove vertebral ligament, cartilage, bone spurs, synovial cysts, cartilage, and bone to provide increased room for neural and neurovascular tissue. The standard surgical procedure for spinal stenosis treatment includes laminectomy (complete removal of the lamina (see
Removal of vertebral bone, as occurs in laminectomy and facetectomy, often leaves the effected area of the spine very unstable, leading to a need for an additional highly invasive fusion procedure that puts extra demands on the patient's vertebrae and limits the patient's ability to move. In a spinal fusion procedure, the vertebrae are attached together with some kind of support mechanism to prevent them from moving relative to one another and to allow adjacent vertebral bones to fuse together. Unfortunately, a surgical spine fusion results in a loss of ability to move the fused section of the back, diminishing the patient's range of motion and causing stress on the discs and facet joints of adjacent vertebral segments.
While laminectomy, facetectomy, discectomy, and spinal fusion frequently improve symptoms of neural and neurovascular impingement in the short term, these procedures are highly invasive, diminish spinal function, drastically disrupt normal anatomy, and increase long-term morbidity above levels seen in untreated patients.
Therefore, it would be desirable to have less invasive methods and devices for addressing neural and neurovascular impingement in a spine. Ideally, methods and devices for addressing impingement in spine would treat one or more target tissues while preventing unwanted effects on adjacent or nearby non-target tissues. Also ideally, such methods and devices would be minimally invasive and reduce impingement without removing significant amounts of vertebral bone, joint, or other spinal support structures, thereby avoiding the need for spinal fusion and, ideally, reducing the long-term morbidity levels resulting from currently available surgical treatments. It may also be advantageous to have less invasive methods and devices for modifying target tissues in parts of the body other than the spine while preventing modification of non-target tissues. At least some of these objectives will be met by the present invention.
Description of Background Art. Flexible wire saws and chain saws, such as threadwire saws (T-saws) and Gigli saws, have been used since the late 1800s to saw through or file/abrade bone and other tissue in the human body. See, for example, Brunori A et al., “Celebrating the Centenial (1894-1994): Leonardo Gigli and His Wire Saw,” J Neurosurg 82:1086-1090, 1995. An example of one such saw is described in U.S. Pat. No. 8250, issued to P. A. Stohlmann on Nov. 28, 1876. A description of using a T-saw to cut vertebral bone is provided in Kawahara N et al., “Recapping T-Saw Laminoplasty for Spinal Cord Tumors,” SPINE Volume 24, Number 13, pp. 1363-1370.
A method and apparatus for treating spinal stenosis is described in PCT Patent Application Pub. No. WO 01/08571. A surgical instrument for removing cartilage from a knee cavity is described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,835,859.
In various embodiments, the present invention provides methods, apparatus and systems for modifying tissue in a patient. Generally, the methods, apparatus and systems may involve using an elongate, at least partially flexible tissue modification device having one or more tissue modifying members to modify one or more target tissues. The tissue modification device may be configured such that when the tissue modification member (or members) is in a position for modifying target tissue, one or more sides, surfaces or portions of the tissue modification device configured to avoid or prevent damage to non-target tissue will face non-target tissue. In various embodiments, during a tissue modification procedure, an anchoring force may be applied at or near either a distal portion or a proximal portion of the tissue modification device, either inside or outside the patient. Pulling or tensioning force may also be applied to the unanchored end of the device to urge the tissue modifying member(s) against target tissue. The tissue modifying members may then be activated to modify tissue while being prevented from extending significantly beyond the target tissue in a proximal or distal direction. In some embodiments, the tissue modifying members may be generally disposed along a length of the tissue modification device that approximates a length of target tissue to be modified.
By “applying an anchoring force,” it is meant that a force is applied to maintain a portion of a device, or the device as a whole, substantially stable or motion-free. Applying an anchoring force is, therefore, not limited to preventing all movement of a device, and in fact, a device to which an anchoring force is applied may actually move in one or more directions in some embodiments. In other embodiments, an anchoring force is applied to maintain a portion of a device substantially stable, while another portion of the device is allowed to move more freely. As will be described in further detail below, applying an anchoring force in one embodiment involves a user of a device grasping the device at or near one of its ends. In other embodiments, devices may use one or more anchoring members to apply an anchoring force. In a number of embodiments, an anchoring force may be applied with or against one or more tissues of a patient's body, and the tissue(s) may often move even as they apply (or help apply) the force. Thus, again, applying an anchoring force to a device does not necessarily mean that all motion of the device is eliminated. Of course, in some embodiments, it may be possible and desirable to eliminate all movement or substantially all movement of a device (or portion of a device), and in some embodiments anchoring force may be used to do so.
