This invention relates to surgical grafts for attachment to a body tissue.
Surgical fasteners are used instead of surgical suturing, which is often both time consuming and inconvenient, in order to join two tissue locations. A surgeon can often use a stapling apparatus to implant a fastener into a body tissue and thus accomplish in a few seconds, what would take a much longer time to suture. A surgical fastener is used, for example in inguinal hernia surgery to fasten polypropylene mesh to the abdominal wall in order to reinforce the abdominal wall.
A surgical fastening device is used to insert a surgical fastener into a body tissue. In these devices, one or more surgical fasteners are contained within a cartridge that are sequentially deployed by an activating mechanism contained in the fastening device. When the body tissue into which a fastener is to be inserted is accessible from only one direction, a fastening device is usually used having a slender shaft. Deployment of a fastener by these devices involves bringing the tip of the shaft to a tissue site and ejecting a fastener from the tip of the shaft. The fastener may become affixed to the tissue site, for example, by undergoing a deformation as it inserts into the tissue, or by rotating as it is ejected so as to screw into the tissue. Surgical fastening devices having a slender shaft are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,582,616, 5,810,882, 5,830,221, 5,470,010, 5,582,616, and in WO 2005/0044727. These systems may be used, for example, in inguinal hernia surgery to fasten a polypropylene mesh to the abdominal wall in order to reinforce the abdominal wall.
In its first aspect, the present invention provides a surgical graft for attachment at two or more tissue locations and for reinforcing tissues. The surgical graft of the invention comprises one or more blind sacs or pockets dimensioned to receive the distal end of a surgical fastening device. In use, the tip of the shaft of a surgical fastening device is inserted into a pocket of the graft which is then brought to a tissue site. A surgical fastener is then ejected from the tip of the shaft so as to attach the pocket to the tissue site. The graft of the invention may be formed from a continuous material or may be constructed as a mesh.
The graft may be made of a non-biodegradable material such as polypropylene, a biodegradable material such as PLA, PLGA, polycaprolactone or other such biocompatible materials; from biological materials containing collagen fibers, or any combination of such materials.
In one embodiment of the invention, the graft is elongated in shape having a pocket at each end. In this embodiment each end of the graft can be pinned to a different tissue site, so as to join two tissue sites by the graft. The graft may be formed from a hollow cylinder of material that is closed at a first end into a first pocket and is closed at a second end into a second pocket. The wall of the cylinder may have one or more openings so as to allow the tip of a shaft of a surgical fastening device to be inserted into the interior of the hollow cylinder and to be introduced into any one of the pockets. In another embodiment of the invention, the graft is in the form of a patch or sling, with one or more pockets being located on the periphery of the graft. This allows the graft to be attached to any number of tissue sites simultaneously.
Thus, in its first aspect, the invention provides a surgical graft having one or more pockets adapted to receive a shaft tip of a surgical fastening device.
In its second aspect, the invention provides use of the surgical graft of the invention in a method for treating urinary incontinence, vaginal vault repair, posterior vaginal wall prolapse, anterior vaginal wall prolapse and inguinal hernia.
In its third aspect, the invention provides a systems comprising:
In order to understand the invention and to see how it may be carried out in practice, a preferred embodiment will now be described, by way of non-limiting example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
a shows a surgical graft 1 in accordance with one embodiment of this aspect of the invention. The graft 1 is elongated in shape and is formed as a hollow cylinder that is closed at a first end 2 and at a second end 4. The wall of the cylinder may be continuous or may be a mesh. The graft 1 has a first opening 6 and a second opening 8 that are dimensioned to receive the tip of the shaft of a surgical fastening device so as to allow the shaft tip to enter the interior of the hollow cylindrical graft 1, as explained below. The first and second openings 6 and 8 define first and second pockets 7 and 9, respectively, inside the graft 1. The first pocket 7 extends from the first opening 6 to the first end 2. The second pocket 9 extends from the second opening 8 to the second end 4.
As shown in
A surgical graft 40 in accordance with another embodiment of the invention is shown in
b shows the graft 40 after the shaft tip 10 of a surgical fastening device has been introduced into the interior of the first pocket 47 through the first opening 46. The shaft tip 10 has been brought to a predetermined position in the first pocket 47 and the first pocket is folded over the shaft tip 10 by pulling on the first string 45. This allows a first surgical fastener to be ejected from the shaft tip at any desired position in the first pocket. The first flap may be pulled so as to assist in the insertion of the shaft tip 10 into the first pocket. After the first fastener has been ejected, the shaft tip 10 is removed from the first pocket 47 and inserted into the second pocket 49. The process is repeated and a second fastener is ejected from the shaft tip at a desired tissue site in the second pocket. In this way, the distance between the first and second fasteners in the graft 40 can be controlled so as to ensure that the graft is stretched tautly between the first and second locations.
