The invention relates to devices and methods of spinal surgery. More particularly, the invention provides a device and method to achieve and maintain soft tissue retraction during spinal repair surgeries.
All publications, patents and patent applications mentioned in this specification are herein incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each individual publication, patent or patent application was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.
In particular, the following U.S. patent applications include related subject matter, and are incorporated in their entirety by this reference: U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/855,124 of Lowry et al. (filed on Sep. 13, 2007, and entitled “Implantable bone plate system and related method for spinal repair”), U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/210,109 of Lowry et al. (filed on Sep. 12, 2008, entitled “Device and method for tissue retraction in spinal surgery”), U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/210,089 of Lowry et al. (filed on Sep. 12, 2008, entitled “Trans-corporeal spinal decompression and repair system and related method”, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application 60/990,587 of Lowry et al., as filed on Nov. 27, 2007, entitled “Methods and systems for repairing an intervertebral disk using a transcorporal approach”
The current standard treatment for neural decompression in the spine caused by a herniated disc, trauma, tumor, osteophyte or other compressing pathology is an anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) or disc arthroplasty procedures, both of which entail removing the intervertebral disc, decompressing the neural element, and implanting a repair device between the adjacent vertebrae in the discal void. In this procedure, an incision is made in the anterior surface of the neck, followed by blunt finger dissection down to the spine. Handheld retractors are used to hold open the wound while multiple adjustable retractor blades are inserted within the wound, adjusted to expose the spine, and are then fixed in place. The disc tissue and neural compressing pathologies are removed, and a bone repair implant is placed in the disc space. When the repair device is a fusion implant, a cervical bone plate is then typically screwed onto the vertebrae above and below the implant to restrict motion and to positively locate the repair implant. The recovery time from this type of surgery is typically several months. During this time, the patient is subjected to physical limitations and is generally required to wear a neck support collar for at least some of the time period.
Retraction of surrounding soft tissues during the surgical procedure is necessary to prevent intrusion of tissue into the surgical field, which would impair surgical access and visibility, and to protect the tissue from contact with the surgical instruments. Currently available retractor systems (for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,795,291 of Koros) can be subject to undesirable inter-operative shifting and migration within the wound. Such migration can require repositioning of the retractor during surgery; this is generally undesirable, but more specifically creates the risk of injury to adjacent soft tissue with each adjustment and prolongs the procedure.
Alternate surgical procedures to access spinal compressing pathologies been developed whereby the site of the compressing pathology is accessed through an adjacent vertebral body, thus reducing, or in some cases, eliminating the need for the removal of the complete inter-vertebral disc. Such procedures are described by Hong et al. (“Comparison between transuncal approach and upper vertebral transcorporeal approach for unilateral cervical radiculopathy—a preliminary report”, Minim Invasive Spine Surgery, 2006 October; 49 (5):296-301.) and by Jho et al. (“Anterior microforaminotomy for treatment of cervical radiculopathy: part 1: disc-preserving functional cervical disc surgery”, Neurosurgery 2002 November; 51, 5 Suppl.: S46-53), and include a discectomy by a transuncal approach, anterior microforaminotomy, and transcorporal approach procedures. These procedures provide for the removal of the offending pathology while preserving disc tissue, and they reduce or eliminate the need for a vertebral fusion or disc arthroplasty procedure.
These and similar alternative procedures are potentially less invasive than current procedures for having a smaller incision site, and an associated reduction in the risk of damage to adjacent tissue. Currently available surgical devices, however do not allow the full benefit of these methods to be realized. The current practice of using two pairs of opposing retractor blades requires an incision size that is larger than actually required by these procedures and exposes regions of the spinal column that are larger than necessary. Further, current retractor systems, in fact, do not satisfactorily protect surrounding nerve and vascular tissue. These retractor systems undesirably stretch surrounding tissues and the esophagus, causing with associated trauma, and, further, can pinch soft tissue between retractor blades with consequent bleeding and damage.
There is a need in the field for a minimally tissue retractor and management device applicable to spinal repair surgeries that positively engages the spine, isolates the surgical field from the adjacent soft tissue, and provides unrestricted operating and visual access to the surgical field. A desirable retractor system would protect the soft tissue adjacent to the surgical field, eliminate a need for inter-operative adjustment, and minimize wound size and the trauma that occurs while manipulating and controlling adjacent tissue during the surgical procedure.
