ULTRASONIC TORSIONAL TISSUE DISSECTION UTILIZING SUBALTERN MODES OF LONGITUDINAL-TORSIONAL RESONANTORS
20180008303 ยท 2018-01-11
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B17/320068
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A TL/T tip is made by scaling down the dimensions of an L/T tip by the ratio of the TL/T frequency to the L/T frequency so that the TL/T tip can operate by excitement from a transducer at the same frequency that would have produced L/T motion in the L/T tip. A reductive resonator may be included between the transducer and the TL/T tip.
Claims
1. In a method of forming an ultrasonic tissue dissection instrument which includes a transducer connected to a tip having a resonator for producing exciting extensional motion in the resonator and producing motion in the terminus of the tip, the improvement being in selecting as a comparison tip a tip which is capable of producing L/T motion when operated by a transducer at a specified frequency and capable of being operated in a subaltern mode when operated by a transducer at a frequency substantially lower than the specified frequency, forming an TL/T tip by using for the length and lateral dimensions reduced dimensions which are scaled down from the length and lateral dimensions of the comparison tip by a ratio of the subaltern frequency to the L/T frequency, and creating TL/T motion in the TL/T tip by operating the transducer at the same specified frequency which would have produced L/T motion in the comparison tip.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the instrument is lengthened by adding one half longitudinal wavelength resonators to the transducer.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the reduced dimensions are scaled down by 0.5.
4. The method of claim 1 including inserting a reductive resonator between the transducer and the TL/T tip.
5. In a method of forming an ultrasonic tissue dissection instrument which includes a transducer connected to a tip having a resonator and a tissue dissection terminus whereby extensional motion is excited by the transducer and motion is produced at the terminus, the improvement being in inserting as the resonator a reductive resonator between the transducer and the tip, and the reductive resonator and the tip being resonant at the same frequency as the frequency of the transducer.
6. The method of claim 5 wherein the tip is a TL/T tip.
7. The method of claim 6 wherein the TL/T tip is produced by the method of claim 1.
8. The method of claim 6 wherein the transducer produces an exciting extensional motion communicated to the reductive resonator, and the reductive resonator produces a diminished extensional motion that excites the TL/T tip and results in torsional motion at the terminus of the TL/T tip.
9. The method of claim 8 wherein the reductive resonator which is used includes a reduced diameter section joined to an enlarged diameter section joined to the TL/T tip.
10. The method of claim 8 wherein the reductive resonator and the TL/T tip are removably mounted to the transducer whereby the reductive resonator and the TL/T tip may be replaced with an L/T tip.
11. The method of claim 10 including removing the reductive resonator and the TL/T tip from the transducer, and mounting an L/T tip to the transducer.
12. The method of claim 8 wherein the reductive resonator which is used has a uniform outer surface and is composed of two different materials longitudinally aligned with each other.
13. The method of claim 8 wherein the reductive resonator which is used has a uniform outer surface and is composed of a first section longitudinally aligned with a second section, and the first section having a smaller cross sectional area of material than the second section.
14. The method of claim 13 wherein the first section is adjacent to the transducer, and the second section being adjacent to the TL/T tip.
15-18. (canceled)
19. An ultrasonic tissue dissection instrument made by the method of claim 1.
20. An ultrasonic tissue dissection instrument made by the method of claim 5.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
TABLE-US-00001 Reference numerals in the drawings Item Description 1 Face of L/T tip for receiving extensional motion from transducer. 2 Spiral grooves for generating L/T motion. 3 Tissue dissecting terminus of L/T tip. 4 Direction and relative magnitude of motion at receiving face of L/T tip executing L/T motion. 5 Direction and relative magnitude of extensional component of motion of terminus executing L/T motion. 6 Direction and relative magnitude of torsional component of motion of terminus executing L/T motion. 7 Direction and relative magnitude of motion of receiving face of TL/T tip executing torsional motion. 8 Direction and relative magnitude of extensional component of motion of tissue dissecting terminus of TL/T tip. 9 Direction and relative magnitude of torsional component of motion of tissue dissecting terminus of a TL/T tip. 10 Face of an L/T tip for receiving extension motion from a transducer. 11 Twisted surface of L/T tip for generating L/T motion. 12 Tissue dissecting terminus of L/T tip. 13 Ultrasonic transducer for generating extensional motion. 14 Reductive extensional resonator for reducing motion received from transducer. 15 TL/T tip. 16 Piezo-active element of transducer. 17 Spindle section of reductive resonator. 18 Communicating section of reductive resonator. 19 First material section of reductive resonator. 20 Second material section reductive resonator. 21 Reductive resonator composed of disparate materials. 22 Reductive resonator having a uniform outer diameter. 23 First section of reductive resonator. 24 Cross section of second section of reductive resonator. 25 Second section of reductive resonator. 26 Cross section of aspirator conduit fitted to reductive resonator. 27 Cross section of first section of reductive resonator. 28 Direction and relative magnitude of motion received from transducer by reductive resonator using disparate materials. 29 Direction and relative magnitude of motion imparted by reductive resonator using disparate materials to TL/T tip. 30 Direction and relative magnitude of motion received by a reductive resonator of uniform diameter from extensional transducer. 31 Direction and relative magnitude of motion imparted by a reductive resonator of uniform diameter to a TL/T tip. 32 Passage way for aspiration within tip. 33 Longitudinal axis of tip. 34 Direction and magnitude of transducer exciting extensional motion. 35 Direction and magnitude of reductive resonator tip exciting extensional motion. 36 Direction and magnitude tip terminus torsional motion. 38 Receiving face, disparate material reductive resonator. 39 Exciting face, disparate material reductive resonator. 40 Receiving face of reductive resonator having different cross sectional areas. 41 Exciting face of reductive resonator having different cross sectional areas. 42 Electrical connections to piezo-active element in transducer. 43 Joint of disparate materials in reductive resonator.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0015]
[0016]
[0017] The gain of a tip resonating in TL/T mode is much larger than that of the tip resonating in the L/T mode. As a result, if the same motion produced by a transducer exciting the L/T mode is applied to a tip executing the TL/T mode, motion of the terminus may become sufficiently large to cause destruction of the tip.
