The present invention regards in general the field of equipment for laparoscopic surgery and more in particular refers to a radially expandable anchorage guide for trocars.
As is known, in the laparoscopic surgery field wide use is made of instruments called trocars which generate and maintain the access channels for the various surgical instruments used in operations. Schematically, a commercial trocar comprises a cannula and a valve body situated at one of its ends. Typically, the cannula has a diameter of 5 or 12 mm with a length of 110-120 mm.
At the beginning of the operation, some holes are made, for example, in the abdomen of the patient by using as many trocars equipped with an accessory capable of penetrating the various tissue layers. Subsequently, such accessory is extracted and an inert gas is insufflated in the abdomen through one of the trocars so as to generate the necessary operating space.
The pressure generated inside the abdomen tends to push the trocars outwardly, so that various methods have been devised for their anchorage. The most widespread solution foresees the use of a tube with inner diameter equal to the outer diameter of the trocar cannula and with an outer threaded surface such to permit the surgeon to “screw it” into the access hole. The tube is then fixed to the cannula of the trocar by means of elastic bands or friction systems.
During the operation, all of the necessary instruments are inserted through the trocars. In the case in which internal parts must be removed, for example gall bladder, intestine parts, tumoral masses etc., it may become necessary to carry out further access cuts of sufficient size for the passage of the part to be removed. This need involves making additional wounds of greater size than those left by the trocars, as well as the possibility of contamination through the walls of the cut during the extraction step of the parts to be removed; all of this results in a more difficult patient recovery after the operation. After the extraction, it is often necessary to continue to operate laparoscopically and the additional cut compromises the gas seal so that it is necessary to use instruments capable of restoring the seal.
The object of the present invention is to provide an anchorage guide for a trocar which, taking advantage of the elasticity of the relaxed tissues (since they are anesthetized), can expand to generate the necessary space for the extraction of the parts to be removed without the need to carry out additional cuts.
Another object of the present invention is to provide an anchorage guide for trocars of the type mentioned above on which it is possible to mount an autonomous valve system through which instruments or an adaptor for commercial trocars can pass, if, after the extraction of the diseased parts, it would be necessary to newly pressurize the abdomen and restart the operation.
These objects are achieved with the anchorage guide for a trocar according to the present invention comprising a tubular body, formed by a plurality of substantially circular sectors, radially moveable from and towards the longitudinal axis of the tubular body between a first position wherein they flank each other according to a first substantially circular arrangement with diameter equal to that of said tubular body, and a second position wherein they are equally spaced from each other according to a second substantially circular arrangement of greater diameter than that of the first arrangement. Each of the sectors is rotatably connected to a support element and manual operation means are foreseen, moveably connected to said support element, for moving the sectors from the first to the second position and vice versa.
Other characteristics, as well as the advantages, of the anchorage guide for a trocar according to the present invention will be clearer from the following description of an exemplifying and not limiting embodiment with reference to the attached drawings wherein:
With reference to
The three sectors 1a of the tubular body 1 form a channel of inner diameter less than or equal to the outer diameter of the cannula of the commercial trocar to be used, while the outer surface of the sectors 1a has a saw tooth thread, as in the anchorage cannulae of known type, capable of grasping the walls of the body cavity access hole.
The three curved arms 2 are housed within the fixed ring nut 4, coplanar thereto, and may be simultaneously rotated around the respective pins 3, to transmit an angular movement to the moveable ring nut 7. Following the rotation of the arms 2, the cylindrical sectors 1a extending therefrom progressively divaricate from each other, passing from the closed configuration illustrated in
Three angularly equidistant closure pins 9 and three thrust pins 10 extend orthogonally from the face of the moveable ring nut 7 turned towards the fixed ring nut 4. When the tubular body 1 is in its closed position, as shown in
To ensure an adequate sealing of the gas on the patient side, a membrane 11 is foreseen as shown in
The radially expandable anchorage guide for trocars according to the present invention is used in the following manner. At the beginning of the operation, during the insertion step of the trocar in the abdomen (for example), the anchorage guide according to the present invention is used as if it was a normal anchorage tube of the trocar to the abdominal wall. As shown in
If during the operation it becomes necessary to insert a trocar of greater size, it will suffice to open the valve 13 of
If during the operation it becomes necessary to remove an internal mass, the tubular body 1 may be divaricated to its maximum expansion so that, once the trocar and the seal valve is removed, an access channel is generated at the abdomen of sufficient dimensions for the passage of the mass to be removed.
To protect the walls of the access hole from possible contaminations (for example during the extraction of a tumoral mass in the absence of other types of protection), it is possible to insert within the divaricated sectors 1a a tube 14 (see
The valve 13 illustrated in
With particular reference to
The obturator of the valve 13 comprises an elastic membrane 25 having in rest position a toroidal shape with “omega” cross section, which is maintained tight on the inner walls of the control ring nut 21 and the fixed support 16, respectively, by means of expansion rings 26 and 27 of rectangular section, cut sideways to permit the flattening of the membrane against the walls of the control ring nut 21 and the fixed support 16 without gap.
Rotating the control ring nut 21 with respect to the support 16, the flexible arms 22 bend, making the projections 23 move from one groove 24 to the other, so that the elastic membrane 25, due to the torsion to which it is subjected, closes radially like a diaphragm. With an appropriate rotation angle of the control ring nut 21, it is possible to completely occlude the opening of the valve 13, or partially occlude it in case the cannula of a trocar must pass through said opening, tightening the membrane 25 around it and ensuring the gas seal and a consistent axial tightening.
The expandable anchorage guide according to the invention, in addition to having the diaphragm valve described above, may naturally be employed even in association with valves for trocars of another type, such as that illustrated in
The valve herein illustrated is of double seal type: i.e. it has a first elastic obturator 26 with flute mouth geometry which in rest is maintained in closed position by the pressure established in the body cavity. If an instrument is inserted, the flute mouth 26 obturator opens in correspondence with the longitudinal cuts, losing however the gas seal. A second obturator 27 is therefore foreseen, upstream of the first and formed by an elastic membrane with calibrated hole to make a seal on a particular instrument diameter. Normally, having to insert an instrument with different diameter, the second obturator block 27 fixed with bayonet coupling to the first obturator must be substituted. The double obturator scheme as illustrated allows instruments to be extracted and inserted without losing the seal, while, when the instrument is inserted, the second obturator ensures the seal by forcing radially against the instrument. The valve system described and illustrated in
Naturally, the tubular body 1 of the expandable anchorage guide according to the invention can be made in a different number of cylindrical sectors 1a with respect to that described and illustrated. In this manner, it is possible to better approximate the circular shape of the realized opening, through the cost of the instrument increases.
Variations and/or modifications can be made to the anchorage guide for trocars according to the present invention without departing from the protective scope of the invention as set forth in the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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FI2005A00082 | Apr 2005 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IT2006/000283 | 4/26/2006 | WO | 00 | 10/29/2007 |