The invention provided herein includes embodiments of a retractor system configured to facilitate surgery on the spine, and methods with which to apply the device in order to facilitate surgical procedures. Embodiments of the system include a retractor that has a hollow or tubular structure with a proximal surface having a proximal aperture, a base comprising a distal aperture, the base configured to couple to one or more vertebral bodies, the distal aperture smaller than the proximal aperture; and an internal surface connecting the proximal aperture and the distal aperture, the surface and the apertures defining a distally-narrowing operating volume. The internal surface of retractor embodiments is typically circumferential, but some embodiments may have a partially-circumferential or circumferentially-interrupted internal surface. In some embodiments of the system, the base of the tubular structure includes a compressible member that is adapted to contact a vertebral body surface and form a seal around the aperture. The two-dimensional area defined by the boundary of the distal aperture may be appreciated as defining an operating field or window.
In some embodiments of the system, the retractor includes an engagement feature configured to engage a complementary feature of an insertion or handling tool that facilitates positioning and insertion of the retractor into a surgical site. In some embodiments of a method, the handling tool is further applied to facilitating removal the retractor from the surgical site. In some of these system embodiments, the engagement feature of the retractor is located on an internal surface of the hollow structure.
Some embodiments of the system include a trajectory control sleeve that is configured to be engageable to a retractor, and further, to accommodate at least a portion of a tissue-cutting or bone-cutting tool, such that the trajectory of the cutting tool (when the system is positioned in situ) is appropriately guided into an underlying surgical site. In some of these system embodiments, the trajectory control sleeve is configured to slidably engage within an internal aspect of the tubular structure. In some embodiments, a trajectory control sleeve engagement feature of the retractor is complementary to a retractor engagement feature of the trajectory control sleeve. And some embodiments of the system include a bone cutting tool, typically a rotary cutting tool, at least a portion of which is configured to be accommodatable by the trajectory control sleeve.
Some embodiments of the system include a handling tool that is adapted to facilitate positioning of the retractor at the surgical site preliminary to a procedure, and to facilitate removal of the retractor at the conclusion of a procedure. In some of these embodiments, the handling tool includes an engagement feature that is complementary to a handling tool-engagement feature of the retractor. And in some of these embodiments, the engagement feature of the handling tool is configured to compressibly-fit into a complementary engagement feature of the tubular structure.
Some embodiments of the system include one or more passages configured to accommodate fastening elements to attach the structure to a vertebral surgical site. Some embodiments of these passages for fastening elements include an abutting surface configured to limit distal movement of the fastening elements. Some embodiments of the fastening elements are integral with the retractor.
Some embodiments of the system include an implantable bone plate adapted to be engageable by the retractor. In some of these embodiments, the base of the retractor is adapted to engage the implantable bone plate. In some of these embodiments, the bone plate is configured to be attachable to one or more vertebral bodies.
In some embodiments of the system, the base of the retractor is configured and sized to fasten to a single vertebral body. In other embodiments of the system, the retractor is configured and sized to fasten to two adjacent vertebral bodies and to span an intervertebral space between the two bodies.
As noted above, embodiments of the invention also include methods with which to operate the retractor system summarized above in the context of performing a medical procedure on a spine from an anterior approach. Embodiments of the method include positioning a retractor device at a surgical site on the spine to retract soft tissue surrounding a surgical site (the retractor comprising a substantially tubular structure having a proximal aperture and a distal aperture); and performing the intended medical procedure, which may, for example, be an minimally interventional observation, a diagnostic procedure, an exploratory procedure, a therapeutic delivery procedure, or a surgical procedure. Typically, but not necessarily, the method further includes fastening the retractor with fastening elements to the surgical site, which may be localized to a single vertebral body, or may span two adjacent vertebral bodies and the intervening intervertebral space, or, in some instances may include spanning two or more vertebral bodies.
In some embodiments of the method, the positioning step includes positioning the retractor on an anterior aspect of a vertebral body of a cervical region of the spine. Typically, positioning occurs after a site has been exposed by an incision made by a conventional method. In other embodiments of the method, the positioning step includes positioning the retractor on an anterior aspect of a vertebral body in any of a thoracic, lumbar, or sacral region of a spine. And in some embodiments of the method, the positioning step includes positioning the retractor onto the surfaces of two adjacent vertebral bodies and spanning an intervertebral space between the two vertebral bodies.
In some embodiments of the method, after the step of disengaging and removing the handling tool, the method further includes engaging a trajectory control sleeve within the interior of the tubular structure of the retractor. Some of these embodiments further include engaging a cutting device within the trajectory control sleeve device. And some of these embodiments further include cutting vertebra; bone with the cutting device.
