The present invention relates to an improved, hands-on, physical simulator for the demonstration and/or practice of major surgical operations on the internal tissues, organs and blood vessels of human or animal bodies.
Major operations include, but are not limited to, those involving entry into the cranium, chest cavity, abdominal cavity, deep planes of the neck, or the deep intermuscular planes of the extremities. Major operations commonly require surgical dissection of structures within the body, retraction of tissues, organs and vessels, surgical manipulation of internal body structures, using hands or instruments, and the repair, removal or rearrangement of the internal anatomy by the surgeon. Other major operations are carried out by endovascular techniques, that is, entry into the great vessels of the chest or abdomen by threading a catheter through a femoral or brachial artery. There is a strong need for surgical trainees to learn and practice the performance of such major operations. However, opportunities of gain sufficient clinical experience with these procedures are limited in current surgical training. The existence of a simulated body with operable tissues would permit a valuable expansion of operative surgical training. Some examples of major operations include:
The operations listed above, while not all-inclusive, indicate the scale and complexity of operation that we would consider “major.” Such operations as tracheotomy, placement of a central venous catheter, chest tube insertion, diagnostic peritoneal lavage or pericardiocentesis, would not, in this definition, be considered “major.” Simulators exist for the performance of these latter procedures and for cholecystectomy and inguinal hernia repair. Such simulators do not contain anatomically correct, surgical environments in which organs and tissues must be mobilized and retracted in order to visualize the area requiring operative repair or resection. In this respect, they are unrealistic, and permit practice of only a fraction of a major surgical operation.
Crudely formed, single layer, silicone rubber gallbladders, stomachs, bowels and blood vessels, without significant anatomic detail and without accurate anatomic environments, already exist on the marketplace and are sold by Simulab and other companies. The prior art contains several references to hands-on simulators.
The simulators described in United States Patent Publications 2004/0126746, 2005/0026125, 20050064378, and 2006/0232664 are considered the most relevant to the present invention, but appear to be completely composed of various formulations of silicone rubber. They do not have the features described in the disclosure below.
Similarly, representations of the internal anatomy of the body molded in a plastic or hard rubber, without the elasticity, deformability, or anatomic details characteristic of biologic tissues lack the unique features of the invention of the present disclosure.
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, the simulator may include a molded or sculpted shell consisting of coated and structurally reinforced open or closed cell foam, or similar materials, in the form of a human or animal body surface, with representations of the muscular, bony, and fascial layers of the body wall. Bonding and/or isolation materials may be used to join or to separate areas, layers, or planes of the body wall.
The entire apparatus is made of materials, as described below that mimic the individual mechanical properties of the several types of biologic tissue, including the skin, subcutaneous tissue, muscle, fascia, solid and hollow organs, glands, arteries, veins and nerves comprising a mammalian body.
The anatomic elements that comprise the internal structures of the simulated body form a physical, hands-on surgical simulator that can be used to demonstrate or practice major operations, including those done by open, endoscopic or endovascular techniques.
The anatomic parts that make up the simulator of the present invention are realistic representations of the three-dimensional internal anatomy of the animal or human body. Unlike the structure of prior simulators, the anatomic structures of the present invention have been sculpted, molded or carved from open or closed cell foam rubber of varying density, elasticity and load-deformation to match the physical characteristics of the specific, simulated organ or tissue. In a preferred embodiment, the material will be viscoelastic (memory), polyurethane foam. While a variety of closed or open cell foam materials, including latex foam, silicone foam rubber or other materials may be suitable for various parts of the simulator, most anatomic elements of the simulator will be made of viscoelastic, polyurethane foam.
The widely-varying density, texture and load-deformability of actual human organs and tissues, whether normal or diseased, are stimulated by varying the density of the foam rubber and/or by treatment with pigments, sealants or impregnating materials to represent the physical properties of the specific organ or tissue within the simulator.
The open or closed cell foam of any organ, tissue or blood vessel may be, in whole or in part, treated with a variety of sealants, pigments or impregnating, glues, hardening agents, solids or gels, so that the textures and appearances of a large variety of normal or pathologic human organs and tissues can be simulated. The sealants may be, by way of example, silicone rubber, vinyl, latex or other high tech sealants. The foam may be impregnated or coated with materials such as plaster, fiberglass resin, plastic, epoxy or other, similar hardening agents.
