This disclosure relates to the field of ankle arthroplasty including methods and apparatus for supplanting the surface of the talus with a prosthetic implant adapted to cooperate with a tibial prosthesis.
US published application 2012/0271314-Stemniski et al., hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety, discloses aspects of total ankle replacement arthroplasty based on the coordinated use of a preoperative alignment fixture, several associated tool guides coupled to the fixture that conform the motion of surgical tools used during a surgical procedure, and prosthetic members that are installed to terminate the distal tibia and to engage over the head of the talus, articulating with one another as a prosthetic ankle joint.
More particularly, the fixture is preoperatively adjusted to conform to the patient's anatomy while fluoroscopically viewing the tibia and aligning the fixture. The distal tibia and the superior talus are resected using a bone saw applied through an anterior incision. The saw cutting path is guided along slots in the fixture while aligned to the patient's anatomy. Three linear saw cuts in the tibia separate a trapezoidal piece of bone that is removed to leave a mortise in the distal tibia, accurately matched to the size and shape of a tibial plate prosthesis that will be the proximal part of a prosthetic ankle joint. Plural lateral cuts at different inclination angles resect the dome of the talus to leave the talus faceted along surfaces that accurately match surfaces on an underside of a talar dome prosthesis.
Certain bore holes are drilled, likewise guided by the fixture, to receive stabilizing posts or other elongated fasteners that engage with the tibial plate and/or talar dome prostheses. If the stabilizing posts and bore holes for one or another of the prostheses are parallel and there is sufficient clearance available, the posts can be fixedly attached to the prosthesis or integral with the prosthesis, and inserted into their associated bore holes when placing the prosthesis.
In some surgical procedures and embodiments, an elongated post for the tibial prosthesis is to extend into the cancellous axial part of the distal tibia occupies a substantial diameter as an intramedullary supporting structure. There is little clearance for this aspect, but a bore for an intramedullary supporting structure can be formed via a plantar incision, drilled through the talus and into the cancellous axial part of the distal tibia, once again while precisely guided by the fixture. Anterior access through saw-cut mortise permits the tibial bore to be reamed. An intramedullary post structure is built and inserted into the tibia in axially short segments that attach to one another.
Embodiments of the fixture and technique are used in the Wright Medical Technology, Inc. PROPHECY® preoperative navigation alignment guides, and the INBONE® and INFINITY® total ankle systems. The INBONE and INFINITY systems each require supporting posts affixed to the talar dome and extending into post holes that are bored and reamed in the talus. The supporting posts are surfaced with a porous metal coating such as Wright Medial Technology BIOFOAM®, a sintered titanium alloy material whose rough and porous surface enhances bone ingrowth during healing.
An object of this disclosure is to provide an ankle arthroplasty talar dome implant functionally replaces the rounded top of the talus bone in a manner that is similar to the function of the talar dome prostheses mentioned above, but is easier to manufacture, easier to install and correspondingly effective in a total ankle arthroplasty. The implant has a rounded articulating dome on its upper (superior) side for bearing against a tibial plate structure as the opposed member of a prosthetic ankle joint. The implant has plural angled faces on an underside, for complementary abutment in surface contact with surfaces of a resected talus. In one embodiment, three flat faces are provided on the underside, of which the anterior and posterior faces are oppositely inclined toward one another, for example at about 20° relative to a horizontal central face, forming a partial enclosure over the talar dome. Preferably, this partial enclosure covers over the top of the talus but does not include lateral and medial sidewall flanges.
According to one aspect, the implant includes plural affixation pegs, preferably integral with the cast surgical alloy of the talar dome, such as austenitic 316 stainless and martensitic 440 and 420 stainless steels or Ti6AI4V titanium alloy. The pegs preferably have a pyramidal pointed shaped, for example with an equilateral triangle cross section. The longitudinal axes of the pegs are parallel to one another and perpendicular to the surface of an anterior one of the faces on the underside of the implant. Thus the pegs are inclined in a posterior/inferior direction and are perpendicular to the anterior surface of the resected talus. In a preferred example, at least one face of the pegs, such as a posterior-facing side of a peg having an equilateral triangle cross section, or both the anterior and posterior faces of a pyramidal peg having a square cross section, is oriented perpendicular to the sagittal plane and in place to oppose forces arising during flexing of the ankle.
As so structured, the peg is readily driven into the resected talus, forming a complementary opening at which the bone tissue of the talus is compressed against the peg. In one embodiment, at least the edges at which the faces of the peg meat, and alternatively or additionally the faces themselves, are serrated in the integral peg structure, to further secure the talar dome.
The disclosed implant is compliant in all aspects with ankle arthroplasty fixtures including preoperative navigation alignment guides for effecting resection of the talus and tibia, boring certain holes for receiving posts of intramedullary or other characters, and by which bone surfaces of the ankle are resected accurately to receive a tibial plate and talar dome.
