The present invention relates to a surgical endoscope including a stem and a branched tube which branches sideways from the stem.
Medical endoscopes fitted with a laterally branched tube are used in many applications. Therein one operational duct runs within the stem as far as latter's proximal end whereas another operational duct deviates into a laterally branched tube. In many such endoscopes, the optics is housed in the straight operational duct and a surgical instrument, such as flexible pincers, a catheter or the like is housed within the laterally branched operational duct.
An endoscope of this kind is disclosed in the German patent document DE 103 51 185 B4. Therein, an operational duct runs in the straight stem made of a rigid material. The laterally branched tube houses a flexible fiber optics. The branched tube is rendered flexible by means of a very complex, two layer design comprising an elastically bending metal bellows on the inside and an elastic hose on the outside. The flexible branched tube of this design is made entirely of elastically resilient materials which, following the bending of the branched tube, would elastically return into their initial positions. To assure durable deformation, the branched tube comprises within it a complex spiral means itself made of an elastically resilient material.
The known, durably deformed branched tube offers the advantage that its free end may be moved into an arbitrary position, namely—in the known design—the advantage being to move the ocular mounted on the end of the branched tube into a convenient position of observation. The bending properties are adjusted in a manner that the branched tube is manually adjustable, i.e., that the surgeon may bend it into any desired shaped during surgery.
However, this known design also incurs the drawback of a multilayer construction and of the susceptibility of the outer elastic surface, because of inadequate sealing relative to the outside, allowing the penetration of moisture and water vapor at least into the metal bellows space allowed by this design of the state of the art. Such endoscopes are difficult to clean and disinfect.
The German patent document DE 197 56 629 A1 discloses a surgical endoscope fitted with a laterally branched tube subtending an angle to the endoscope stem. Using appropriate machinery, the branched tube may be manufactured to assume the desired shape, however, it is also rigid during normal surgery and cannot be manually adjusted to meet the particular needs of the surgeon.
The German patent document DE 39 23 851 C1 shows an endoscope used in nasal surgery and fitted with an obliquely branched tube connected by an adapter to another tube element which is bent but also rigid and which allows different orientations of its free terminal part by rotating the bent, rigid branched tube in its adapter.
The objective of the present invention is to improve the initial designs cited above with respect to manufacturing costs and ease of cleaning.
In the present invention, the branched tube consists of a single layer tube retaining its manually bent shape (unless and until being subsequently specifically treated into its initial, pre-bending state) and made of an appropriate material. Compared with the initially cited multilayer design of the state of the art, the single-layer design of the present invention offers substantial design simplicity, in particular, improving manufacturing costs and cleaning. The branched tube material easily deforms to allow manual deformation, illustratively even as regards a very short branched tube to be seized by the finger tips. During surgery, the surgeon is able to adapt the branched tube to his/her needs in the same manner as for the initially cited state of the art. Illustratively, the branched tube may be made of a durably deforming plastic or, it may be a suitably deforming metal such as soft iron. By means of its closed, smooth surface, the single layer tube is well sealing, easily cleaned and integral.
Advantageously, the branched tube shall be made of a memory alloy, namely an alloy substantially of nickel and titanium, which is both easily bent but, especially at higher temperatures, shall resume its original, un-bent shape. Such a return to the initial condition can be implemented in particular during the hot steam sterilization taking place at about 130° C. Following every use with any bending, the branched tube resumes its initial shape in the course of the hot steam sterilization ipso facto mandatory in the medical procedure.
The special-alloy branched tube segment may be made integrally with the endoscope stem, also made of the same material. Preferably, however, the branched tube is affixed by a junction site to the branched tube, as a result of which the stem per se may be made of a conventionally rigid, unbending material.
