1. Field of Invention:
This invention relates generally to materials handling apparatus and an improved method of manufacture of same. More specifically, this invention relates to an integrated system of pockets and baskets for facilitating sterilization, storage and presentation of surgical instruments.
1. Prior Art:
A variety of sterilization cassettes exist with different shapes and styles of pockets and retainers to hold various surgical instruments securely during sterilization. Where possible, some surgical instruments are single use, arriving from the manufacture in a sterile package to be opened during surgery and then thrown away. There are many instruments used in modern surgery, however, that are delicate, complex and expensive and must be sterilized and re-used. A common practice is also to present all of the instruments to be used in a given surgery to the surgeon in a common cassette or carrier. Holding the instruments securely during sterilization and transport is usually accomplished by sandwiching them between a deformable member with sterilant ingress ports and a top enclosure with mating sterilant ingress ports. Once a pre-arranged cassette is loaded with the correct instruments for the desired surgery and sterilized, the cassette is typically wrapped in a sterile gauze material and stored until required transportation to the next operating room. It is unwrapped, the top enclosure and deformable member removed and presented to the surgical team. These sterilization trays suffer from handling damage and relatively quick obsolescence and are expensive to maintain.
The myriad of such cassettes or carriers can be broken into two major types each with their own advantages and drawbacks. The first and earliest of these were sheet metal trays with brackets riveted into holes stamped onto the bottom of the tray and weep ports punched through the bottom of the sheet metal tray to allow for egress of the sterilizing condensate. Side walls are formed up from the bottom blank, overlapped and riveted forming a secure lower box. An example of this type is shown in
The two biggest drawbacks to the stamped sheet metal case are the inherent weight and the fact that it very difficult and expensive to punch holes in sheet metal with conventional punch and die clearance leaving no burrs or sharp edges around the openings or edges of tray. Some instruments are fairly large and heavy and their packaging is limited by the weight that the technician can handle safely. As mentioned above, once the tray full of instruments has been sterilized, it is desirable to have it wrapped in sterile gauze and stored awaiting transport to an operating room and presentation to the surgical team. Any sharp edges or corners can pierce the sterile gauze and require re-sterilization before use
A number of cassettes have been fabricated from high temperature plastics molded or vacuum formed in an attempt to reduce these two problems. The plastic cases are inherently lighter in weight and can be molded or formed essentially burr and sharp edge free. An example of this type is shown in
Continued exposure to high temperatures and humidity, essentially an autoclave environment, however, can cause deterioration and fracturing of some plastics over time. The biggest problem with the plastic carriers, however, is the relatively low coefficient of heat transfer. As mention above, the drying time is dramatically impacted by the case's ability to conduct the heat away from the instruments.
An object of the present invention is to provide a container for sterilizing, storing, transporting and presenting surgical instruments of different sizes and shapes in a lightweight cassette with a high heat transfer coefficient and formed with no sharp edges or burrs. Another object of the present invention is to provide a cassette that retains the instruments securely during processing, but allows the surgical team to remove them readily when required. A further object is for the instrument retaining case to be economical to revise or replace, facilitating different instruments when the procedure changes, the sequence of presentation changes or the tray is damaged in handling. The case should also contain basket shaped pockets to hold small instruments such as screws. The sterilization case is made in a vertically oriented matrix format and can be formed by-molding, extrusion or as a combination of interlocking rectangular members. The matrix can have as many or as few members as the individual surgical procedure demands and can be made of various materials. The matrix can have the non-weight bearing portions of the interlocking members removed except for the structural connections resulting in strong lightweight load carrying structures.
In order that the invention may be more fully understood it will now be described by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
The same reference numbers are used to refer to the same or similar parts in the various views.
In order that the invention may be more fully understood, it will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings. The improvement in the method of manufacture involves replacing the stamped sheet metal case as shown in
Weep ports 16 required in the bottoms of pockets 12 of the molded plastic case 10 or the stamped sheet metal case 10 with brackets 18 are no longer required as the matrix concept is a series of through holes connected with a matrix web.
Instruments 14 are retained in sterilization case with matrix base 10 with a deformable member 22 shown in phantom lines in
Graphic outlines of the instrument can be placed on outer wrapper 24 adjacent to the pocket 12, on a separate plate, not shown, or on the under side of top enclosure 20 if present, to assist in identifying the proper tool for the appropriate stage of the procedure.
A matrix of rectangular interlocking members is formed either by molding or extrusion as shown in
After case 10 is loaded with required instruments 14, deformable member 22 and top enclosure 20 are installed. To assist the surgical team in getting the correct instrument in the correct sequence, Graphic outlines of the proper placement within the matrix may be placed on a separate plate as cutouts, stamped on the under side of the cover or noted on the outer wrapper.
The assembly is subjected to an autoclave type environment where steam is pumped through top enclosure 20 and deformable member 22, around instruments 14 and out the bottom of the open matrix. After sterilization, the assembly is allowed to cool in a controlled environment and wrapped in a sterile gauze or muslin material and stored until required. The assembly is then transported to the operating room where it is unwrapped and top enclosure 20 and deformable member 22 removed and instruments 14 presented to the surgical team.
This sterilization case with matrix base 10 may also be used in a filtered case with no top enclosure 20 and open bottom, as a filtered case with filters 24 and holders mounted on the bottom of outer wrapper 28 and the under side of top enclosure 20, and with top enclosure 20 with filter 24 and a gasket as shown in
The preceding descriptions are for illustrative purposes and are not intended to limit the scope of this invention. The scope of the invention should be determined by the appended claims rather than by the specific examples given. Manufacturing techniques described herein are well known to those skilled in the arts of mass production but have not been embraced for this particular application and hold forth significant benefits for improving the cost effectiveness of these critical and rapidly escalating costs of modern surgery.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60536657 | Jan 2004 | US |