In some embodiments of the method, prior to the positioning step, the method includes engaging the retractor and a handling tool together. And in some of these embodiments, the positioning step includes positioning the retractor with the assistance of the handling tool.
Some embodiments of the method further include performing the surgical procedure in an operating field provided by an interior of the tubular structure of the retractor. Some embodiments of the method further include unfastening the retractor and removing it from the surgical site. In some of these embodiments, removing the retractor from the surgical site includes re-engaging the retractor and the handling tool, and removing the retractor from the surgical site with the assistance of the handling tool.
Some embodiments of the method include making use of an implantable bone plate. In such embodiments, for example, the positioning step may include securing a bone plate engageable by the retractor to the surgical site, and then securing the retractor to the bone plate.
The invention relates to device and methods for use in retracting soft tissue surrounding the spine or between the spine and the skin incision during spinal repair surgery. Embodiments of the retractor device include two major elements: (1) a vertebral mounting or contacting portion adapted on the base or distal aspect of the device that is adapted to substantially engage and conform to the anterior surface of one or more vertebral bodies, and (2) a solid walled hollow portion that generally stands at an angle that ranges between 45° and 90° relative to the vertebral mounting portion and whose accessible interior provides an operating volume and whose boundaries at a distal opening generally define an operating field. In some embodiments, the device is assembled as a device that includes integrated self-tapping screws that securely but detachably mount the retractor to the spine at a surgical site.
The hollow or tubular portion of the retractor is open at the proximal and distal ends, and the external wall of the tubular portion is typically (but not necessarily) uninterrupted and configured to prevent the ingress of retracted tissue into the surgical field. An operating space or volume is defined or circumscribed by the internal funnel-like aspect of the hollow portion. This hollow portion is generally funnel-shaped in that it has a proximal aperture generally larger than the distal aperture. This configuration for the device is generally advantageous for its intended use, which is to provide visibility for a surgeon, and to allow access of instruments from a relatively wide angle range that converges distally into a relative tight operating field. In some embodiments, the tubular portion is generally cylindrical or conical in shape, but these are not limiting shapes, as the device may also be rectilinear, and further, it is not necessarily symmetrical in its planar aspect or outline.
Further with regard to the hollow portion of the device that forms a generally funnel-shaped operating volume, the walls of the embodiments of the device are typically solid, and typically fully circumferential. However, some embodiments of the device, for particular applications, may have a wall that is not circumferentially complete. The wall may have, for example, describe a form that occupies an arc as narrow as 180°, or there may be embodiments that occupy an arc of 270°. Further, some embodiments of the device may be substantially fully circumferential, but include interrupting apertures or discontinuities in the wall.
The retractor device is securely fixed to the spine during the surgical procedure using fastening elements such self-tapping screws (or any other appropriate type of bone attachment or fastener element), which may be separate pieces or pieces integrated into or held within the retractor structure.
Inserting, positioning, and fastening of the retracting device within the wound may be assisted by the use of a handling tool that positively engages but easily and controllably detaches from a corresponding mating feature on the retractor device. This handling tool is detached from the device prior to performing the surgical procedure and can be re-engaged thereafter to assist in the removal of the retractor device prior to closure of the wound.
In some embodiments, a retracting device is sized to span two or more adjacent vertebrae and has fasteners inserted there through into at least one of the vertebral bodies. In some embodiments, the device may be mounted onto a single vertebra and affixed there by at least one fastener.
In some embodiments, the retractor device may detachably engage a bone plate device such as that disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/855,124 of Lowry et al. (entitled “Implantable bone plate system and related method for spinal repair”, as filed on Sep. 13, 2007), which has already been attached to one or more vertebrae.
According to an aspect of the invention, the main tubular body portion of the device is formed of a substantially rigid biocompatible material. The contact surfaces for engaging vertebral bone tissue may be formed from a different biocompatible material, different by being compressible. The compressible feature of the composition provides conformability to the vertebral surface, and a sealability that substantially prevents entry of tissue or fluids into the surgical field. The generally rigid biocompatible materials may be polymeric, metallic, ceramic, or a combination thereof; the compressible or conformable biocompatible materials are more generally polymeric or elastomeric, or have a high proportion of polymer in their composition.
