Methods and devices for safely penetrating materials
09561544 ยท 2017-02-07
Assignee
- Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Inc. (Boston, MA)
- President And Fellows Of Harvard College (Cambridge, MA)
Inventors
- Conor James Walsh (Dublin, IE)
- Ajith Thomas (Brookline, MA, US)
- Samuel Benjamin Kesner (Arlington, MA, US)
- Hao Pei (Maanshan, CN)
- Kechao Xiao (Guangzhou, CN)
- Paul Loschak (Sunrise, FL, US)
- Kevin C. GALLOWAY (Somerville, MA, US)
Cpc classification
A61B90/03
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Y10T408/551
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B23B41/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23B31/117
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T408/20
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T279/33
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T408/665
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
A61B17/1695
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61B17/16
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B23B41/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The present invention is directed to a bi-stable coupling for controlling the depth of a tool insertion, such as drilling, and similar processes. The bi-stable coupling can be used to penetrate (e.g., drill or push) through a material layer of unknown thickness without plunging the tool into the adjacent layer. In accordance with the invention, in a first state, force is applied to the tool to initiate penetration and a reactive force maintains the device in the first state during penetration and when tool penetrates the material, the reactive force is diminished enabling the device to transition to a second state in which the tool becomes retracted. In medical applications, the invention allows for drilling through bone of unknown thickness without plunging into the adjacent soft tissue.
Claims
1. A drilling device comprising: a bi-stable coupling connecting a motor to a drill chuck, the drill chuck being adapted to rotate about a longitudinal axis as a result of a rotational force applied by the motor; wherein the bi-stable coupling having at least two positions; in a first position, the bi-stable coupling resists a reactive force applied along the longitudinal axis applied to the drill chuck; and in a second position, the bi-stable coupling does not resist a reactive force applied along the longitudinal axis applied to the drill chuck; and wherein the bi-stable coupling extends along the longitudinal axis having a first length while in the first position and a second, shorter length while in the second position.
2. The drilling device according to claim 1 wherein the bi-stable coupling includes at least one connecting arm pivotally mounted to the bi-stable coupling at a first end; the at least one connecting arm including a weight displaced from the first end, whereby the centrifugal force on the weight caused by the rotation of the bi-stable coupling causes the at least one connecting arm to extend outwardly from the longitudinal axis.
3. The drilling device according to claim 2 wherein the bi-stable coupling extends along the longitudinal axis having a first length and when centrifugal force is applied on the weight, the bi-stable coupling contracts to second length, shorter than the first length.
4. The drilling device according to claim 1 wherein the bi-stable coupling connects a rotational input to a drill chuck, the drill chuck being adapted to rotate about a longitudinal axis as a result of a rotational force applied by the motor; and at least one mass on the bi-stable coupling applies a centrifugal force causing the bi-stable coupling to change from the first position to the second position.
5. The drilling device according to claim 1 wherein the bi-stable coupling includes at least one spring that applies a force on the bi-stable coupling causing the bi-stable coupling to change from the first position to the second position.
6. A tool insertion device comprising: a bi-stable coupling connecting an input drive member to a tool wherein the bi-stable coupling having at least two positions; in a first position, the bi-stable coupling resists a reactive force applied along the longitudinal axis applied to the drill chuck; and in a second position, the bi-stable coupling collapses upon the removal of a reactive force applied to the tool along the longitudinal axis of the device; and wherein the bi-stable coupling extends along the longitudinal axis having a first length while in the first position and a second, shorter length while in the second position.
7. The tool insertion device according to claim 6 wherein the bi-stable coupling includes at least one connecting link pivotally mounted to the bi-stable coupling at the first and second end; and at least one drive member to apply a force radially to the longitudinal axis of the device that causes at least one connecting link to extend outwardly from the longitudinal axis.
8. The tool insertion device according to claim 7 wherein the bi-stable coupling extends along the longitudinal axis having a first length and when a force causes the connecting link to extend outward, the bi-stable coupling contracts to second length, shorter than the first length.
9. The tool insertion device according to claim 8 where in one embodiment the bi-stable coupling connects an input motor to a drill chuck, the drill chuck being adapted to rotate about a longitudinal axis as a result of a rotational force applied by the motor; and at least one mass on the at least one pivotally mounted link applies a centrifugal force changing the bi-stable coupling from its long state to its short state.
10. The tool insertion device according to claim 7 wherein the drive member includes at least one spring that applies a force on the at least one pivotally mounted link causing the bi-stable coupling to change from the longer state to the shorter state.
