SURGICAL CUTTING BLADE USING COMPOSITE MATERIALS
20220370091 · 2022-11-24
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B17/3211
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/320016
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L31/14
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/142
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61B17/3211
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A guide is disclosed that operates to guide in the creation of a bone spur to facilitate harvesting a quadriceps tendon and includes an end having a width equal to a desired graft width with a terminal slope equal to a cutting angle desired. In use, the guide may be initially positioned parallel to the femur to form guide cuts in the patella. The guide is then rotated ninety degrees to allow an angled cut at the guide cut. The guide is again rotated, this time one hundred eighty degrees and a second angled cut made on the other guide cut. A final lateral cut is made and the bone spur may be lifted from the patella.
Claims
1. A surgical blade comprising: a base material having a sharpened tip configured to cut; and a coating comprising a diamond-like material.
2. The surgical blade of claim 1 formed into a scalpel blade.
3. The surgical blade of claim 1 formed into a circular blade.
4. The surgical blade of claim 1 formed into a circular blade with an arc removed therefrom.
5. The surgical blade of claim 4, wherein the arc is 120 degrees.
6. A surgical cutting tool comprising: a handle comprising: a body having a first end and a second end; and threads disposed proximate the second end; and a blade comprising: a blade body comprising a first blade end and a second blade end; second threads disposed proximate the first blade end, the second threads fitting complementarily with the threads of the handle; a central portion disposed between the first blade end and the second blade end; and the second blade end tapering inwardly from the central portion to a terminal portion having a generally circular cross-section and having an arc removed along at least 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees therefrom.
7. The surgical cutting tool of claim 6, wherein the handle comprises surgical steel.
8. The surgical cutting tool of claim 6, wherein the terminal portion comprises a composite material.
9. The surgical cutting tool of claim 6, wherein the handle comprises a cylinder having a longitudinal axis extending between the first end and the second end.
10. The surgical cutting tool of claim 9, wherein the cylinder is hollow for at least a portion of the longitudinal axis.
11. The surgical cutting tool of claim 10, wherein the handle further comprises a slot extending parallel to the longitudinal axis and communicating to an interior portion of the hollow cylinder.
12. The surgical cutting tool of claim 6, wherein the first end comprises a knurled portion.
13. The surgical cutting tool of claim 6, wherein the terminal portion has a diameter between 8-12 millimeters (mm).
14. The surgical cutting tool of claim 6, wherein the terminal portion has a diameter of 10 millimeters (mm).
15. The surgical cutting tool of claim 6, wherein the blade is configured such that a workpiece having an edge dimension larger than a diameter of the terminal portion fits through the arc allowing cutting at a desired dimension corresponding to the diameter.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013] The accompanying drawings incorporated in and forming a part of this specification illustrate several aspects of the disclosure, and together with the description serve to explain the principles of the disclosure.
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0025] The embodiments set forth below represent the necessary information to enable those skilled in the art to practice the disclosure and illustrate the best mode of practicing the disclosure. Upon reading the following description in light of the accompanying drawings, those skilled in the art will understand the concepts of the disclosure and will recognize applications of these concepts not particularly addressed herein. It should be understood that these concepts and applications fall within the scope of the disclosure and the accompanying claims.
[0026] The present disclosure provides a surgical cutting blade using composite materials. In an exemplary aspect, the blade may be circularly shaped with a triangular cut-out. The cut-out allows the overall diameter of the circularly-shaped blade to remain appropriately sized for tendon harvesting (e.g., around 10 millimeters (mm)), while still allowing a similarly-sized equilateral triangle piece of patella to pass through the blade. In a second exemplary aspect, the reusability and sharpness of the surgical cutting blade may be improved by including a first material over which a diamond-like coating is applied. The first material may be steel, ceramic, or another glass-like material such as sapphire or tetragonal zirconia. Such a composite material blade can retain a sharp edge through multiple sterilization processes. It should be appreciated that blades from these materials may not be limited to the blade with a cut-out.
[0027] Before addressing the particular structure of the surgical blades of the present disclosure, a brief overview of the process that harvests a quadriceps tendon is provided with reference to
[0028]
[0029] Next, a bone plug or spur is created by cutting into the patella 124 using the guide to guide the cuts into the patella 124, thereby creating the bone plug and the initial cut into the quadriceps tendon 126 (block 206). Using the guide disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2021/0015497 (which is herein incorporated by reference), the guide directs the saw blade such that the resulting bone plug is of the same lateral dimensions as the quadriceps graft that has been chosen, allowing the bone spur to be slipped through the aperture on the tendon cutting blade (block 208). The graft may be secured by sutures based through the original hole drilled at the beginning of the procedure, facilitating passage of the bone plug. The doctor then slices anteriorly up the quadriceps tendon 126 underneath the skin of the patient (block 210). When an appropriate length of the quadriceps tendon 126 has been cut, the doctor severs the distal end of the quadriceps tendon 126 (block 212). The doctor then removes the tendon (block 214) and closes the incision (block 216).