Methods, apparatus and systems of aspects of the present invention generally provide for tissue modification while preventing unwanted modification of, or damage to, surrounding tissues. Tensioning the tissue modification device by applying anchoring force at or near one end and applying tensioning or pulling force at or near the opposite end may enhance the ability of tissue modification members of the device to work effectively within a limited treatment space. Applying tensioning force to a predominantly flexible device may also allow the device to have a relatively small profile, thus facilitating its use in less invasive procedures and in other procedures in which alternative approaches to target tissue may be advantageous.
In some embodiments, the described methods, apparatus and systems may be used to modify tissue in a spine, such as for treating neural impingement, neurovascular impingement and/or spinal stenosis. In alternative embodiments, target tissues in other parts of the body may be modified.
In one aspect of the present invention, a device for modifying tissue in a spine may include one or more of the following: a shaft having a proximal portion and a distal portion, the distal portion having dimensions which allow it to be passed into an epidural space of the spine and between target and non-target tissues; at least one distal force application member extending from the distal portion of the shaft and configured to facilitate application of at least one of anchoring force and tensioning force to the shaft; at least one movable tissue modifying member coupled with the shaft at or near its distal portion; at least one drive member coupled with the at least one tissue modifying member to activate the at least one tissue modifying member; and at least one power transmission member coupled with the at least one drive member to deliver power to the at least one drive member.
In another aspect of the present invention, a device for modifying tissue in a patient may include: an elongate, at least partially flexible body having a proximal portion and a distal portion, the distal portion having dimensions which allow it to be passed between target and non-target tissues in the patient; at least one distal force application member extending from the distal portion of the elongate body and configured to facilitate application of at least one of anchoring force and tensioning force to the elongate body; at least one proximal force application member coupled with the elongate body at or near the proximal portion and configured to facilitate application of tensioning force to the elongate body; at least one movable tissue modifying member coupled with the elongate body; at least one drive member coupled with the at least one tissue modifying member to activate the at least one tissue modifying member; and at least one power transmission member coupled with the at least one drive member to deliver power to the at least one drive member.
In another aspect of the present invention, a method for modifying tissue in a spine may include one or more of the following steps: passing a distal portion of a tissue modification device into an epidural space of a spine and between one or more target tissues and one or more non-target tissues; positioning at least one tissue modifying member of the tissue modification device adjacent the target tissue such that the tissue modifying member(s) face the target tissue and do not face the non-target tissue; applying at least one of anchoring force and tensioning force at or near the distal portion and at or near a proximal portion of the tissue modification device to urge the at least one tissue modifying member against the target tissue; and transmitting power to at least one drive member coupled with the at least one tissue modifying member to activate the tissue modifying member(s) and thus modify the target tissue.
In one aspect of the present invention, a device for modifying one or more tissues in a patient's spine may include: an elongate, at least partially flexible body having a proximal portion and a distal portion, wherein at least the distal portion has dimensions that allow it to be passed into an epidural space and between target and non-target tissues of the spine; at least one movable blade disposed along one side of the elongate body; at least one actuator coupled with the at least one blade and disposed at or near the proximal or distal portion of the body for moving the blade(s) to modify one or more target tissues, wherein the at least one actuator is configured to move the blade(s) without significantly translating the elongate body proximally or distally; and means at or near the proximal and distal portions of the elongate body for facilitating application of at least one of anchoring force and tensioning force to the body to urge the at least one blade against the target tissue.
In another aspect of the present invention, a device for modifying one or more tissues in a patient may include: an elongate, flexible body having a proximal portion and a distal portion; at least one blade disposed along one side of the elongate body; and means at or near the proximal and distal portions of the elongate body for facilitating application of at least one of anchoring force and tensioning force to the body to urge the at least one blade against the target tissue.
In another aspect of the present invention, a method for modifying tissue in a patient may involve: advancing at least a distal portion of at least one elongate, at least partially flexible tissue modification device into a patient and between one or more target tissues and one or more non-target tissues; positioning at least one blade of the tissue modification device adjacent the target tissue such that the blade(s) face the target tissue and do not face the non-target tissue; applying at least one of anchoring and tensioning force to the tissue modification device at or near its proximal and distal portions to urge the blade(s) against the target tissue; and moving the at least one blade to cut the target tissue.
These and other aspects and embodiments are described more fully below in the Detailed Description, with reference to the attached Drawings.
Methods, apparatus and systems for modifying tissue in a patient are provided. Although the following description and accompanying drawing figures generally focus on tissue modification in spine, in various alternative embodiments any of a number of tissues in any of a number of anatomical locations in a patient may be modified.