11. The tool insertion device according to claim 10, wherein the drive member further includes a spring along the longitudinal axis that increases or decreases a retraction force of the bi-stable coupling during transition from the first position to the second position.
12. The tool insertion device according to claim 11, further comprising: a locking mechanism configured to passively disengage during tool use.
13. The tool insertion device according to claim 10, further comprising: a locking mechanism configured to be engaged to resist the bi-stable coupling spring forces, thereby holding the bi-stable coupling in the first position.
14. A tool insertion device comprising: a bi-stable coupling connecting an input drive member to a tool, the bi-stable coupling comprising a first linkage and a second linkage; wherein the bi-stable coupling having at least two positions; in a first position, the bi-stable coupling resists a reactive force applied along the longitudinal axis applied to the drill chuck; and in a second position, the bi-stable coupling collapses upon the removal of a reactive force applied to the tool along the longitudinal axis of the device.
15. The tool insertion device according to claim 6, further comprising: a reloading mechanism configured to transition the bi-stable coupling from the second position to the first position.
16. The tool insertion device according to claim 14, wherein an angle between the first linkage and the second linkage is adjustable in the first position.
17. The tool insertion device according to claim 16, wherein an angle between the first linkage and the second linkage is adjustable in the second position.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(25) The present invention is directed to a device for controlling the depth of a drilling operation and similar processes. The invention includes a bi-stable device that can be used to drill through a material layer of unknown thickness without plunging into the adjacent layer. In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, in a first state, force is applied to the drill bit to initiate cutting and a reactive force maintains the device in the first state and when drill bit penetrates the material, the reactive force is diminished enabling the device to transition to a second state in which the drill bit becomes retracted. In medical applications, the invention allows for drilling through bone of unknown thickness without plunging into the adjacent soft tissue.
(26)
(27) The bi-stable coupling 120 further includes one or more linkages connecting the first base member 122 and the second base member 124. In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, two links can be used to connect the first and second base members 122 and 124. The linkage mechanism can include a first bar 132A pivotally connected at a first end to the first base member 122 and a second bar 134A pivotally connected at a first end to the second base member 124. The first bar 132A can also be pivotally connected at a second end to a second end of the second bar 134A by a central pivot joint. In this configuration, the central pivot joint can be moved radially with respect to the longitudinal axis 102 and enabling the second base member 124 to move relative to the first base member 122 along the longitudinal axis 102 and enabling the drill bit 116 to retract along the longitudinal axis.
(28) In accordance with one embodiment of the present invention as shown in
(29) In accordance with an alternate embodiment of the present invention as shown in
(30) For example, in
(31) In accordance with another embodiment of the present invention as shown in
(32) In still another embodiment of the present invention as shown in
(33) In other embodiments, other mechanisms for applying forces can be used. For example as shown in
(34) In accordance with an alternate embodiment of the present invention as shown in
(35) In accordance with other embodiments of the invention, the bi-stable coupling can use a combination of masses (142A), spring (144A) and/or elastic bands (146A) together to bias the linkage mechanism into the appropriate position at the appropriate time.
(36) In accordance with some embodiments of the invention as shown in
(37) As will be explained in more detail, the dimensions of the components and the forces of the springs will vary greatly depending on the application and use of the invention. Factors, such as the hardness or softness of the material to be drilled, and the size and depth of the hole can influence the design preferences for the coupling.
(38) In accordance with one embodiment, the invention can be used to drill a hole in the skull without plunging the drill bit into brain tissue. The following description provides a more detailed description for selecting the design parameters for the coupling for this exemplary application of the invention.
(39) As shown in
F.sub.hand+F.sub.g=F.sub.skull(1)
F.sub.=m.sub.0.sup.2r(2)
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(41)
(42) Next, the moment balance for link A-B is calculated. The torque caused by F.sub.ax and F.sub.ay with respect to point B should balance each other, resulting in Equation 6, where is the angle between one link and the shaft (see
F.sub.axl cos =F.sub.ayl sin (6)
F.sub.cxl cos =F.sub.cyl sin (7)
(43) Equations 1-7 can be combined and arranged to solve for F.sub.bx as in Equation 8.
f.sub.bx=(F.sub.skull+F.sub.spring(M.sub.chuck+m.sub.0)g)tan m.sub.0.sup.2r(8)
(44) The physical meaning of the reaction force F.sub.bx is quite important. If F.sub.bx is positive the linkage is forced inward and point B is being supported by the shaft. As shown in
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(46) If Equation 9 is true and F.sub.skull exceeds F.sub.cr the links will be kept in the drilling or first position. If Equation 9 is not satisfied (if F.sub.skull<F.sub.cr) then the links will collapse into the open or second position. Equation 9 requires pushing force to be maintained by the clinician during the drilling process to ensure that the links do not open before drilling is finished. Upon skull penetration the reaction force of the skull will reduce significantly [13], such that F.sub.skull<F.sub.cr. This change in the reaction force will cause the linkage to collapse, therefore retracting the drill bit the proper distance.