Hollow organs and structures, including the trachea, esophagus, stomach and intestines, as well as the gallbladder and urinary bladder and the associated ducts are composed of two layers: an inner layer of viscoelastic, memory foam, representing the mucosa and submucosa, and an outer layer or coating, representing the muscular layers of the visceral wall. In the preferred embodiment, the coating for the viscoelastic foam will be silicone or latex. Acrylic, vinyl or polyurethane-based coatings may be used to provide stiffness to the trachea and larynx.
The interstitial, or connecting, tissues, the loose, fibrous tissues filling the spaces between major muscle groups, organs and blood vessels represent the planes through which most surgical dissection is typically performed. In the simulator of the present invention, interstitial tissues are represented using one or more layers of non-woven, thin, fibrous fabric or cellulosic fibers, or non-cellulosic fibers preferably of poly (ethylene terephthalate) similar in structure to “BOUNCE” fabric softener sheets from The Procter & Gamble Company.
Membranes that are important to surgical operations, such as the peritoneum, pericardium and pleura, as well as the investing membranes of the brain, are represented in the simulator of the present invention, by one or more thin sheets or layers of viscoelastic foam material, and/or random fiber-direction fabric. These materials may be coated or impregnated with pigments, silicone or latex, or with other materials, to achieve a realistic appearance, elasticity, flexibility, texture and surgical dissectability.
Hollow, watertight, simulated vascular channels are molded into the correct anatomic position of the thoracic and abdominal aorta, the subclavian arteries, the carotid arteries, the iliac and renal arteries, the superior and inferior mesenteric arteries, the brachial and femoral arteries. In addition, hollow, watertight simulated vascular channels are molded into the chambers of the heart and into the parenchyma or “flesh” of the lungs, spleen, liver and pancreas. Similar vascular channels are molded into the anatomic position of the superior and inferior vena cava, the subclavian vein, the veins of the upper and lower extremities, and the renal, mesenteric and portal veins. These vascular channels constitute a closed pathway for artificial blood. The hollow, tubular lumens of the larger vascular channels may be reversibly connected to the corresponding vascular channels within organs. This reversible connection of the blood vessels of the organs to the major arteries and veins is accomplished by hollow, soft, tubular connectors, capable of forming a watertight seal between one blood vessel and another.
The watertight vascular channels of the simulator may be filled with simulated liquid blood, and may be connected to a pressurizing or a circulating pump. The pressure, flow and volume of the circulating artificial blood may be measured at various points within the simulator vasculature by pressure or flow sensors. In the preferred embodiment, the sensors may transmit data by wired or wireless means to a logic circuit and a display, which show the blood pressure, blood volume and blood flow of the simulated “patient.” A logic circuit can be developed, which shows the response of the blood pressure and flow to maneuvers such as operative control of hemorrhage, clamping the aorta or manually massaging the simulated heart. The ducts of major organs or glands, such as the liver or pancreas are also hollow, and are coated or sealed to be watertight. In a preferred embodiment, these major ducts will be filled with simulated body fluids, such as imitation bile or pancreatic juice.
The physically simulated organs, blood vessels, glands, ducts and tissues of the simulator of the present invention may be represented in normal or pathologically altered forms. Anatomic abnormalities caused by trauma, inflammation, neoplasm or degeneration can be simulated. For example, traumatic injuries to the internal structures of the body such as gunshot wounds, traumatic ruptures of major blood vessels, or rupture of the liver or spleen are represented by realistic patterns of disruption of the anatomic integrity of the specific tissues, vessels or organs.
Because of the vascular channels coursing through the tissues and organs, simulated traumatic disruption of the organs or vessels will be associated with simulated hemorrhage from the blood vessels in the damaged area. Thus, for example, in the simulator of the present invention, a high velocity gunshot of the thigh is not just simulated as a hole in the surface of the extremity, issuing blood. Instead, such a wound is stimulated by the destruction of the skin, subcutaneous tissues, the muscle tissues and fascia and the blood vessels of the extremity. With such a model, both the first aid measures for hemorrhage control and the operative management of such wounds can be realistically practiced.