Referring to
Generally, tissue modification device 102 may be advanced to a position in the spine such that tissue modifying member 110 faces target tissue to be modified, such as buckled, thickened or otherwise impinging ligamentum flavum tissue as shown in
In some embodiments, once tissue modification device 102 is positioned such that tissue modifying member 110 faces target tissue and protective surface 112 faces non-target tissue, an anchoring force may be applied at or near distal portion 109 of elongate body 108, either inside or outside the patient's body. A tensioning force may also be applied at or near proximal portion 107 of elongate body 108, such as by pulling on handle 104 (one-directional arrows), and actuator 106 may be used (two-headed arrow) to activate tissue modifying member(s) 110 to modify target tissue. In the example shown, anchoring force is applied near distal portion 109 by a user's hand 244, and handle 104 is pulled proximally (arrows) to apply tensioning force. In an alternative embodiment, hand 244 may grasp guide member 116 at or near its distal portion 117 and thus apply anchoring force to it, thus also applying anchoring force to elongate body 108. In one variation of such an embodiment, elongate body 108 or handle 104 may optionally be adjustably clamped to guide member 116 to further enhance or facilitate application of anchoring force to elongate body 108. Tissue modification via tissue modifying members 110 may include cutting, ablating, dissecting, repairing, reducing blood flow in, shrinking, shaving, burring, biting, remodeling, biopsying, debriding, lysing, debulking, sanding, filing, planing, heating, cooling, vaporizing, delivering a drug to, and/or retracting the target tissue. Once tissue has been modified, tissue modification device 102 and any introducer devices 114, guide members 116 or other devices may be removed from the patient.
In various embodiments of the apparatus, tissue modifying member(s) 110 may be disposed along any suitable length of body 108. In one embodiment, for example, such as an embodiment of the device to be used in a spinal treatment, tissue modifying members 110 may be disposed along a length of the device measuring no longer than 10 cm, and preferably no more than 6 cm, and even more preferably no more than 3 cm. In various embodiments, tissue modifying member(s) 110 may include a rongeur, a curette, a scalpel, one or more cutting blades, a scissors, a forceps, a probe, a rasp, a file, an abrasive element, one or more small planes, an electrosurgical device, a bipolar electrode, a unipolar electrode, a thermal electrode, a rotary powered mechanical shaver, a reciprocating powered mechanical shaver, a powered mechanical burr, a laser, an ultrasound crystal, a cryogenic probe, a pressurized water jet, a drug dispensing element, a needle, a needle electrode, or some combination thereof. In various embodiments, all tissue modifying members 110 may be mobile relative to the elongate body, all may be static, or some may be mobile and some may be static. These and other aspects and embodiments are described further below.
Turning now to
In various embodiments, elongate body 108 may have any number of dimensions, shapes, profiles and amounts of flexibility. For example, distal portion 109 is shown having a curved shape to demonstrate that at least a portion of elongate body 108 may be flexible. In various embodiments, elongate body 108 may have one or more of a round, ovoid, ellipsoid, flat, cambered flat, rectangular, square, triangular, symmetric or asymmetric cross-sectional shape. As shown in
In one embodiment, elongate body 108 is predominantly flexible along its length and comprises any suitable flexible material, such as thin, flexible metals, plastics, fabrics or the like. In some embodiments, it may be advantageous to include one or more rigid sections in elongate body 108, such as to impart pushability to a portion of body 108 or to facilitate application of force to tissue modification members 110 without causing unwanted bending or kinking of elongate body 108. In such embodiments, rigidity may be conferred by using additional materials in body 108 or by making the rigid portions thicker or wider or of a different shape.
Handle 104 may have any suitable configuration according to various embodiments. Similarly, actuator 106 may include any of a number of actuation devices in various embodiments. In the embodiment shown in
Blades 110 include a distal 110a and a proximal blade 110b that reside at the distal and proximal edges, respectively, of window 111 of elongate body 108. Window 111 of body 108 may accommodate both soft and hard tissue when the device is forcibly applied to the surface of a target tissue site. The top view of the distal portion of elongate body 108, shown in
In one embodiment, distal blade 110a is coupled with two pull-wires 118, as seen in
Referring now to
Blades 110 may be made from any suitable metal, polymer, ceramic, or combination thereof. Suitable metals, for example, may include but are not limited to stainless steel (303, 304, 316, 316L), nickel-titanium alloy, tungsten carbide alloy, or cobalt-chromium alloy, for example, Elgiloy® (Elgin Specialty Metals, Elgin, Ill., USA), Conichrome® (Carpenter Technology, Reading, Pa., USA), or Phynox® (Imphy SA, Paris, France). In some embodiments, materials for the blades or for portions or coatings of the blades may be chosen for their electrically conductive or thermally resistive properties. Suitable polymers include but are not limited to nylon, polyester, Dacron®, polyethylene, acetal, Delrin® (DuPont, Wilmington, Del.), polycarbonate, nylon, polyetheretherketone (PEEK), and polyetherketoneketone (PEKK). In some embodiments, polymers may be glass-filled to add strength and stiffness. Ceramics may include but are not limited to aluminas, zirconias, and carbides. In various embodiments, blades 110 may be manufactured using metal injection molding (MIM), CNC machining, injection molding, grinding and/or the like. Pull wires 118 be made from metal or polymer and may have circular, oval, rectangular, square or braided cross-sections. In some embodiments, a diameter of a pull wire 118 may range from about 0.001″-0.050,″ and more preferably from about 0.010″-0.020″.