[0018] The tip shown in
[0019]
[0020] Because the resonant frequencies of the L/T and subaltern (TL/T) modes differ substantially in frequency, the transducer, which excites their motion and which must also be resonant at the frequency of the mode of interest, cannot be used to excite both modes. Either separate transducers must be attached, having the correct resonant frequencies, or the tip must be designed, if TL/T mode operation is desired, to have same resonant frequency as the L/T tip. Having to use separate transducers for each tip, L/T and TL/T, is a distinct disadvantage to surgical use as it requires two separate assemblies, transducer and tip and associated support accessories when various occasions require the alternate use of both. Separate transducers also increase the cost of the equipment to the user and thus suffer a commercial disadvantage to the manufacturer whose cost to user is burdened by having to offer two separate appliances.
[0021] As both longitudinal and torsional resonances are inversely proportional to length, a TL/T tip can be designed from an L/T tip by scaling its length by the ratio of the subaltern mode frequency to the L/T frequency. Because scaling just the length alters the pitch of the grooves 2 preserving the pitch requires that the lateral dimensions also be scaled by the same factor. Every part of the resonator, including the terminus is scaled down. A tip, so scaled, will then have a TL/T mode of the same frequency as the transducer used to excite the L/T mode. A suitable ratio (torsional/longitudinal motion) for an L/T top ranges from 0.5 to 2. The range for a TL/T tip is 5 to 20. The preferred range is 10 to 15.
[0022] This aspect of the invention thus involves starting with an L/T tip as a standard of comparison. Such L/T tip could be an actual tip or the physical (dimensional) specifications for an L/T tip. The dimensions of the comparison L/T tip are then scaled down in length and preferably also lateral dimensions by a ratio of the subaltern frequency to the L/T frequency to result in an instrument having a TL/T tip operated by the transducer at the same frequency which would have produced L/T motion in the comparison tip.
[0023] However, although equality in resonant frequencies between the extensional transducer and TL/T tip can be so obtained, if the exciting levels of motion of the transducer used for an L/T tip are applied to the TL/T tip, very large torsional motions of the tip's terminus are produced that may result in failure of the tip itself. The electrical voltage, V, and current, I, shown in
[0024]
[0025] In operation, the transducer produces an exciting extensional motion 34 that is communicated to the reductive resonator 14 which, in turn, produces a diminished extensional motion 35 that excites tip 15 and results in torsional motion 36 at the terminus of the tip.
[0026] Reductive resonators act acoustically as step-down motional transformers. They do not diminish the motion by attenuation and ideally consume no power, conveying the power received at their receiving face to an identical power at their opposite face, which in
[0027] The addition of the reductive resonator 14 permits the transducer to be operated at levels adequate to excite an L/T tip while reducing the level of excitation provided to the TL/T tip. In this construction, during a procedure, should L/T tissue dissection be desired, reductive resonator 14 and TL/T tip 15 can be removed from the transducer 13 and replaced with an L/T tip, obviating the need for an additional transducer, an important convenience in surgical procedures and an economy in use.
[0028] If a uniform outer surface of the reductive resonator is desired, one not having a transition in diameter, for example,
[0029] If, for example, material 19 is aluminum and material 20 is tungsten, even though both materials have the same diameter, the resonator will act to reduce the motion at receiving face 38. Alternatively, if material 19 is titanium and material 20 is stainless steel, the motion will also be reduced. In practice the joint 43 of the two materials made by made using a threaded attachment or by metallurgical joining, such as welding brazing. Other combinations of materials are possible, all resulting in a reduction of motion.
[0030] Another method of providing a uniform outer surface for a reductive resonator 22 composed of one material is shown in
[0031]
[0032] Many other variations of reductive resonators are possible and are well known in the art. Such resonators may be made integral with the TL/T tip or be separately attached to the tip using any one of the conventional methods: screw joints, press-fitting, welding or brazing. The releasable attachment of the reductive resonator to the transducer can be made using screw threads or other releasable joining method.