Endoscope optics of having several housing parts are protected by a hermetic housing against entry of water, and in particular, also against entry of water vapor, and accordingly can be steam-sterilized before being used in surgery without the steam fogging optical surfaces.
In part, the housing consists of an elongated tube receiving an image guide and being sealed at the distal end by a hermetically sealed window. Housing parts are connected to the proximal tube end and they receive, within an inner space, further devices such as ocular lenses, pertinent, hermetically sealed windows, and the like.
The connections between the housing parts must be hermetic. Therefore, as regards known endoscopes of this type, the housing parts are metallic and welded or soldered to each other. The windows, which are parts of the enclosing housing, also are soldered into place. Effective hermetic junctions can only be made in this manner, namely by welding or soldering, whereas such junctions can be implemented adhesively only with great difficulties, if at all.
This restriction to metals for the housing parts represents a drawback.
The objective of the present invention is to make possible endoscope optics of the above type while making use of plastic housing parts.
In the present invention, the housing parts may be plastic and still be hermetically joined to the remaining housing parts. This objective is attained by coating a connection site with metal, thus allowing solder to be deposited onto it for hermeticity. As a result, a hermetic housing is feasible using plastic parts, offering lower costs and more latitude in construction.
Advantageously, the plastic is PEEK (polyether-etherketone). This plastic has been found to be practical for years in endoscope engineering using non-hermetic parts and is easily metallized.
In the shown embodiment, the image guide 2 is an optical image guide and is viewed on the other side of its proximal end through an ocular lens element 4.
The optical system described so far, above, is mounted in a hermetically sealed housing. This housing is fitted at its distal end zone with an elongated tube 5, which for the sake of mechanical strength, is made of metal and which is sealed at its distal end by a window 6. This window is fitted at its rim with a metal coating 7 shown for illustration in a much exaggerated size in the drawing and by means of this coating the window is hermetically soldered to the tube 5.
The tube 5 is affixed to a middle housing part 8 which in turn is affixed in a terminal housing part 9.
The two housing parts 8 and 9 are made of PEEK (polyether-etherketone), a plastic widely used with endoscope optics. At its cylindrical rest surface 10, the housing part 8 comprises a metal coating 11 which is hermetically soldered to the metal tube 5.
In the present embodiment, the housing part 8 is inserted into a borehole 12 of the housing part 9 at the connection site between the housing parts 8 and 9. At that connection site, the borehole 9 comprises a metal coating 13 and the outer surface of the housing part 8 comprises a metal coating 14. Again these two metal coatings are hermetically soldered to each other. All metal coatings shown in
The terminal housing part 9 is fitted at its proximal end with a metal coating 15 on the inside surface of a terminal borehole. A proximal window 16 is inserted at this site, which is fitted with a metal coating 7 just like the distal window 6. The metal coatings 7 and 15 are hermetically soldered to each other.
As a result, the optic elements 3, 2, 4 are enclosed by a housing which is constituted by the tubular parts 5, 8, 9 and the two terminal windows 6 and 16, and which is soldered to be hermetically sealed at all connection sites.
In the embodiment of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 009 383.0 | Feb 2004 | DE | national |