[0030] A first exemplary tendon harvesting tool 300 is illustrated in
[0031] With continuing reference to
[0032] While not shown, it should be appreciated that by providing a threaded, detachable blade 304, the blade portion of the cutting tool 300 may be swapped for a differently-sized blade portion. Thus, for one surgery, the surgeon may select a blade 304 having a diameter 336 of 8 mm and for a second, subsequent surgery, the surgeon may select a blade 304 having a diameter 336 of 11 mm. Other sizes may be used, but the most frequent graft dimensions are between 8 and 12 mm and it is expected that most blades will fall within that range. The handle 302 may be used in the first surgery, sterilized in an autoclave, and then used again with the second blade portion for the subsequent surgery.
[0033] While the circular shape of the terminal portion 338 is well suited for cutting the quadriceps tendon 126, there may be an issue relative to the patella spur created in step 206 discussed above. A cut patella spur 400 is illustrated in
[0034] As better seen in
[0035] For various L of interest (e.g., 8-12 mm), h may vary from about 6.93 to about 10.39 mm. This height h becomes relevant as better illustrated in
[0036] which means that the spur 400 will not readily fit through the aperture 340 formed by the terminal portion 338 if diameter 336=L. The net result of the situation illustrated in
[0037] Conversely,
where R is the radius of the circle and 2R is the diameter 336.
[0038] In this case, the diameter 336 would (for L between 8-12 mm) range from about 9.23 mm to 13.85 mm, which for any given desired L, is about 1.15 times larger than L. This means that the widest part of any blade 304 would cut a graft 1.15 times larger than desired. While functional, such approach is perhaps wasteful in that too much tendon is harvested.
[0039] Exemplary aspects of the present disclosure provide a solution that allows the surgeon to select a cutting implement having a diameter size corresponding to a desired graft size, but that also accommodates a bone spur that has the same lateral dimension as the desired graft. Specifically, the bone spur may pass through the aperture of the cutting implement without necessitating an increase in the cutting dimension of the cutting implement as better seen in
[0040] In particular, a blade 700 compatible with the handle 302 is illustrated. The blade 700 may be formed from a body 702, which has a first blade end 704, which has threads 706 proximate thereto. The threads 706 are sized and configured to mate complementarily with the threads 316 of the handle 302 (
[0041] While 120 degrees is specifically contemplated, other arcs may be used ranging from more than 90 degrees to less than 180 degrees.
[0042] While a blade 304 or 700 made of surgical steel may be adequate for harvesting a quadriceps tendon, the tough nature of the quadriceps tendon will likely dull a surgical steel blade to the point where it is impractical to reuse the blade even though the surgical steel is amenable to multiple sterilizations. The result of this dulling is that the blade 304 or 700 is likely to be a single-use item, resulting in increased expense as more items are used. Further, the disposable nature of such items may lead to increased landfill use. However, exemplary aspects of the present disclosure also provide a solution to this concern. Specifically, the blade 304 and the blade 700 may be made from a composite material. In its simplest form, the composite material may be a diamond-like coating (such as that sold by UNITED PROTECTIVE TECHNOLOGIES (UPT) of 142 Cara Court, Locust NC 28097 under the tradename SPEC™ Coatings) applied to a base material. The base material may be surgical steel, a glass like material such as sapphire or tetragonal zirconia, or a ceramic material. The addition of the coating preserves the edge of the underlying material and/or makes the composite material more amenable to repeated sterilization procedures.
[0043] Thus, as illustrated in
[0044] In general, the base materials are typically crystalline structures (stainless steel, sapphire, and Zirconia are all crystalline materials) that are susceptible, in varying degrees to corrosion, pitting, erosion, staining, and chipping. Generally, these materials can be honed to very sharp edges, however, the edges (which are key to surgical applications) quickly deteriorate in use—for example, surgical blades made from stainless steel typically become dull after several cuts. Sapphire tends to chip along the sharp edge due to stresses in its crystalline structure created during manufacturing—making the blades unusable and creating a danger that the chips will become implanted in the patient as they break off. Tetragonal Zirconia suffers from “low” temperature degradation that can cause it to crumble when subjected to high humidity and temperature such as that used to sterilize instruments in surgical settings.
[0045] To address the shortcomings of the base material, a very thin “film” is provided that protects the blade and other portions of the base material in a manner that reduces or prevents chipping, staining, pitting, corrosion, etc., thereby increasing the life of the instrument/blade, reducing the potential for accidental implantation of chipped off materials, and improving the survivability of the instrument/blade through many autoclave cycles. The coating in most cases will have a hardness/composition that is more pliable (plastic) in nature than the substrate but that has a structure that does not suffer the issues noted above that crystalline base materials have. As noted above, increasing the reusability of the device also reduces landfill waste as it lowers the number of instruments/blades disposed of by a surgical center.
[0046] Note further that blades made from any of these composite materials do not have to be limited to the shapes of blades 304 or 700. Rather, any surgical blade made be formed from the composite material. For example, as illustrated in