Inflammatory, degenerative and neoplastic alteration of the tissue of the human body is accompanied by characteristic changes in the texture, size, uniformity, elasticity, density and shape of the affected organs and tissues. This phenomenon can be illustrated by a few specific examples:
In the simulator of the present invention, such inflammatory, neoplastic or degenerative diseases are represented by changes in the size, texture, elasticity, uniformity, density, coloration and shape of the simulated organ, vessel or tissue. Abnormal organ shapes can be molded, on the basis of sculpted primary models, in viscoelastic foam of varying density and load deformation. Tumors or inflammatory changes in tissue texture and elasticity are simulated by the impregnation or coating of the viscoelastic foam. For example, a hard, cancerous mass in the thyroid gland or the pancreas is stimulated by the impregnation of hardening agents into the cells of the viscoelastic foam in the area of simulated tumor formation. A cancerous tumor of the colon is simulated by sculpting or molding the abnormality in the wall of the colon and impregnating the “cancerous” area with polyurethane, or another liquid material that hardens upon drying. Appendicitis is stimulated by representing the tip of the appendix as abnormally increased in diameter, stained red with pigment and made unnaturally firm and rubbery by impregnating and/or coating the structure with latex or silicone rubber. Atherosclerotic degeneration of an artery can be simulated by molding an artery with a narrowed lumen out of foam rubber and locally impregnating the foam in the narrowed area with plaster or acrylic. Many other examples could be given, but the crucial techniques are disclosed: of molding viscoelastic foam into the desired shape and then altering its physical properties, in areas of pathologic alteration, to match the desired pathology, by various coatings and impregnations.
The reversible attachment of various organs such as the liver or spleen to the main blood vessels of the simulator is accomplished by soft, hollow, tubular connecting pieces or hollow dowels. These connectors mimic, as closely as possible, the physical characteristics of the simulated blood vessels into which they insert. Thus, normal organs can be reversibly replaced with organs reflecting various pathologic changes. Those organs, blood vessels, glands and tissues that have been cut, sutured, stapled or otherwise damaged, as part of the simulated operative procedure, can be replaced at the end of the practice operation through the use of these connectors. Entire anatomic regions, for example, the undersurface of the liver, gallbladder, bile ducts, pancreas and duodenum, can be molded as a single block and reversibly attached to the infrastructure of the simulated body as a unit.
Using hollow, connecting pieces or other tubular connectors, actual animal tissues, for example, blood vessels or hollow viscera may be integrated into the anatomic infrastructure of the simulator. Segments of cadaveric human or animal blood vessels, hollow viscera or other tissues can be integrated into the architecture of the simulated body so that the trainee surgeon can practice techniques on real biologic tissue within a physically simulated human body interior.
The open-cell, viscoelastic foam constituting the internal structure of the simulator described above is fully dissectible using normal surgical instruments, such as scalpels, scissors, clamps and forceps. The simulator is suitable for training in open, endoscopic or endovascular surgical procedures, using standard instruments and techniques. Moreover, because the tissues and organs of the simulator are composed of materials that mimic the texture, load-deformability and elasticity of biologic tissues, the internal structures of the simulator can be subjected to the maneuvers employed during a variety of surgical operations on all of the major internal organs, tissues and large blood vessels, including maneuvers such as sewing and stapling.
Unlike any prior, physical, hands-on simulator, the simulator of the present invention permits the demonstration and/or repeated practice of the following operative maneuvers that are components of many surgical operations:
Examples of aspects of the invention are illustrated in
The simulated stomach A, seen in cross-section in
In
In
In
A pressure sensor D is provided in the wall of a major vessel, in this case the left subclavian artery, and a flow sensor D is provided in the wall of the descending aorta. Outputs of the pressure sensor and the flow sensor, are connected to a monitor I.
This application claims priority on the basis of Provisional patent application No. 61/039,202, filed Mar. 25, 2008.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61039202 | Mar 2008 | US |