Spinal surgery and spinal implants have advanced considerably over the last half-century, resulting in an increased number of fusion surgeries performed each year. The current generation of spinal implants and procedures are designed to allow the safe application of spinal fixation with a great amount of customization to accommodate significant patient to patient variation in anatomy and alignment. However, in some respects, the flexibility allowed by current designs sacrifices the ability of these implants to control spinal alignment. In fusion surgery, achieving the correct spinal alignment is critical to achieve improved patient outcomes. The current state of the art use of rod and screw constructs to control spinal alignment involves one of two techniques. The first involves placing rods that are contoured to the patient's spine and then manipulating the rods by bending them or compressing/distracting on screws to effect alignment. The other technique involves creating rods from a preoperative plan that are custom shaped to the patient's desired alignment and then bringing the patients spine into alignment by reducing the screws to the rods in surgery.
The first minimally invasive surgeries were generally limited to discectomies and fusions at one or two vertebral levels. Rod fixation for correcting spinal deformities were more problematic for minimally invasive techniques due to the need to introduce a long, curved rod spanning multiple vertebral levels. Early techniques were developed for minimally invasive lumbar fixation using shorter curved rods that can easily be placed over a short segment of the spine. Attempts to expand these minimally invasive techniques to larger fusions has been limited as the geometry of the human spine necessitates a rod contour that cannot be introduced using a minimally invasive technique. To date, current rods, whether they are hand bent or pre-contoured, are designed to match the desired spinal curvature and thus are limited in their application of minimally invasive surgery.
Instrumentation for minimally invasive fusion systems include modifications of the standard pedicle screws and rods that allow them to be placed through small incisions in the skin. Placing a connecting rod through the tops of the screws requires that the screws line up with the shape of the rod that is being placed. This requirement for precise alignment has limited the application of minimally invasive techniques to fusions of only a small number of levels. In recent years, computer aided pre-surgical planning systems have allowed greater precision. This precision stems from the ability to develop a detailed pre-operative plan and the ability to precisely place the implants according to that plan. This technology has expanded the capabilities of both standard and minimally invasive techniques by allowing the minimally invasive placement of screws and rods from the lower thoracic spine, across the lumbar spine to the pelvis. Even though the pre-surgical planning systems have addressed one of the primary limitations of minimally invasive deformity surgery, the current procedures are still limited by the curved shape of the rod.
In a typical procedure, the rod is pre-shaped or is manually bent at the time of surgery to a lordotic curve that matches the desired lordotic shape of the spine. This, however, can create extreme difficulty in placing the rod, particularly for correcting an extremely deformed spine. Another problem is that bending the spinal rod inherently weakens the rod to some degree at the bend points. A further difficulty arises from a rod bent to a lordosis matching the spine in which the rod is too curved to pass easily through the soft tissue of the patient when attempting to perform procedures spanning several vertebral levels. In cases that include fusions of multiple levels, particularly those spanning the lower lumbar spine, a minimally invasive insertion of the rods is not possible and necessitates an opening of the spine with a large incision. Although pre-planning screw and rod placements and advances in rod bending techniques have greatly improved spinal surgery, there is still a significant need for a spinal construct and surgical technique that can overcome the detriments noted above.
The technology of the present disclosure differs substantially from the pre-existing techniques as it involves using rods that are of standard dimensions and controlling the shape of the spine by controlling the relationship between the spine and rods by a combination of screw placement and angular control of the spine with implants that are rigid in the sagittal plane. This technique first involves creating a computerized 3-dimensional model of spines desired shape. Then preexisting rods are added to the model of the spine. The variation between the two is bridged by precise screw placement. This technique works for longer fusion constructs of multiple levels. Shorter constructs require the screws and rods to interact with each other at precise angles to establish the desired angular relationships. This requires the use of implants that are constrained in the sagittal plane to control the sagittal alignment for short constructs. Larger constructs may have their alignment controlled both by a combination of screws placement as well as fixed angular relationships between the rods and screws.
One difference between the method disclosed herein and current techniques is that the proposed system uses rods of a predefined shape and plans the screw depth and angular relationship to the rods. The goals of the system are to provide control of the patient's spinal alignment in fusion surgery for both long and short fusion constructs utilizing standardized (not patient specific implants) in both minimally invasive and open applications. Current rod/screw constructs are also limited in their application of minimally invasive surgery in long constructs that span the lumbar spine.
Accordingly, in one aspect of the disclosure, a bone screw for fixation in a vertebral body of a spine is provided that comprises an elongated shank having bone engaging threads and defining a longitudinal axis, and a rod-engaging portion connected to one end of the elongated shank. The rod-engaging portion defines a channel for receiving a spinal rod therein, wherein the channel is defined at a non-perpendicular angle relative to the longitudinal axis of the shank. In particular, the channel can be defined at an angle of between 5° and 45°. A kit can be provided that includes a plurality of such screws with different non-perpendicular angle so that the surgeon can select an optimum screw for a particular vertebral level.