Depending on the tissue to be treated or modified, activating blades 110 (or other tissue modifying members in alternative embodiments) may cause them to modify target tissue along an area having any of a number of suitable lengths. In use, it may also be advantageous to limit the extent of action of blades 110 or other tissue modifying members to a desired length of tissue, thus not allowing blades 110 to affect tissue beyond that length. In so limiting the effect of blades, unwanted modification of, or damage to, surrounding tissues and structures may be limited or even eliminated. In one embodiment, for example, where the tissue modification device is used to modify tissue in a spine, blades 110 may operate along a length of target tissue of no more than 10 cm, and preferably no more than 6 cm, and even more preferably no more than 3 cm. Of course, in other parts of the body and to address other tissues, different tissue modification devices may be used and tissue modifying members may have many different lengths of activity. In one embodiment, to facilitate proper location of tissue modifying members, such as blades 110, relative to target tissue, the tissue modifying members and/or the elongate body and/or one or more additional features intended for just such a purpose may be composed of a material readily identifiable via x-ray, fluoroscopic, magnetic resonance or ultrasound imaging techniques.
In various embodiments, a number of different techniques may be used to prevent blades 110 (or other tissue modifying members) from extending significantly beyond the target tissue. In one embodiment, for example, preventing blades 110 from extending significantly beyond the target tissue involves holding tissue modification device 102 as a whole predominantly stable to prevent device 102 from translating in a direction toward its proximal portion or toward its distal portion while activating blades 110. Holding device 102 stable is achieved by anchoring one end of the device and applying tensioning force at or near the other end, as described further below.
In the embodiment shown in
Referring now to
Elongate body 208 may be fabricated from any suitable material and have any of a number of configurations. In one embodiment, body 208 comprises a metal tube with a full-thickness slit (to unfold the tube into a flat form—not shown) or stiffening element (not shown). The split tube provides for a simple manufacturing process as well as a conductive pathway for bi-polar RF operation.
Referring to
In one embodiment, wire loop 210 may be housed within elongate body 208 during delivery of tissue modification device 202 into a patient, and then caused to extend up out of window 211, relative to the rest of body 208, to remove tissue. Wire loop 210 may also be flexible so that it may pop or bow up out of window 211 and may deflect when it encounters hard tissue surfaces. Wire loop 210 may have any of a number of shapes, such as curved, flat, spiral or ridged. Wire loop 210 may have a diameter similar to the width of body 208, while in alternative embodiments it may expand when extended out of window 211 to have a smaller or larger diameter than that of body 208. Pull wires (not shown) may be retracted proximally, in a manner similar to that described above, in order to collapse wire loop 210, decrease the diameter and lower the profile of the wire loop 210, and/or pull wire loop 210 proximally to remove tissue or be housed within body 208. The low profile of the collapsed wire loop 210, facilitates insertion and removal of tissue modification device 202 prior to and after tissue modification. As the wire loop 210 diameter is reduced, support tubes 218 deflect toward the center of elongate body 208.
In an alternative embodiment (not shown), tissue modification device 202 may include multiple RF wire loops 210 or other RF members. In another embodiment, device 202 may include one or more blades as well as RF wire loop 210. In such an embodiment, wire loop 210 may be used to remove or otherwise modify soft tissues, such as ligamentum flavum, or to provide hemostasis, and blades may be used to modify hard tissues, such as bone. In other embodiments, as described further below, two separate tissue modification devices (or more than two devices) may be used in one procedure to modify different types of tissue, enhance modification of one type of tissue or the like.
In other alternative embodiments, tissue modification devices 202 may include tissue modifying members such as a rongeur, a curette, a scalpel, a scissors, a forceps, a probe, a rasp, a file, an abrasive element, one or more small planes, a rotary powered mechanical shaver, a reciprocating powered mechanical shaver, a powered mechanical burr, a laser, an ultrasound crystal a cryogenic probe, a pressurized water jet, a drug dispensing element, a needle, a needle electrode, or some combination thereof. In some embodiments, for example, it may be advantageous to have one or more tissue modifying members that stabilize target tissue, such as by grasping the tissue or using tissue restraints such as barbs, hooks, compressive members or the like. In one embodiment, soft tissue may be stabilized by applying a contained, low-temperature substance (for example, in the cryo-range of temperatures) that hardens the tissue, thus facilitating resection of the tissue by a blade, rasp or other device. In another embodiment, one or more stiffening substances or members may be applied to tissue, such as bioabsorbable rods.