The joint defined, in particular may be a weld or a solder joint. However when joining rigid metal alloys to bending alloys and in particular to memory alloys—which typically are NiTi alloys—very considerable problems are encountered that in this instance preclude welding or soldering. A remedy is attained by making the tube parts of different materials and having the tube parts connected and sealed by a mechanical adapter. Preferably, such a tube adapter is designed to allow connecting to each other the tube ends without need for mechanical processing, such processing of memory alloys also being unusually difficult if the end part were to be a memory alloy or a plastic.
While the end part of a memory alloy can be durably deformed by bending, on the other hand the forces required for instance in view of the required diameters of an endoscope operational duct would be high. Advantageously therefore, the terminal element is designed as a bellows allowing for reducing the necessary bending forces.
Instead of making a terminal tube part from a memory alloy, said part advantageously may be in the form of a plastic tube reinforced by a memory wire sheath. As a result, the invention attains durable deformation provided by the memory wire and easier bending. The memory wire illustratively may be a wire mesh or a spiral hose.
The present invention is shown in illustrative and schematic manner in the appended drawings.
The distal end 4 of the stem 2 is open whereas an adapter 5 is configured at its proximal end through which an optics 7 may be inserted into a hole 6 (
The branched tube 3 is made of another material than the stem 2 and its junction to this stem is a seam 13. At its free end the branched tube 3 comprises an insertion element 14 through which may be inserted, as indicated, a flexible surgical implement 15, for instance flexible pincers, a laser fiber or a catheter.
In its position indicated in
For that purpose, the branched tube 3 is made of a plastic or preferably a metal flexible tube that is durably deforming, preferably plastically, and which can be deformed into arbitrary angular positions as shown in
The branched tube 3 of the embodiment mode of
The material of the branched tube 3 is selected to be bendable easily enough that the branched tube 3 can be bent manually in any desired shape as shown in
In the embodiment mode of
In this embodiment, the branched tube 3 is short, straight and may be made of the same material as the stem 2. At its free end, the branch tube 3 is fitted with a flange 10 receiving a rigid tube element 17 bent into a specified curvature. Just like the branched tube 3 of
By means of the deforming branched tube 3 respectively tube element 17, an operational implement may be repositioned, and it also may receive a flexible optics or an optic fiber or serve as a rinsing duct.
In the embodiment mode discussed in relation to
However, such material mating already raises junction problems. Memory alloys, which typically are NiTi alloys, on account of their good deformation properties for the branched tube 3, are much more suitable. On the other hand, memory alloys entirely preclude being welded or soldered at the seam 13 to the metal of the stem 2. Accordingly, when using other alloys and in particular memory alloys for the branched tube 3, a design is used which is described in relation to
The branched tube of
Appropriate tube adapters are known, for instance, from plumbing techniques to connect water pipes to water sinks. They are fitted with sealing tightening screws and may include a pipe enclosing the two branched tube elements 3, 17, assuring reliable force transmission between these elements 3, 17. When a substantial force is applied to bend the terminal element 17.
In such an embodiment the terminal element 17 alone may be deformed and may be bent arbitrarily, for instance, as indicated in
A flat memory-alloy tube as shown by the terminal element 17 in
In another, omitted embodiment mode, the terminal element 17 also may be a plastic hose reinforced (armored) in by a memory-alloy wire, said wire illustratively being helical or mesh-wise. The elastically resilient plastic is kept, after being bent by the durably deforming memory wire, in its new shape.
When using memory-material for the bending branched tube, said memory material, for instance an NiTi alloy, may be adjusted in such manner that at higher temperature it shall return to its initial, bent shape. This restoring temperature may be selected to be that which is reached at the endoscope in the autoclaving procedure required for sterilization, that is a temperature of about 130° C. Thereupon the endoscope 1 may be used for surgery when bending the branched tube is required. Upon completion of surgery and during autoclaving, the branched tube is restored to its initial shape and then may be bent into another one at the next surgery.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 040 925.6 | Sep 2006 | DE | national |
10 2006 031 415.8 | Jul 2006 | DE | national |