(47) Dynamics of Bi-stable Mechanism The maximum penetration distance, L.sub.push, is the total distance traversed by the drill bit towards brain tissue after penetrating the skull.
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(49) While point B moves to the right and the linkage approaches the parallel position in
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(51) During time t, the whole drill vertically accelerates forward due to the continued pushing force by the doctor. This vertical acceleration is calculated by Equation 14 where M.sub.total is the mass of the whole assembly.
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(53) From Equations 11-14, the downward distance traversed by the whole drill before linkage collapse can be calculated by solving L.sub.1 in Equation 15. Meanwhile, as the linkage moves from closed position to parallel position, point C will move forward relative to point A by distance L.sub.2 calculated in Equation 16. Together, the maximum penetration distance is the sum of these two distances calculated in Equation 17.
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Selecting Design Parameters
(55) To design a drill that can work safely and comfortably, the following factors need to be considered:
(56) Retraction Distance
(57) The retraction distance, L.sub.back, is the distance that the drill bit retracts. As the linkages collapse and changes from closed to open position, the retraction distance, L.sub.back, of the drill bit can be calculated by Equation 18 where a is the angle between the link and the shaft in the fully open position. After penetration the whole drill bit should be able to fully retract from the skull, so L.sub.back should be larger than a typical large skull thickness.
L.sub.back=2l(cos cos )(18)
L.sub.back>10 mm(19)
Penetration Distance
(58) To ensure that the drill bit does not damage brain tissue after penetrating the skull, the maximum penetration distance L.sub.push should be less than 2 mm.
L.sub.push<2 mm(20)
Critical Force
(59) The critical force, F.sub.cr , was calculated in Equation 9 as the lower limit of F.sub.skull in the drilling position. Below F.sub.cr the linkage will collapse to open position. Therefore F.sub.cr must be designed as the lower limit of clinicians' typical drilling forces so that the device continues drilling within the comfortable range for doctors to operate. Depending on the size of the drill bit, the feed rate, and the application, typica pushing force can range from 10 N to 40 N. The system can be designed to function correctly within this broad approximate range of pushing forces.
F.sub.cr10N(21)
(60) Table II contains the optimal set of design parameters that can satisfy Equations 19-21. These parameters were used in the final prototype, which will be discussed in the next section.
(61) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE II Design Parameters M.sub.total 2.5 kg L.sub.back 11.6 mm M.sub.chuck 60 g L.sub.push 0.64 mm m.sub.0 10 g F.sub.cr 10.2N 10 F.sub.skull 50N 60 F.sub.spring 10N r 16 mm w 1400 rpm l 12 mm
Sensitivity Analysis
(62) The value L.sub.push is a useful variable in the analysis and for calculating the sensitivity of the mechanism. Table III was determined by changing each of the parameters listed by 1% and calculating the resulting change in L.sub.push. An increase in , l, F.sub.spring, or a decrease in r, w, m.sub.0 will all lead to a larger L.sub.push. It is evident from the table that L.sub.push is most sensitive to and w. Therefore, the part dimension that determines must be especially accurate to ensure that the experimentally determined L.sub.push does not exceed the calculated value. The drill used to spin the device should have rotational speed minimum 1400 rpm to ensure a smaller and safer L.sub.push.
(63) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE III Sensitivity Analysis Error of L.sub.push due to 1% change 1.97% r 0.86% w 1.72% F.sub.spring 0.44% l 1.01% m.sub.0 0.4%
EXAMPLES
(64) Based on the above analysis, an embodiment of the bi-stable mechanism according to the invention was created. A number of different mechanical designs can be developed and then the component layout and robust connections among different parts, such as masses, links, chuck and leader, can be optimized in order to make the drill more compact and easier to manufacture and assemble.