In another aspect, another bone screw for fixation in a vertebral body of a spine includes a rod-engaging portion that is connected to the elongated shank so that the longitudinal axis of the shank is not colinear with a vertical axis through the rod-engaging portion. In particular, the longitudinal axis can be oriented at an angle relative to the vertical axis of between 5° and 45°. A kit can be provided that includes a plurality of such screws with different angles so that the surgeon can select an optimum screw for a particular vertebral level.
In another feature of the present disclosure, a bone screw for fixation in a vertebral body of a spine is provided that includes an elongated shank having bone engaging threads and defining a longitudinal axis, a rod-engaging portion defining a channel for receiving a spinal rod therein oriented perpendicular to the vertical axis, and an intermediate portion connecting the rod-engaging portion to the elongated shank. The intermediate portion has a height along the longitudinal axis of between 0.5 mm and 30 mm. A kit can be provided that includes a plurality of such screws, each having different heights so that the surgeon can select an optimum screw for a particular vertebral level.
The kits can include an elongated rod defining a fixed curved contour adapted for percutaneous introduction along a patient's spine. The fixed curved contour will ordinarily be offset from the patient's spine by different height and angular offsets at different vertebral levels. The surgeon can select among the screws described above to achieve coronal and sagittal correction of the patient's spine. The devices, kits and methods disclosed herein can be used for a wide range of spinal procedures and across any number of vertebral levels. Thus, while the present disclosure demonstrates the use of the devices, kits and methods in the correction of scoliosis, this disclosure is merely for illustrative purposes. The same devices, kits and methods can be used for shorer constructs, spanning only one or two vertebral levels.
For the purposes of promoting an understanding of the principles of the disclosure, reference will now be made to the embodiments illustrated in the drawings and described in the following written specification. It is understood that no limitation to the scope of the disclosure is thereby intended. It is further understood that the present disclosure includes any alterations and modifications to the illustrated embodiments and includes further applications of the principles disclosed herein as would normally occur to one skilled in the art to which this disclosure pertains.
The present disclosure addresses these problems by providing a rod system incorporating a novel rod that has a lesser lordotic curve that can be easily passed under the tissues in a minimally invasive fashion. This concept of a rod designed to specifically allow minimally invasive placement in the treatment of long lumbar fusions is demonstrated by the rod 10′ in the X-ray image of
The present disclosure provides devices and methods to accommodate the lesser curved pre-bent rod to the patient's anatomy. Thus, as depicted in
When placing a rod with a decreased lordotic bend, there is a risk of inducing a flat back deformity in the patient's spinal alignment. To allow the lumbar spine to achieve a proper anterior offset and suitable lordotic angles, precise placement of the pedicle screws and a modified pedicle screw is provided according to the present disclosure. In particular, in order to accept the lesser curved spinal rod 10′, the present disclose contemplates bone fasteners, such as bone screws 12a-12e, having a lengthened intermediate portion between the bone-engaging threads and the rod-receiving tulip portion, as shown in
The selection of the bone screws is preferably made in the planning stage, and most preferably using software operable to evaluate X-rays, CT scans and other advanced imaging techniques capable of accurately displaying the patient's spinal anatomy, in order to determine an optimum spinal construct. The software can assist in determining the spinal curvature, an acceptable curvature of the spinal rod for simplified introduction, and ultimately the amount of offset at each level of instrumentation—i.e., the gap between the reduced curvature rod and the desired position of the spinal level. The software can then assist in selecting the bone screw with the optimum height H for each level. The goal of this screw selection is that the tulip 14 of each bone screw is exactly aligned along the path of introduction of the reduced curvature spinal rod 10′ so that the rod is solidly seated within each tulip by the time the rod reaches its caudal extent during percutaneous insertion. With this feature of the bone screws, the entire construct can be designed prior to the surgery, with the curvature of the rod being defined in the planning stage. The rod can then be pre-bent or pre-formed, as described above, and provided with a pre-determined collection of bone screws 10′.
The tulip portion 14 of the bone screw can be of any desired configuration, including fixed, uni-planar and poly-axial. The intermediate portion 18 can be uniform with the outer dimensions of the tulip portion along the extended height H and can merge into the threaded shank 20 in a conventional manner for bone screws, thereby preserving the structural integrity of the bone screw.
In another feature of the present disclosure, a bone screw is provided that optimally creates a pre-defined sagittal relationship between the bone screw and the fixation rod. As described above, the rod 10′ of the present disclosure has a fixed pre-determined curved contour that is configured for optimal correction of a patient's spinal deformity. Since the rod has a fixed contour, the interface between the rod and a particular vertebral body may not lend itself to the strict perpendicular interface required by prior fixed bone screws. In prior spinal constructs, poly-axial screws have been provided to address this angular misalignment, albeit at the cost of coronal correction. According to one aspect of the present disclosure, a bone screw 30 is provided as shown in
The angled channel feature of the screw 30 can be integrated into an enhanced height screw, such as the screws 12b-12e described above. It can be appreciated that range of angles can be more limited for bone screws having a greater height H since the angular orientation of the rod relative the vertebral body would be less dramatic where the rod is farther away from the true curvature of the patient's anatomy.