Referring now to
In
Referring to
In various alternative embodiments, certain of the above-described steps may be carried out in different order. For example, in one embodiment the distal portion of elongate body 108 may be anchored within or outside the patient before the tissue modifying members are positioned adjacent the target tissue. In another alternative embodiment, the proximal portion of device 102 may be anchored, and the tensioning force may be applied to the distal portion of device 102. In yet another embodiment, tensioning force may be applied to both ends of the device. In yet another embodiment, a second handle and actuator may be coupled with the distal end of body 108 after it exits the patient's back, allowing tensioning forces as well as tissue modifying actuation to occur at both the proximal and distal portions of device 102. By anchoring one end of device 102 and applying tensioning force to the opposite end, contact of the tissue modifying members with the target tissue is enhanced, thus reducing or eliminating the need for translating or otherwise moving device 102 as a whole and reducing the overall profile and the resulting access pathway required to position the device. Reducing movement and profile of device 102 and using tissue modifying members confined to a relatively small area of device 102 helps facilitate target tissue modification while minimizing or eliminating damage to surrounding tissues or structures.
As mentioned above, tissue may be modified using one tissue modification device or multiple devices, according to various embodiments. In one embodiment, for example, an RF electrosurgical tissue modification device may be used in the patient to remove soft tissue such as ligament, and a bladed tissue modification device such as a rongeur may then be used to remove additional soft tissue, calcified soft tissue, or hard tissue such as bone. In some embodiments, such multiple devices may be inserted, used and removed serially, while in alternative embodiments such devices may be inserted into the patient at the same time to be used in combination.
Referring to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring to
Once introducer sheath 114 is in place, one or more curved or steerable guide devices 318 may be advanced through it to desired positions in and/or through the spine, as shown in
Once tissue modification device 102 is in a desired position, tissues which may be modified in various embodiments include, but are not limited to, ligament, tendon, tumor, cyst, cartilage, scar, “bone spurs,” inflammatory and bone tissue. In some embodiments, modifying the target tissue reduces impingement of the tissue on a spinal cord, a branching nerve or nerve root, a dorsal root ganglia, and/or vascular tissue in the spine. Actuator 106 on handle 104 is activated to modify target tissue using tissue modification member(s) 110, while elongate body 108 is held relatively stable by hand 244 and by tension force applied to handle 104.
In various embodiments, the system and method described immediately above may include additional features or steps, may have fewer features or steps, may have an alternate order of implementation of steps, or may have different features or steps. For example, in some embodiments placement of device 102 will be performed in a medial-to-lateral direction (relative to the patient), while in alternative embodiments device placement will be performed lateral-to-medial. In some embodiments, one or more components of the system described may be anchored to the patient, such as guide member 116 or introducer sheath 114. In various embodiments, one or more guide members 116 may include one or more wires, rails or tracks and may be inserted through guide device 318, introducer sheath 114 without guide device 318, cannula 300, an epidural needle, a lumen of an endoscope, a lumen of a tissue shield or barrier device, a curved guide device 318 placed through a lumen of an endoscope, or the like. In other embodiments, for example, guide device 318 may be placed through introducer cannula 300 and then introducer sheath 114 may be passed over guide device 318. Tissue modification device 102 may similarly be inserted with or without using any of these devices or components in various combinations. Various guidewires 312, guide devices 318 and/or guide members 116 may be pre-shaped to have one or more curves, may be steerable, and/or may include one or more rails, tracks, grooves, lumens, slots, partial lumens, or some combination thereof.
In some embodiments, tissue modification device 102 is inserted through one or more hollow devices as described above (such as introducer sheath 114, as shown, or cannula 300 in an alternative embodiment) in such a way that device 102 expands upon extending out of a distal portion of the hollow delivery device thereby assuming a wider profile for modifying a greater amount of target tissue from a single location. In an alternative embodiment, device 102 retains the same overall profile during insertion and during use. In some embodiments, one or more delivery devices will remain in the patient during use of tissue modification device 102, while in alternative embodiments all delivery devices are removed from the patient when tissue modification device 102 is operating. In some embodiments, tissue modification device 102 may be slidably coupled with one or more delivery devices during delivery and/or during use. In one embodiment, tissue modification device 102 is advanced through introducer sheath 114 and sheath 114 is used as an irrigation and evacuation lumen to irrigate the area of the target tissue and evacuate removed tissue and other debris, typically by applying a vacuum. In alternative embodiments, tissue modification device 102 may include an irrigation and/or evacuation lumen to irrigate an area of the target tissue and evacuate removed tissue and other debris.
