HIGH-FREQUENCY TOOL FOR MEDICAL RESECTOSCOPES

20180235688 ยท 2018-08-23

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

High-frequency tools are used in medicine for manipulating body tissue, using an HF resectoscope. For electrical insulation of an electrode from an electrode support, the ends of the electrode are initially guided through ceramic tubes. These ceramic tubes are sensitive in particular to forces transverse to the longitudinal axis of the resectoscope. A high-frequency tool that has increased stability with respect to transverse forces. An electrode has two ends, which for establishing a connection to an electrode support are each insertable into a receiving opening of the ends of the electrode support, or positionable in front of the ends, and wherein the electrode is contacted in an electrically conductive manner, at least in the area of a receiving opening, with a conductor wire that is guided in the electrode support.

Claims

1. A high-frequency tool for medical resectoscopes for manipulation of body tissue, having an electrode support that is movable in the axial direction of the resectoscope, and an electrode which may be acted on with high-frequency current and which is mounted on the distal, fork-shaped ends of the electrode support, wherein the electrode has two ends, which for establishing a connection to the electrode support are each positioned in, or, viewed in the distal direction, in front of, a receiving opening of the ends of the electrode support, and wherein the electrode is contacted in an electrically conductive manner, at least in an area around a receiving opening, with a conductor wire that is guided in the electrode support and whose cross section is smaller than the cross section of the electrode.

2. The high-frequency tool according to claim 1, wherein the ends of the electrode support are widened to accommodate the ends of the electrode.

3. The high-frequency tool according to claim 1, wherein the electrode and the conductive wire are made of an electrically conductive material in one piece.

4. The high-frequency tool according to claim 1, wherein the conductor wire has a continuous design, and the electrode, as a tube, is guided between the ends of the electrode support above the conductor wire.

5. The high-frequency tool according to claim 1, wherein the ends of the electrode are sheathed with a construction material having a strength greater than 80 MPa.

6. The high-frequency tool according to claim 1, wherein the ends of the electrode and/or the conductor wires are sheathed by an insulator.

7. The high-frequency tool according to claim 1, wherein the ends of the electrode are each electrically insulated from the ends of the electrode support by PEEK tubes or PPS tubes.

8. The high-frequency tool according to claim 1, wherein the ends of the electrode are mechanically fixedly connected to the conductor wires.

9. The high-frequency tool according to claim 1, wherein the insulation of the ends of the electrode and of the conductive wires is designed as one piece.

10. The high-frequency tool according to claim 1, wherein the ends of the electrode sheathed by the insulation are fixedly connected in the widened areas of the electrode support.

11. The high-frequency tool according to claim 1, wherein for stabilization, the ends of the electrode are insertable through steel tubes situated directly in front of the openings of the receiving openings of the electrode support.

12. The high-frequency tool according to claim 11, wherein the tubes are an integral part of the electrode or of the ends of the electrode support.

Description

[0018] One preferred exemplary embodiment of a high-frequency tool is described in greater detail below with reference to the drawings, which show the following:

[0019] FIG. 1 shows an HF resectoscope with a high-frequency tool,

[0020] FIG. 2 shows a view of a distal area of an electrode, and

[0021] FIG. 3 shows a cross section of the electrode according to FIG. 2.

[0022] The high-frequency tool 10 according to the invention is situated on a distal end of a shank 11 of a resectoscope 12. An HF resectoscope 12 or a carrier of an HF resectoscope 12 is illustrated in FIG. 1 with an indicated outer shank 29 by way of example. In FIG. 1, the high-frequency tool 10 is in a working position, in which it is pushed out from the outer shank 29. The high-frequency tool 10 illustrated in FIGS. 1, 2, and 3 is designed by way of example as a cutting electrode having a cutting loop. It is expressly noted at this point that the present invention is not limited to the exemplary embodiment of a resectoscope 12 or a cutting electrode illustrated here. Rather, the high-frequency tool 10 according to the invention may be used for any medical instrument.