As with the variable height feature of the bone screws, the angle of the channel 36 can be determined in the pre-operative planning. Once the shape of the fixation rod and the location of the bone screws is known, the desired angle of the rod relative to the bone screw at each vertebral level can be determined. The planning software can thus assist in the selection of the bone screw having the optimum height H and optimum angle of the channel 36. The planning software can also assist in optimization of both height and angle to control lordosis or kyphosis in a fusion construct. Providing a bone screw with an optimum sagittal angle allows the screw to be introduced at a precise predetermined optimum angle with respect to vertebral body or endplates. Subtly adjusting the angle between the pedicle screws and vertebra allows for fine tuning of the spinal alignment. This is an important feature of precise control of sagittal alignment with pedicle screws that is not possible with the prior art technique of placing screws at an uncontrolled angle.
In another embodiment, a screw 45, shown in
It is contemplated that the bone screws 30, 45 accommodate angular deviations between the rod-engaging portion and the rod from the conventional perpendicular orientation. More specifically, the angular deviations are in the sagittal plane to accommodate the tulip configuration of the rod-engaging portions 34, 48. These “sagittally-biased” screws can be provided in several standard angles to account for the majority of spinal deformities. In contrast to conventional poly-axial screws, the screws of the present disclosure are rigid which facilitates sagittal alignment of the spine as the screws are tightened onto the contoured rod. Thus, the spinal construct disclosed herein achieves both coronal and sagittal correction of the spine in a minimally-invasive percutaneous procedure.
It should be understood that the bone screws disclosed herein can be used in a wide range of spinal constructs. For instance, the screws 12b-12e, 30 or 45 may be beneficial in a shorter construct with shorter rods. The same planning process can be used to assign a proper curvature to the shorter rod and to select the bone screws having the necessary height H, angled channel 36 and/or angled shank 47. These bone screws can be used with any shaped rod—straight or curved.
One differentiating feature of the rod 10′ and bone screws 12b-12e, 30 or 45 is that the planning to achieve alignment of the spine is based on knowing the exact geometry of the rod ahead of time and using this known rod geometry as the foundation of the spinal alignment. This approach also allows selecting the appropriate bone screws ahead of time, secure in the knowledge that if the screws are implanted according to the predetermined plan the reduced curvature rod 10′ can be easily introduced percutaneously into all of the rod-engaging portions of the bone screws. For instance, in a method for treating degenerative lumbar fusions, the pedicle screws of the present disclosure can be placed with a defined orientation relative to the vertebral endplates and with a pre-planned degree of bias. The rod can be passed percutaneously beneath the soft tissue and navigated into the tulips of the pedicle screws. Tightening the set screws corrects the spine to the desired segmental lordosis. As needed, the screws can “walk” along the rod to move the axis of rotation anteriorly prior to tightening.
The implant procedure starts with modeling the patient's spine using known software. A model of the modified rod disclosed herein is overlaid onto the spine model. As explained above, the rod has a fixed contour that is configured to facilitate percutaneous placement. The rod contour can be determined based on the dimensions of the patient's spine, as described above. The rod model is aligned with the spine model to achieve the desired correction, with the understanding that the excursion or offset from the rod to a particular vertebral body will vary along the length of the rod. Models of the bone screws are overlaid onto the models of the spine and rod, bridging the space between rod and spine and oriented at an optimum sagittal angle for proper fixation within the bone. The height from the rod to the bone surface and the angle of the threaded shank relative to the rod are determined and this information is used to select a bone screw modified as disclosed herein. The selected bone screws are precisely placed in the spine with the rod-engaging portion, or tulip, exactly aligned to accept the fixed contour rod. The rod is passed percutaneously into the aligned tulips and tightened onto the bone screws in a conventional manner.
It is contemplated that the rod 10′ and the bone screws 12, 30 and 45 described herein are formed of medical grade materials suitable for use in spinal implant constructs. The rod and bone screws can be manufacture in a conventional manner for the fabrication of spinal implants.
The present disclosure should be considered as illustrative and not restrictive in character. It is understood that only certain embodiments have been presented and that all changes, modifications and further applications that come within the spirit of the disclosure are desired to be protected.
This application is a utility filing form and claims priority to co-pending U.S. Provisional No. 62/815,669, filed on Mar. 8, 2019, and to co-pending U.S. Provisional No. 62/914,424, filed on Oct. 12, 2019. The disclosures of both provisionals, along with the appendices filed with the provisional applications, are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62815669 | Mar 2019 | US | |
62914424 | Oct 2019 | US |