Some embodiments of an access system for facilitating tissue modification may further include one or more visualization devices (not shown). Such devices may be used to facilitate placement of the access system for introducing the tissue modification device, to facilitate tissue modification itself, or any combination of these functions. Examples of visualization devices that may be used include flexible, partially flexible, or rigid fiber optic scopes, rigid rod and lens endoscopes, CCD or CMOS chips at the distal portion of rigid or flexible probes, LED illumination, fibers or transmission of an external light source for illumination or the like. Such devices may be slidably couplable with one or more components of an access system or may be slidably or fixedly coupled with a tissue modification device. In other embodiments, additional or alternative devices for helping position, use or assess the effect of a tissue modification device may be included. Examples of other such devices may include one or more neural stimulation electrodes with EMG or SSEP monitoring, ultrasound imaging transducers external or internal to the patient, a computed tomography (CT) scanner, a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner, a reflectance spectrophotometry device, and a tissue impedance monitor disposed across a bipolar electrode tissue modification member or disposed elsewhere on a tissue modification device or disposed on the access system.
Referring now to
In some embodiments, a curved and cannulated thin, blunt probe may be placed directly through the open incision into the epidural space of the spine, or alternatively may be placed through introducer sheath 414. The probe tip may be advanced to or through a neural foramen. Such a probe may be similar in shape, for example, to a Woodson elevator, Penfield 3, hockey stick probe, ball tipped probe, or the like. In alternative embodiments, probes that may be manually bent to change their shapes, or probes with articulating tips, or probes with shape lock portions, and/or probes having grooves instead of cannulas may be used.
As shown in
Referring now to
In various alternative embodiments, open surgical access may be through exposure down to a vertebral lamina, through ligamentum flavum without lamina removal, through ligamentum flavum with partial or complete lamina removal, through ligamentum flavum with or without lamina removal with partial or complete medial facet joint removal, through open exposure and out through skin laterally, through open exposure and back out through the open exposure, or through a lateral open exposure that accesses the neural foramen from the lateral side. One or more visualization devices may be used with open surgical access procedures as well as with percutaneous or other less invasive procedures. In another alternative embodiment (not shown), a tissue modification device may be placed in the patient directly, without any introduction devices.
Referring now to
Optionally, in some embodiments, tissue modification devices or systems may further include one or more tissue barriers (or “shields”) for further protecting non-target tissues. Such barriers may be slidably coupled with, fixedly coupled with, or separate from the tissue modification devices with which they are used. In various embodiments, a barrier may be delivered between target and non-target tissues before delivering the tissue modification device, may be delivered along with the tissue modification device, or may be delivered after delivery of the tissue modification device but before the device is activated or otherwise used to modify target tissue. Generally, such a barrier may be interposed between the non-target tissue and one or more tissue modification devices to prevent unwanted damage of the non-target tissue.
Referring now to
In some embodiments, as shown in
In various embodiments, handle 1006 may have any suitable configuration and features. In some embodiments, handle 1006 includes one or more actuators for activating tissue modifying member(s) 1004. Power connector 1010 may have any suitable configuration and may deliver any suitable type of energy from an external power source (not shown) to device 1000 in various embodiments, such as but not limited to electric, radiofrequency, ultrasound, laser or conductive energy. In alternative embodiments, device 1000 may be battery operated or use any other suitable source of internal power or energy, and such internal energy source may be housed in handle 1006, for example. From whatever source, power is typically transmitted to tissue modifying member(s) 1004 to activate them and thus modify tissue.
With reference now to
Turning to
In various embodiments, tissue modifying member(s) 1014 may include one or more of a rongeur, a curette, a scalpel, one or more cutting blades, a scissors, a forceps, a probe, a rasp, a file, an abrasive element, one or more small planes, an electrosurgical device, a bipolar electrode, a unipolar electrode, a thermal electrode, a rotary powered mechanical shaver, a reciprocating powered mechanical shaver, a powered mechanical burr, a laser, an ultrasound crystal, a cryogenic probe, a pressurized water jet, or some combination thereof. Some embodiments include one tissue modifying member 1014, while others include multiple tissue modifying members 1014. As is described further below, tissue modifying member(s) 1014 may have any of a number of suitable sizes, shapes and configurations and may move or actuate in any suitable way.
Referring now to
In the embodiment shown in
Referring now to
In an alternative embodiment, as shown in
Referring to
Proximal guidewire anchoring member 1064 may be included in handle 1046, as shown, or in other embodiments may be located proximal or distal to handle 1046. Guidewire anchoring member 1064 may be used to lock or anchor guidewire 1048 to prevent or minimize its translation into or out of device 1040. This may help facilitate application of tensioning and/or anchoring force via guidewire 1048.
Referring now to
In some embodiments, optical cable 1090 may include fiber optics. Some or all of the fiber optics may comprise or may be coupled with illuminating elements 1092. Alternatively or additionally, some or all of the fiber optics may be connected to a camera (not shown). For example, such a camera may be attached to the proximal end of tissue modification device 1080. Optical cable 1090 may alternatively include one or more electrical wires connected to a power source (e.g., to power LED(s)) and/or an image capturing element 1094. Lenses, fiber optics, LED(s), or combinations thereof may be used for illumination with lenses, fiber optics, CCD, CMOS, or combinations thereof used for image capturing, according to various embodiments.