[0023] Since the high-frequency tool 10 is regarded as the subject matter of the present invention, further description of the illustrated resectoscope 12 is dispensed with.

[0024] Reference is made to the extensive prior art for a more detailed description.

[0025] FIG. 2 illustrates an enlarged detail of the high-frequency tool 10 according to the invention. This high-frequency tool 10 essentially comprises a bracket-like electrode 13 and the electrode support 14. Of the electrode support 14, only two ends 15, 16 are illustrated in FIG. 2. The electrode support 14 is illustrated by a forked tube 17, likewise only partially shown. The forked tube 17 has two tubular arms 18, 19 that converge into a single tube, and which together form the electrode support 14.

[0026] The electrode 13 illustrated here has a bow 20 or bracket that extends downwardly into the plane of the drawing. However, it is also conceivable for this bow 20 to be designed as a simple connection of the ends 21 and 22, and to lie in the same plane as the ends. The cutting depth or the cutting pattern may be specified due to the design of the bow 20.

[0027] For fastening the electrode 13 to the forked tube 17 or to the electrode support 14, the ends 21, 22 are inserted into an opening or widened area 23, 24 at the ends 15, 16, respectively, of the electrode support 14. Since the electrode 13 as well as the arms 18, 19 of the forked tube 17 or of the electrode support 14 may be metallic, the likewise metallic electrode 13 or the ends 21, 22 of the electrode 13 must be insulated from the widened areas 23, 24. For this purpose, the invention provides for sheathing the end 21 and the end 22 with an insulating tube 25, 26, respectively. This insulating tube 25, 26 may be a plastic tube or a PTFE tube, for example. The wall thickness of this tube may be 0.1 mm to 0.5 mm or 0.2 mm to 0.4 mm, in particular 0.3 mm, the wall thickness being a function primarily of the material and the required impact strength.

[0028] The ends 21, 22 of the electrode 14 are each fixedly connected to a conductor wire 27, 28. This fixed connection between the ends 21, 22 and the conductor wires 27, 28 may be a crimped, soldered, or plug-in connection or the like.

[0029] The conductor wires 27, 28 are electrically insulated from the walls of the arms 18, 19 by insulation in the same way as for the ends 21, 22. As illustrated in FIG. 3, this insulation may involve the same insulating tubes 25, 26 as those which electrically insulate the ends 21, 22. The insulating tubes 25, 26 then converge into one insulating tube.

[0030] The high-frequency tool 10 is inserted with its ends 21, 22 into the widened areas 23, 24 in such a way that the ends 21, 22 together with the insulating tubes 25, 26 form an essentially fixed connection to the widened areas 23, 24. The high-frequency tool 10 according to the invention is stable with respect to transverse forces due to this plug-in connection between the electrode 13 and the conductor wires 27, 28. That is, in particular the widened areas 23, 24 of the electrode support 17 and the electrode 13 are not mechanically damaged when force is exerted transversely with respect to the longitudinal axis of the resectoscope 12.

[0031] It is quite conceivable and within the scope of the invention to provide that the arms 18, 19 or the widened areas 23, 24 of the electrode support 17 illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 have a different shape. In addition, it is provided according to the invention that instead of the insulating tubes 25, 26 or in addition to the insulating tubes 25, 26, the ends 21, 22 of the electrode 14 may be insulated from the electrode support 17 by additional or alternative insulators, for example PEEK tubes.

LIST OF REFERENCE NUMERALS

[0032] 10 High-frequency tool

[0033] 11 shank

[0034] 12 resectoscope

[0035] 13 electrode

[0036] 14 electrode support

[0037] 15 end

[0038] 16 end

[0039] 17 forked tube

[0040] 18 arm

[0041] 19 arm

[0042] 20 bow

[0043] 21 end

[0044] 22 end

[0045] 23 widened area

[0046] 24 widened area

[0047] 25 insulating tube

[0048] 26 insulating tube

[0049] 27 conductor wire

[0050] 28 conductor wire

[0051] 29 outer shank