The present invention relates to a surgical cutting instrument according to the preamble of Patent Claim 1.
Surgical cutting instruments for use in closed or endoscopic surgery are known from EP 0 557 004, for example. They consist of two tubes which move one inside the other and on which the so-called cutting head is located in the end area at one end, and a coupling for the connection to the drive turbine is located at the other end. The end parts are open or closed to the front and also have forwardly directed lateral openings through which irrigation fluid and, during the intervention, detached tissue is carried off.
The tubes of such instruments are of small diameter and great length, so as to permit interventions on the body without causing large surgical wounds. The intervention is normally performed with three openings in the tissue, but in the area of the tissue closed to the outside. A camera for observing the operating site on screen is inserted through the first opening into the body, the second opening provides access for the surgical cutting instruments, and a nozzle is introduced through the third opening. This nozzle is used to deliver irrigation fluid to the operating site where the actual intervention is taking place. This irrigation fluid is again removed from the body, together with the detached tissue, through the tubular centre of the cutting tool.
To enlarge the operating site, for example in interventions on the hip joint, femur and pelvis, an invasive distractor is used, or simple stretching effected, to the extent permitted by the tendons, ligaments, nerves and muscles. The camera is used to view the operating site on TV monitors during the operation.
On the one hand, the operating site is kept clean by the irrigation fluid, and, on the other hand, the parts detached by the cutting instrument are suctioned off from the operating site together with the irrigation fluid. Instruments are also commercially available which have a camera through which the irrigation fluid at the same time is brought to the operating site. The combined device of camera with delivery of fluid makes it possible to work with just two intervention sites. In many cases, the combination of camera with fluid delivery is not possible for practical reasons, for example in cases when technical operating reasons mean that the camera should be moved to another location in order to gain a quite specific view of the operating site.
As has been described above, the surgical cutting instruments to which the invention pertains are designed as long tubes. The irrigation fluid, together with the detached parts, is suctioned off through the inner, rotating tube. Important problems to be solved when producing such surgical cutting instruments are the production technique, the material selection, and the economic aspects. Suitable sterilizable material must be processed such that, with economic production, it is possible to obtain a cutting instrument that is as precise as possible. Normally, such instruments are made of expensive metal alloys.
To be able to operate as efficiently as possible with the surgical cutting instrument, it should have sharp cutting edges. The precision with which the cutters of the inner tube and the cutters of the outer tube approximate to one another is, together with the sharp edges of the cutters, crucial in determining how easily tissue can be detached. The most demanding requirement placed on the surgical cutting instrument is that, in one and the same intervention, different types of tissue structures have to be cut and removed. It is well known that a cutting tool for brittle and hard material is not readily suitable for cutting elastic, fibrous or plastically soft materials. This, however, is exactly what the surgeon wants if he is to perform the operation efficiently and in a short time.
This requirement is met by EP 0 557 044, for example, to the extent that the cutting edges of the inner tube are provided with sawtooth-like cutters. This has the effect that elastic tissue and hard tissue can be “grabbed”. Here, however, the problem with this type of design of the cutting edge still remains. The tool grabs at tissue and has a tendency to catch in the tissue. If the cutting instrument catches, it either comes to a standstill through the response of an overload coupling, or it tears out too much of the tissue to be treated.
Conventional surgical cutting tools are rounded at the front end. This is based on the belief that a rounded instrument can be more easily introduced into the tissue. It is also based, however, on the more simple production technique when a closure piece is to be arranged on a long tube. Methods such as thermoforming or flanging, etc., can be used. All these surgical cutting tools present on the market are inexact from the mechanical point of view and from the point of view of tolerances. The production techniques do not allow for anything else. In addition, material that can be thermoformed must be soft material, it cannot be brittle or hard. The inventor knows of no tools of this type which would be hardened.
In surgery, experience shows that this can have the following disadvantageous effects listed below:
The present invention now has the object of improving a surgical cutting instrument of the type mentioned at the outset in such a way that it easily satisfies the stringent conditions for in vivo use and provides the surgeon with a really sharp cutting instrument for all types of tissue and bones.
This object is achieved by a surgical cutting instrument having the features of Patent Claim 1. Further features according to the invention will become evident from the dependent claims, and their advantages are explained in the following description.
In the drawing:
The figures depict preferred illustrative embodiments which are explained in the description below.
A surgical cutting instrument according to the prior art of this invention consists of a fixed outer tube 10 (
In known designs, outer tube 10 and outer head part 11 are made as one piece. This applies also to the inner tube 20 and inner head part 21. Since, in clinical use, such instruments must be kept absolutely clean and sterile, special alloys are used for their production. The demanding technique of welding such materials and material thicknesses is the reason why the tubes are usually produced in one piece. The inventor has now developed methods which permit secure welding between outer tube 10 and outer head part 11 (
The cutting device according to the invention differs significantly from the commercially available products. The outer cutting edges 121′ and 121″ of the outer head part 11 form inwardly with respect to the tangent an acute angle α. The outer cutting edges 121′ and 121″ are thus situated directly on the internal diameter of the outer head part 11. To ensure that only a small cutting force is obtained for good cutting properties, the inner cutting edges 221′ and 221″ form outwardly with respect to the tangent an acute angle β, so that the inner cutting edges 221′ and 221″ are situated on the external diameter of the inner head part 21. If the inner head part 21 now turns in the clockwise direction (
The cutting instrument can be used in both directions of rotation and oscillating with exactly the same cutting property and cutting quality. Cutting instruments of smaller diameter can thus be used. This is unique and in particular affords considerable advantages in confined operating conditions. An example of this is an operation performed on the meniscus. For interventions on joints, the extent of the distraction can thus be kept smaller, which reduces the risk of overextension of tendons, muscles and nerves.
The shape of this cutting instrument permits use in many areas even where milling tools would traditionally be used. The outer cutting edges 121 (
As has been described above, conventional cutting tools are rounded at the front end. As has been mentioned above, in the proposed surgical cutting instrument the outer head part 11 and the inner head part 21 can be connected, after production, to the outer tube 10 and the inner tube 20, respectively. This permits other shapes and the use of other production techniques for forming the two head parts 11, 21.
The inventor proposes in particular a conical closure of the surgical cutting blade. As is shown in
The greatest novelty, made possible by recent production techniques and the choice of the right materials, is the formation of the inner head part with one, two or three inner openings 22 (
The outer tube head part 11 remains the same in all configurations of the inner tube head parts 21. Each inner opening, whether one, two or three are present, has in each case two inner cutting edges 221′, 221″. These are also always of the same design, so that work can be carried out in both directions of rotation using the cutting instrument with one inner opening (
In practical use, it is necessary also to fit a milling head 223 (
The design of the milling head 223 as a cap, together with the fact that the proposed surgical cutting tool works with extremely small clearances, has the advantage that no soft parts are wound round the milling head 223. This is one of the great problems that conventional milling tools often have in this application, especially if the outer head part 11 is designed so that the milling head 223 is absolutely free to the front. As is shown in
Trials clearly showed that a far greater cutting performance can be achieved at the same speed of rotation of the driven inner tube 20. It was also found that with the tools equipped according to the invention, in particular also with the inner head part 21 with milling head 223 (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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01243/04 | Jul 2004 | CH | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB05/52425 | 7/20/2005 | WO | 6/13/2007 |