The talar dome element can be affixed to the talus in a surgical step comprising anterior insertion of the talar dome element into position anterior of its final position (according to the cosine of the angles of the anterior face and the peg), and driving the talar dome by one or more impacts applied toward the talus in a direction parallel to the longitudinal axis of the pegs. This sets the pegs into talus and brings the surfaces of the talar dome into surface abutment with the resected surfaces of the talus (preferably with a layer of bone cement).
These and other objects and aspects will be appreciated by the following discussion of preferred embodiments and examples, with reference to the accompanying drawings, and wherein:
The talar dome prosthesis 22 can be an integral forging of surgical steel, shaped as shown and polished on its articulating surface 25. The tibial prosthesis 24 comprises a tibial plate 26 and a wear element 28 received therein. The wear element can comprise a high density polyethylene or similar material capable of withstanding carrying the patient's weight and sliding smoothly over the talar dome over a long useful life.
The tibial prosthesis 24 and the talar dome need to be permanently and rigidly affixed to the tibia and the talus, respectively. US 2012/0271314-Stemniski et al., which has been incorporated by reference, teaches techniques for resecting a tibiofibular joint to receive a tibial plate and resecting the talus to receive a talar dome prosthesis, both guided using the same navigation and guidance fixture for controlling the paths of surgical saws, drills and reamers applied from the anterior and plantar sides. In the Stemniski technique, the attachments to the tibia include providing an intramedullar bore in the tibia for receiving an elongated shaft element. In the present embodiment as shown in
It is an aspect of the present invention that the talar dome prosthesis 22 is attached to a resected talus by virtue of complementary surface shapes together with a plurality of pegs 34 that are embedded in the resected talus to secure the talar dome 22. As shown in
The total ankle replacement (ankle arthroplasty) prosthesis comprises a talar dome prosthesis 22 configured for affixation to a talus bone. The talar dome 22 has a dome body with an articulating side 25 (the top side in
The mounting side of the talar dome 22 as shown in
In the embodiment shown, the pegs 34 extend perpendicularly from the anterior flat section. As a result, the pegs extend are obliquely inclined relative to horizontal, downwardly and toward the rear of the talus bone. With a nominal gait, pushing off with some degree of dorsi-flexion applies the patient's weight in a direction more or less parallel to the longitudinal axes of the pegs 34. Stepping forward into plantar-flexion causes the wear element 28 to slide anteriorly over the talar dome sliding surface 25 in a direction corresponding to the insertion direction of pegs 34, which is partly posteriorly.
For providing complementary surfaces on the talus and the talar dome 22, the talus is resected during the surgical process ankle arthroplasty. In the medial side elevation view of
For manufacturing, an integral talar dome element is provided in the general shape shown, for example cast in one piece. The bottom surfaces can be machine to flat precision at the necessary angles. The sliding upper surface 25 is polished. The sides of pegs 34 are polished. A porous coating such as sintered titanium alloy particles as in Wright Medical Technology BIOFOAM® (not shown) can be applied to surfaces 42, 44, 46 to improve prospects for bone ingrowth. It would be possible to likewise apply a porous coating to the peg 34, but in general a smooth peg is more readily driven into the talus 50 than a peg thickened by a porous coating.
The prosthesis 22 is driven home with a mallet 64 or other similar tool, which preferably is faced with a polymer material so as not to mar the sliding surface 25. This places the talar dome prosthesis 22 in its final position shown in
In
In
As shown in
The pegs are capable of embodiment in shapes other than polyhedrons, especially pyramids with sides that meet at three or four edges, at least one being perpendicular to the sagittal plane. In the depicted embodiment, the pegs are obliquely inclined relative to horizontal, downwardly and toward a rear of the talus bone, because the longitudinal axes of the pegs are perpendicular to the plane defined by the anterior flat section 42, which is inclined downwardly (inferiorly) toward the anterior edge of the talar dome prosthesis.
Flat section or face 42 is one of a plurality of flat faces on the underside of the dome body, configured to abut against a resected surface of the talus having a shape that is complementary with the underside, namely cut or machined away to define the same sequence of flat faces. The underside of the dome body is fully defined by the flat faces. That is, the prosthesis lacks depending lateral and medial flanges, instead wrapping over the top of the resected talus and defining the smooth and rounded articulating upper surface in an arc over the talus, for bearing against the tibial prosthesis. The talar dome is formed as an one-piece part with the dome body and pegs being integral with one another, being readily manufactured, robust and structurally uncomplicated.
The invention has been disclosed in connection with a number of variations presented as examples. However the invention is not limited to the exemplary embodiments and is capable of additional variations. Reference should be made to the appended claims instead of the foregoing description, to assess the scope of exclusive rights in the invention claimed.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US14/55294 | 9/12/2014 | WO | 00 |