Referring now to
In an alternative embodiment, as shown in
In yet another alternative embodiment, shown in
In another embodiment, illustrated in
In yet another alternative embodiment, as in
In an alternative embodiment, shown in
In another embodiment, as in
In another alternative embodiment, as in
In yet another embodiment, shown in
In a similar alternative embodiment, shown in
Referring to
Referring now to
In yet another embodiment, as in
Referring to
As shown in
Blades 1344a, 1344b, or any other blades described in alternative embodiments herein, may be fabricated from metals, polymers, ceramics, any other suitable material or combination of materials. According to various embodiments, suitable metals for blades may include, but are not limited to, stainless steel (303, 304, 316, 316L), nickel-titanium alloy, or cobalt-chromium alloy, for example, Elgiloy® (Elgin Specialty Metals, Elgin, Ill., USA), Conichrome® (Carpenter Technology, Reading, Pa., USA), or Phynox® (Imphy SA, Paris, France). Polymer materials include nylon, polyester, Dacron®, polyethylene, acetal, Delrin® (DuPont), polycarbonate, nylon, polyetheretherketone (PEEK), and polyetherketoneketone (PEKK). In some embodiments where polymers are used, such polymers may be glass-filled or carbon-filled to add strength and stiffness. Ceramics may include, but are not limited to, aluminas, zirconias, and carbides. Blades may be manufactured using skills known in the art, for example, metal injection molding (MIM), CNC machining, injection molding, grinding, EDM, sheet metal bending, etching, or the like. Other portions of a tissue modification device, such as a cover over one or more blades or other features, may be made of any suitable material now known or hereafter discovered. A blade cover, for example, may be fabricated in various embodiments of one or more polymeric materials, such as nylon, silicone, polyetheretherketone (PEEK), polyetherketoneketone (PEKK), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), polyurethane (Tecothane,), Pebax (co, USA), polycarbonate, Delrin (co, USA), high-density polyethylene (HDPE), low-density polyethylene (LDPE), HMWPE, UHMWPE, or the like.
Referring now to
In an alternative embodiment, as in
Referring now to
In the embodiment shown in
As shown in
In yet another embodiment, shown in
With reference now to
In yet another embodiment, as shown in
Referring now to
Each cup 1435 may be spaced apart from adjacent cups 1435 at regular angle intervals, for example, in longitudinal and/or latitudinal direction around tissue modifying member 1434. Cups 1434 may be disposed on all or part (
Referring now to
In various embodiments, platform 1448 may be flexibly and/or rigidly integrated and/or attached to cross beam 1454. Bottom plate 1450 may be flexibly and/or rigidly integrated and/or attached to cross beam 1454. Base plate 1460 and/or bottom plate 1450 and/or cross beam 1454 may be attached and/or integrated to drive shaft 1462. For example, the tissue modifying member 1444 may include a drive groove, and the drive groove may be configured to receive drive shaft 1462.
Referring now to
The embodiment shown in
In the embodiments described previously or in any other embodiments described herein, blades may be fabricated from metals, polymers, ceramics, composites or any other suitable material or combination of materials. According to various embodiments, suitable metals for blades may include, but are not limited to, stainless steel (303, 304, 316, 316L), nickel-titanium alloy, or cobalt-chromium alloy, for example, Elgiloy® (Elgin Specialty Metals, Elgin, Ill., USA), Conichrome® (Carpenter Technology, Reading, Pa., USA), or Phynox® (Imphy SA, Paris, France). Polymer materials include nylon, polyester, Dacron®, polyethylene, acetal, Delrin® (DuPont), polycarbonate, nylon, polyetheretherketone (PEEK), and polyetherketoneketone (PEKK). In some embodiments where polymers are used, such polymers may be glass-filled or carbon-filled to add strength and stiffness. Ceramics may include, but are not limited to, aluminas, zirconias, and carbides. Blades may be manufactured using skills known in the art, for example, metal injection molding (MIM), CNC machining, injection molding, grinding, electrodischarge madhining (EDM), sheet metal bending, etching, electrodeposition, or the like. Pull wires 1011 may similarly be fabricated from any suitable material and may have any of a number of suitable shapes and dimension. In some embodiments, for example, pull wires 1011 may be made from metal or polymer and may have substantially circular, oval, rectangular or square cross sections, although this is by no means a comprehensive list. In some embodiments, pull wires 1011 may range in diameter from about 0.001 inches to about 0.10 inches, and more preferably between about 0.010 inches and 0.020 inches. Other portions of a tissue modification device, such as a cover over one or more blades or other features, may be made of any suitable material now known or hereafter discovered. A blade cover, for example, may be fabricated in various embodiments of one or more polymeric materials, such as nylon, silicone, polyetheretherketone (PEEK), polyetherketoneketone (PEKK), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), polyurethane (Tecothane,), Pebax (co, USA), polycarbonate, Delrin (co, USA), high-density polyethylene (HDPE), low-density polyethylene (LDPE), HMWPE, UHMWPE, or the like. In some embodiments, one or more materials may be chosen for their compatibility with one or more imaging techniques or systems, such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), for example.