(65) Many parts of the device can be resized to make the device as compact as possible without sacrificing material strength. The total number of parts can be minimized to reduce manufacturing costs. In accordance with one embodiment, the links were sized to retract the drill bit by 11 mm. In one embodiment, the links were inserted into grooves containing steel shafts (pivot pins) for link rotation. A cylinder concentric to the shaft was added to ensure that the desired angle between the links and the shaft is accurate and precise. Various embodiments of bi-stable coupling according to the invention are shown in
(66) In accordance with the invention, the bi-stable coupling can be adapted to connect directly to the drive shaft of a drill, for example by providing an internal or external thread on the leader 110 to enable it to be mounted on the drive shaft of a motor and thus having one device all packaged together. Alternatively, the leader 100 can include an extension shaft 112 that can be inserted into the chuck of a drill. In this embodiment, the device according to the invention includes a second chuck for retaining the drill bit.
(67)
(68) The various embodiments of present invention can utilize a dynamic bi-stable mechanism that supports drilling when force is being applied to the drill (see
(69) A reload mechanism can be provided that allows the user to reset the device to the drilling position and create additional holes. For example,
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(72) When the user applies a downward force to the push ring 184, this causes the bi-stable coupling to move to the first position, as shown in
(73) Manufacturing and Assembly
(74) The majority of the parts (links, masses, threaded pins, adapter, and leader) can be purchased or professionally manufactured. The links and masses can be machined from brass to take advantage of the material's high density and increased centrifugal force during rotation. The adapter and leader can be machined from aluminum. Steel pins can be used for all revolute joints. The base members can be printed in a high resolution 3D printer. The casing and reloading system can be printed in a low resolution 3D printer. All other parts (steel pins, springs, screws, etc.) can be purchased off the shelf. Alternatively, the device could be made from plastic components for embodiments intended for single-use.
(75) Evaluation
(76) One embodiment of the device was evaluated using a high speed camera to capture the drilling process in real-time, especially after drill bit penetration. The high speed camera was focused on beef bones that were obtained from a local store. These bones, with cortical bone thickness measuring roughly 5 mm, provided a good approximation of the human skull for these experiments.
(77) The described embodiment of the present invention is directed to the design of a cranial drill with an automatic retraction coupling that avoids the risk of plunging after bit penetration through the bone. The design includes a bi-stable coupling whose transformation is triggered by centrifugal forces that pull a linkage open at the end of penetration when the reaction force on the drill bit reduces significantly. This design provides a safer drilling mechanism that can decrease the experience required for drilling holes on the skull without damaging the delicate brain tissue, enabling general surgeons to perform these procedures. Furthermore, the highly portable nature of the mechanism allows it to be used in all conditions including the emergency room or in the field for disaster relief and military operations. The bi-stable coupling works well in any orientation and is robust to external factors such as vibration.
(78) The device according to the various embodiments of the invention can be used as an attachment to an existing drill or built into a sterile, standalone portable unit. The invention can support drill bit diameters from 2 mm (or less) to 7 mm (or more), covering the entire range of hole sizes needed for ICP monitoring, and could easily be fitted for larger diameter drill bits if needed. The device according to the invention can be used to penetrate the skull and safely remove itself without damaging brain tissue. The availability of this device could greatly increase the frequency of ICP monitoring for patients in many different settings, reducing the negative long-term effects caused by brain trauma.
(79) The drilling device according to the invention provides an improvement over currently existing technology, and ensures that important medical procedures can be done safely and successfully. Possible procedures that could be done safely with drilling devices according to one or more embodiments of the present invention include: Skull penetration (for pressure monitor placement, for catheter insertion for drainage of cerebrospinal fluid, to administer medication directly to the area of need, to place electrodes for stimulating or recording brain activity, for abdominal and thoracic applications, for drilling/inserting screws into the sternum without injury to heart, for drilling/inserting screws into ribs without puncturing lungs, for penetrating vertebrae without injuring the spinal cord or its nerve roots, and for penetrating the pelvis or any long bones without injuring nerves or adjacent blood vessels and organs.
(80) Our device can be attached to a battery powered drill. Multiple small drills bits can be incorporated so the clinician can make different sized holes when needed. The bi-stable coupling according to the invention can be used in other embodiments, for example, embodiments that involve pushing a needle or a tube through a layer of tissue. In this embodiment, the forces applied to the needle to penetrate the tissue can be used to hold the bi-stable coupling in the closed or first position. Upon penetrating the tissue layer, springs such as those shown in
(81) Other embodiments are within the scope and spirit of the invention. Features implementing functions may also be physically located at various positions, including being distributed such that portions of functions are implemented at different physical locations.
(82) Further, while the description above refers to the invention, the description may include more than one invention.
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