In another aspect of the invention, a method is provided for inserting the soft tissue retractor through an incision, attaching the retractor to one or more vertebrae, and performing a surgical repair procedure through the retractor. Embodiments of the method typically start by creating of an incision in the surface of the skin and manually retracting the tissue to expose the spine by standard procedures. Inventive aspects of embodiments of the method include positioning the retractor at the site with a handling tool, securing the retractor to the surgical site with one or more fasteners, disengaging and removing the handling tool, and performing the intended surgical procedure. Embodiments of the method may optionally further include re-engaging the retractor and the handling tool, unfastening the retractor from the bone, removing the retractor device from the surgical site, and then closing the incision. In some embodiments of the method, the retractor is positioned so as to span two adjacent vertebrae, thereby exposing intervertebral disc and vertebral bone tissue to the surgeon. In other embodiments the retraction device is placed on a single vertebral body so as to expose anterior or lateral vertebral bone tissue only.
According to some aspects of the invention, methods are provided for establishing and controlling the trajectory of a tissue-cutting device, more particularly, a bone cutting device such as a drill, burr, or reamer, by the inserting and engaging a trajectory control device within the internal volume of the retractor after it has been affixed to the vertebral bone tissue. The trajectory control sleeve has an orientation feature that positively engages a corresponding feature on the retractor device so as to control the orientation of the trajectory control sleeve axes relative to the retractor and vertebral bodies. A detailed disclosure of embodiments of another embodiment of a trajectory control sleeve and methods for use therefore are provided in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/210,192 of Lowery et al., (filed Sep. 12, 2008), which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
Some of these embodiments and features of the present invention as described above are depicted as examples in
The embodiments of device 100, as shown in
Referring to
It can be appreciated from the embodiment depicted in
Referring again to
In brief, with regard to embodiments of retractor 100 as seen in
As a consequence of the surgical working field being exclusively within the enclosed volume 130 of the device 100, there is no contact between surgical instruments and adjacent tissue, thus substantially eliminating risk of damage to the tissue. On completion of the surgical procedure, the fixing screws 120 and 121 are accessed through the anterior facing holes 113 and 105, respectively, and withdrawn from their vertebral body location, and device 100 is withdrawn from the surgical site.
After grasping a retractor 100 with a handling tool 300, a surgeon can position the retractor into a surgical site that has been exposed on an anterior aspect of the spine. With insertion into the wound, the compressive locking force is released and the handling tool is removed from the device. In some embodiments of a method, particularly when the embodiment of the retractor 100 includes a fastening element passageway 105 within silo-like structure 106, the surgeon may continue to hold the retractor in position with handling tool 300 while securing the device to bone at the surgical site. At some point, however, either before or after completing the fastening of the retractor to the surgical site, the compressive engagement of the handling tool within the retractor is released, and the handling tool is withdrawn. With the retractor in place, and the operating field clear of impinging soft tissue by virtue of its retraction by the retractor, the surgical procedure is conducted. On completion of the surgical procedure, the retractor is removed from the site; in some embodiments of a method, handling tool 300 may be re-inserted and lockably re-engaged with interior surfaces of the device 100 to assist in screw back-out and device removal.
Trajectory control sleeve 500 further has a proximal abutting surface 505 adapted to engage a bone-cutting tool (as it is seated and operating within the sleeve) in order to control the depth of cutting tool penetration through the device and into the bone tissue below. The engaging member 502 positively engages a corresponding feature 503 on the retractor device 100. Engagement of the feature 502 of the trajectory control sleeve insert and feature 503 of the retractor 100 prevents unwanted movement of the sleeve during bone cutting and assures a well-controlled trajectory of the drill into the underlying bone tissue. The trajectory control sleeve 500 can be further or alternatively engaged with the retractor device 100 by various locking-but-releasable mechanisms, such as snap and bayonet mechanisms, so as to assure positive and orientation-specific engagement of the elements.
The trajectory channel 504, as shown in
Exemplary device 100 embodiments described and depicted (
While the description provided herein of devices and methods by which to operate the devices refer in an exemplary manner to procedures applied to the cervical spine by way of an anterior approach, such devices and methods may also be applicable to other neurosurgical and orthopedic procedures. Surgeries in the thoracic, lumbar, and sacral regions of the spine, with anterior, posterior, or lateral approaches, also require the retraction of surrounding soft tissue structures, such as the pleura and its contents, the peritoneum and its contents, adjacent musculature, and/or adjacent vascular structures. For procedures in these regions, there is also no currently available retractor system that attaches directly to the spine and there stabilizes a hollow structure to enable the performance of a repair procedure there through, to protect adjacent tissue from instrument injury, or to facilitate illumination and visualization of the surgical field during a procedure.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/976,331 of Lowry et al., entitled “Vertebrally mounted tissue retractor and method for use in spinal surgery”, as filed on Sep. 28, 2007.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60976331 | Sep 2007 | US |