The procedure is shown in a vaginal view in
In another embodiment shown in
The graft of the invention may also be used in a method for repairing anterior vaginal wall prolapse; vaginal vault and or posterior vaginal wall prolapse. For repairing posterior vaginal wall prolapse, the patient is in lithotomy position with the legs supported by stirrups. The vaginal introitus is exposed. Local anesthesia of the planned incision and dissection path is performed and the posterior vaginal wall is hydro-dissected from the underlying tissue. A transverse incision, an inverted T shaped incision, or a longitudinal incision is performed between the posterior vaginal wall and the perineum. The vaginal wall is dissected in the middle and laterally from the rectum by sharp and blunt dissection to the lateral pelvic wall and down to the sacrospinous ligament. The shaft of a fastening device is introduced in a pocket of a graft of the invention and the distal end of the shaft with the enveloping pocket is inserted through the opening in the vaginal wall and through the channel created below the vaginal wall, and a fastener is deployed into the tissue near the sacrospinous ligament, or into the tissue at the side wall of the pelvis through the enveloping pocket. Alternatively, the mesh may be introduced through the incision and positioned properly and the distal end of the shaft introduced through the sleeve connected to one of the pockets and a fastener deployed into the tissue near the sacrospinous ligament through the enveloping mesh. Then the fastening device is introduced through the sleeve connected to the second pocket and the procedure is repeated on the opposite side. The mesh may be fixed laterally to tissues near the incision by two additional fasteners through the 2 additional pockets provided with the mesh. At the end of the operation the incision is closed with absorbable sutures.
The graft of the invention may also be used in a method for repairing anterior vaginal wall prolapse. The patient is in lithotomy position with the legs supported by stirrups. The vaginal introitus is exposed. Local anesthesia of the planned incision and dissection path is performed and the anterior vaginal wall is hydro-dissected from the overlaying tissue. A transverse incision, or an inverted T shaped incision, or a longitudinal incision is performed at the bladder neck. The vaginal wall is dissected in the middle and laterally from the urethra and bladder base by sharp and blunt dissection to the lateral pelvic wall and down to the arcus tendineous of endopelvic fascia, or the tissue near the side wall of the pelvis. One of the fastening devices described in previous embodiments is introduced in one pocket of the mesh and the fastening device with the enveloping pocket is inserted through the opening in the vaginal wall and through the channel created above the vaginal wall and the fastener is deployed into the tissue near the arcus tendineous of endopelvic fascia, or the tissue near the side wall of the pelvis through the enveloping mesh. Alternatively, the mesh may be introduced through the incisions and positioned properly and the fastening device is introduced through the sleeve connected to one of the pockets and the fastener deployed into the tissue near the arcus tendineous of endopelvic fascia, or the tissue near the side wall of the pelvis through the enveloping mesh. Then the fastening device is introduced through the sleeve connected to the second pocket and same procedure is performed on the opposite side. The mesh may be fixed laterally to tissues at the lateral pelvic wall by two additional fasteners through the 2 additional pockets provided with the mesh. At the end of the operation the incision is closed with absorbable sutures.
The graft of the invention may be used in a method for repairing an inguinal hernia. The patient lays supine. The skin and subcutaneous tissue overlaying the external ring of the inguinal canal is infiltrated with anesthetic solution. A 2 to 3 cm skin incision is performed over the external ring of the inguinal canal. The inguinal cord with the hernia sac is isolated. The cord is infiltrated with anesthetic solution. The cremaster sheath is opened and the sac is isolated and dissected toward and within the external ring. In case of a voluminous sac the external ring of the inguinal canal is opened to facilitate dissection of the sac to the sac neck in the posterior wall of the inguinal canal—in case of direct hernia—or to the internal ring of the inguinal canal—in case of the indirect hernia. Blunt and sharp dissection is used. In case of a voluminous inguino-scrotal sac, the sac is incised and the distal sac is left attached to the cord elements. A rectangular mesh is used for repair of the weakness of the posterior wall of the inguinal canal. The mesh is attached at the conjoint tendon of the inguinal canal superiorly and at the inguinal ligament inferiorly, at one or more fixation points using the previously described fasteners and fastening devices under direct vision and using palpation. A sac type of mesh may be particularly suited for such an application.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IL05/01167 | 11/8/2005 | WO | 00 | 1/14/2008 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60625725 | Nov 2004 | US | |
60696516 | Jul 2005 | US |