Patent classifications
A61F2/30767
Cervical disc and instrumentation
A spinal implant configured for positioning within a space between adjacent vertebral bodies includes an upper end plate including an outer surface extending between first and second end surfaces and opposed side surfaces. The outer surface includes a first convex profile extending between the first and second end surfaces and a second convex profile extending between the opposed side surfaces. The first convex profile and the second convex profile have different curvatures. The spinal implant further includes a lower end plate and a core disposed between the upper and lower end plates and coupled thereto. A method of assembling a spinal implant and a method of performing spinal surgery are also disclosed.
Systems for Sacroiliac Joint Stabilization
Systems are described for conducting minimally invasive medical interventions utilizing instruments and assemblies thereof to stabilize and/or fixate a dysfunctional sacroiliac (SI) joint. The systems include a drill guide having a bone dislodging member adapted to create a pilot SI joint opening in the dysfunctional SI joint through an incision comprising a length no greater than 3.0 cm; portions of the pilot SI joint opening being disposed in the sacrum and ilium bone structures. The drill guide includes a tri-mode fixation system adapted to position and stabilize the drill guide during creation of the pilot SI joint opening in the dysfunctional SI joint and delivery of the SI joint prosthesis therein. The systems also include a SI joint prosthesis configured to be inserted into the pilot SI joint opening of the dysfunctional SI joint, a prosthesis deployment assembly configured to engage the SI joint prosthesis and advance the SI joint prosthesis into the dysfunctional SI joint, and a bone harvesting assembly adapted to extract and collect dislodge bone material from the bone dislodging member after creation of the pilot SI joint opening.
Hip implant device
A hip implant is provided that includes a metal acetabular cup to be inserted into an acetabulum of the pelvis, a femoral head and neck portion with a polymer femoral head molded onto a metal formal head base that is attached to a metal femoral neck rod configured to be inserted into the neck of a femur, and a metal main body shaft configured to be inserted into a femoral shaft region of the femur and secured by bone screws. The head base may have stabilizing features, such as dimples and peripheral mounds, over which the femoral head is molded. The main body shaft also has diagonal hole located at the center line of the neck of the femur to receive the femoral neck rod at an adjustable angle. The femoral head interfaces with the acetabular cup as a smooth plastic-to-metal spherical-surface joint.
BONE IMPLANT HAVING COATED POROUS STRUCTURE
The invention relates to a bone implant, comprising a main body, which has, in its outer region, an open-cell porous lattice structure, which is formed from a plurality of regularly arranged elementary cells, the elementary cells being in the form of an assembled structure and each being composed of an interior and of a plurality of interconnected bars surrounding the interior. The porous lattice structure is provided with a bone-growth-promoting coating comprising calcium phosphate, the calcium phosphate coating having a hydroxylapatite proportion forming a pore inner coating extending into the depth of the porous lattice structure.
FEMORAL NECK-PRESERVING ARTIFICIAL HIP JOINT FEMORAL PROSTHESIS
The present disclosure comprises a ball head, a neck part, a cover body, and a fastener, wherein the cover body is in a shape of a thin-walled cup, including a cup buckled and embedded on the femoral neck left after the femoral head is removed and a circle of skirt plates attached to the lower edge of the cup to extend the covering range of the cup to the femoral neck and the intertrochanteric femur; a through hole for a cable to penetrating through is formed in the tail end of each skirt plate, and a limiting clip for limiting the cable for cerclage of the cup is arranged outside the skirt plate; and then stable rigid connection is conducted using a compression ring; and the fastener comprises a screw or an additional perforated steel plate and a cable which is fixed in a cerclage and tension manner.
PROSTHETIC STEM FOR A PROSTHETIC IMPLANT
A prosthetic stem is configured to reduce the perioperative and intraoperative risk of catastrophic medical complications and death that may be caused by BCIS. The prosthetic stem includes one or more internal channels that are configured to self-regulate intramedullary pressure within a prepared bone channel as the stem is inserted into the channel, thus reducing the likelihood of BCIS without sacrificing biomechanics and maintaining a reliable and repeatable implantation process. The stem includes a head and a body, wherein the head is configured to serve as a joint replacement and the body is configured for insertion into the prepared bone channel of a patient. One or more internal channels in the stem are configured to control the pressure within the prepared bone channel during insertion of the stem into the channel, particularly by forming a path through which excess cement may flow as the stem proceeds into the prepared bone channel. By so limiting pressurization of cement during this process, the risk of BCIS complications and other potential harmful effects are reduced while still maintaining sufficient fixation of the prosthetic stem in the prepared bone channel.
Prevention of biofilm formation
Antibacterial coatings and methods of making the antibacterial coatings are described herein. A first branched polyethylenimine (BPEI) layer is formed and a first glyoxal layer is formed on a surface of the BPEI layer. The first BPEI layer and the first glyoxal layer are cured to form a crosslinked BPEI coating. The first BPEI layer can be modified with superhydrophobic moieties, superhydrophilic moieties, or negatively charged moieties to increase the antifouling characteristics of the coating. The first BPEI layer can be modified with contact-killing bactericidal moieties to increase the bactericidal characteristics of the coating.
THREE-DIMENSIONAL LATTICE STRUCTURES FOR IMPLANTS
The three-dimensional lattice structures disclosed herein have applications including use in medical implants, Some examples of the lattice structure are structural in that they can be used to provide structural support or mechanical spacing In some examples, the lattice can be configured as a scaffold to support bone or tissue growth Some examples can use a repeating modified rhombic dodecahedron or radial dodeca-rhombus unit cell. The lattice structures are also capable of providing a lattice structure with anisotropic properties to better suit the lattice for its intended purpose.
OSTEOINDUCTIVE AND OSTEOCONDUCTIVE IMPLANT OR BIOACTIVE SCAFFOLD SURFACE AND METHOD FOR PRODUCING SUCH A SURFACE
A method for constructing a three-dimensional multi-scale surface to obtain controlled and improved physical and chemical configurations to promote the integration of orthopedic and/or dental implants, to human and/or animal tissues, in different shapes and geometries in a versatile manner, and can be applied to all types of metals, metal alloys and/or ceramic compounds. This method includes the modification at the macroscopic level of the roughness, with an objective of promoting the mechanical interlocking of the implant, followed by the modification of the surface for the formation of microtopography, then the microtopography is changed to obtain a nanotopography with characteristics that optimize cellular metabolic responses related to attraction, adhesion, spreading, proliferation and cell growth, in addition to phenotypic and genotypic inductions in undifferentiated cells and in osteoblast lineage, responsible for mineralization and bone neoformation. As a result, the interface between implant and bone is improved.
Intervertebral implant with conformable endplate
The invention is generally related to an intervertebral implant for replacing an intervertebral disc of the human spine. The intervertebral implant includes a first conformable endplate, the first conformable endplate being conformable to a boney vertebral endplate under an anatomical load, a second endplate and a core between the endplates, wherein the first conformable endplate partitions the core from the boney vertebral endplate, whereby the core does not contact the boney vertebral endplate. The invention is also directed to a method of replacing an intervertebral disc. The method includes removing at least a portion of an intervertebral disc to form an intervertebral disc space, implanting a first conformable endplate, into the intervertebral disc space and in contact with a first boney vertebral endplate, the first conformable endplate being conformable to the first boney vertebral endplate under an anatomical load; implanting a second endplate into the intervertebral disc space and in contact with a second boney vertebral endplate; and implanting a core between the first conformable endplate and the second endplate, wherein the first conformable endplate partitions the core from the first boney vertebral endplate, whereby the core does not contact the first boney vertebral endplate.