In various embodiments, elongate body 1005 may include one or more hollow chambers (not shown) at or near a distal portion of body 1005. Such hollow chamber(s) may serve any of a number of suitable functions. In some embodiments, for example, a chamber may be located distal and/or proximal to one or more blades 1008a, 1008b and may serve to collect removed tissue during and/or after a tissue modification procedure. In some embodiments, one or more blades 1008a, 1008b may help push removed tissue into such a chamber or chambers. In some embodiments, one or more chambers may house one or more blades 1008a, 1008b, such that blades 1008a, 1008b are housed within the chamber(s) while elongate body 1005 is passed into a patient and between target and non-target tissues. Once elongate body 1005 is in a desired position, blades 1008a, 1008b may then be deployed out of one or more windows or similar openings in the chamber(s) to remove or otherwise modify tissue. Such chambers may include, in various embodiments, a hollow distal portion or nosecone of elongate body 1005, a hollow portion of elongate body 1005 just proximal to proximal cutting blade 1008b, and/or the like.
Another embodiment, as shown in
Referring now to
Referring now to
As shown in
In the cross-sectional view of
Referring now to
With reference now to
Referring to
With reference now to
Referring now to
Referring to
In an alternative embodiment, as in
In one alternative embodiment (not pictured), similar to that in
Referring now to
As depicted in
In some embodiments, as in
Referring to
In one embodiment, and with reference now to
Referring now to
Referring to top-view
With reference now to
As shown in
Referring to
In yet another embodiment, as depicted in
In an alternative embodiment, as shown in
Top-view
In yet another embodiment, as shown in end-on views in
In yet another embodiment, and with reference now to
Although various illustrative embodiments are described above, any of a number of changes may be made to various embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention as described by the claims. For example, the order in which various described method steps are performed may often be changed in alternative embodiments, and in other alternative embodiments one or more method steps may be skipped altogether. Optional features of various device and system embodiments may be included in some embodiments and not in others. For example, in many of the embodiments described above, one or more abrasive tissue modifying members may be substituted for one or more bladed tissue modifying members or vice versa. These an many other modifications may be made to many of the described embodiments. Therefore, the foregoing description is provided primarily for exemplary purposes and should not be interpreted to limit the scope of the invention as it is set forth in the claims.
The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/078,376, entitled “Powered Tissue Modification Devices and Methods,” filed Apr. 1, 2011, Publication No. US-2011-0190772-A1, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/406,486, entitled “Powered Tissue Modification Devices and Methods,” filed on Apr. 17, 2006, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,938,830, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/375,265, entitled “Methods and Apparatus for Tissue Modification,” filed on Mar. 13, 2006, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,887,538, which is a continuation-in-part of PCT Patent Application No. PCT/US2005/037136, filed Oct. 15, 2005, Publication No. WO2006/044727, which claims the benefit of: U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/619,306, filed Oct. 15, 2004, U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/622,865, filed Oct. 28, 2004, U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/681,719, filed May 16, 2005, U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/681,864, filed May 16, 2005, and U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/685,190, filed May 27, 2005, each of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/078,376 is also a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/405,848, entitled “Mechanical Tissue Modification Devices and Methods,” filed on Apr. 17, 2006, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,430,881, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/375,265, entitled “Methods and Apparatus for Tissue Modification,” filed on Mar. 13, 2006, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,887,538, which is a continuation-in-part of PCT Patent Application No. PCT/US2005/037136, filed Oct. 15, 2005, Publication No. WO2006/044727, which claims the benefit of: U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/619,306, filed Oct. 15, 2004, U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/622,865, filed Oct. 28, 2004, U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/681,719, filed May 16, 2005, U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/681,864, filed May 16, 2005, and U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/685,190, filed May 27, 2005, each of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20130310837 A1 | Nov 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60619306 | Oct 2004 | US | |
60622865 | Oct 2004 | US | |
60681719 | May 2005 | US | |
60681864 | May 2005 | US | |
60685190 | May 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 13078376 | Apr 2011 | US |
Child | 13913801 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11406486 | Apr 2006 | US |
Child | 13078376 | US | |
Parent | 11375265 | Mar 2006 | US |
Child | 11406486 | US | |
Parent | PCT/US2005/037136 | Oct 2005 | US |
Child | 11375265 | US | |
Parent | 11405848 | Apr 2006 | US |
Child | 13078376 | US | |
Parent | 11375265 | Mar 2006 | US |
Child | 11405848 | US | |
Parent | PCT/US2005/037136 | Oct 2005 | US |
Child | 11375265 | US |