REPLICA GUIDED MOTION KNEE
20170020674 ยท 2017-01-26
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61F2002/30621
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A total knee replacement, comprising a femoral and a tibial component in articulating contact that can restore normal joint function. The articulation between the two components is controlled by four guide surfaces.
Claims
1. A total knee replacement comprising: a femoral component having a femoral bearing surface, said femoral bearing surface comprising a lateral section located adjacent, in a medial-lateral direction, to an central section that is adjacent, in a medial-lateral direction, to a medial section, wherein coronal and sagittal cross-sections of said lateral and medial sections are convex, and central section has a convex sagittal cross section and a concave coronal cross section; and a tibial component with a tibial bearing surface in articulating contact with said femoral bearing surface, said tibial bearing surface comprising a lateral segment located adjacent, in a medial-lateral direction, to an central segment that is adjacent, in a medial-lateral direction, to a medial segment, wherein sagittal cross section of said lateral segment is approximately flat and coronal cross section is concave, a sagittal and coronal cross sections of said medial segment are concave, and the sagittal cross section of the central segment is concave while the coronal cross section is convex.
2. A total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, wherein: coronal cross-sections of said lateral femoral sections are defined by a first radius, and coronal cross-sections of said lateral tibial segments are defined by a second radius, said first radius is smaller than said second radius; coronal cross-sections of said medial femoral sections are defined by a third radius, and coronal cross-sections of said lateral tibial segments are defined by a fourth radius, said third radius is smaller than said fourth radius; sagittal cross-sections of said medial femoral sections are defined by a fifth radius, and sagittal cross-sections of said medial tibial segments are defined by a sixth radius, said fifth radius is smaller than said sixth radius; sagittal cross-sections of said central femoral sections are defined by a seventh radius, and sagittal cross-sections of said central tibial segments are defined by a eighth radius, said seventh radius is smaller than said eighth radius; and coronal cross-sections of said central femoral sections are defined by a ninth radius, and sagittal cross-sections of said central tibial segments are defined by a tenth radius, said tenth radius is smaller than said ninth radius.
3. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, wherein: said lateral section of said femoral component comprises lateral condyle and said medial section of said femoral component comprises a medial condyle, the sagittal cross section of each of said medial condyle and said lateral condyle has a constant sagittal radius over the arc of flexion from zero to approximately 160 degrees flexion, and from the anterior extreme to the distal end for 0 degrees flexion, the sagittal section slopes upwards by an average of 12 degrees on the lateral side and 20 degrees on the medial side.
4. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, wherein: said sagittal cross-section of said flat lateral segment of said tibial component is sloped by approximately 7 degrees relative to a transverse plane descending in the posterior direction; said sagittal cross-section of said flat lateral section of said femoral component is sloped by approximately 12 degrees relative to a transverse plane descending in the posterior direction; said sagittal cross-section of said flat central segment of said tibial component is sloped posteriorly by approximately 12 degrees relative to a transverse plane descending in the posterior direction; and said sagittal cross section of said flat medial segment of said tibial component is sloped by approximately 20 degrees relative to a transverse plane descending in the posterior direction.
5. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 3, wherein a radius of a sagittal cross-section of a posterior lip of said tibial component is equal to, or up to 2 mm greater than, the radius of a sagittal cross-section of said femoral condyles.
6. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, a patella bearing surface has a depth of at least 7 mm and a side slope angle of 23 degrees.
7. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, a patella bearing surface has a decreasing sagittal radius with increasing flexion angle from approximately 16 mm to 14 mm.
8. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, wherein each said section of said femoral bearing surface smoothly blends into each said adjacent sections, and each said segment of said tibial bearing surface smoothly blends into each said adjacent segments.
9. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 6, wherein said patella bearing surface is a replica of an anatomical patella flange, but is continued distally and posteriorly.
10. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, wherein periphery of said femoral component matches an average peripheral shape of a femur and periphery of said tibial component matches an average peripheral shape of a tibia.
11. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, wherein said femoral and tibial bearing surfaces are configured to guide motion a combination of guiding surfaces and the action of gravity.
12. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, wherein the central region of the lateral tibial surface is sloped posteriorly in the sagittal plane by 5-8 degrees relative to a transverse plane and is configured to produce posterior femoral displacement by gravity.
13. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, where the motion in flexion consists of greater posterior displacement of the lateral femoral condyle compared with medial femoral condyle.
14. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 13, where the lateral displacement is 8-12 mm and the medial displacement is 2-4 mm.
15. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, that provides a greater lateral laxity than medial laxity.
16. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, where the lateral laxity anteriorly is greater than posteriorly, and the medial laxity is greater posteriorly than anteriorly.
17. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, wherein said intercondylar motion guiding surfaces are configured to a total of 4-6 mm of posterior displacement of the femur on the tibia throughout flexion.
18. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, wherein said medial motion guiding surfaces limit anterior displacement of the femur on the tibia to 1-2 mm and limit posterior displacement to 2-4 mm.
19. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, comprising a continuous patella groove on the femoral component configured so that the patella has full contact throughout a full flexion range.
20. The total knee replacement, in accordance with claim 1, wherein: a center of said sagittal cross-section of a posterior portion of said lateral femoral condyle, and a center of said sagittal cross-section of a posterior portion of said medial femoral condyle, and a center of said sagittal cross-section of said central section, of said femoral component are collinear; said sagittal cross-sections of said lateral and medial condyles each comprise condylar arcs of constant radius from 0 degrees flexion to maximum flexion; and said sagittal cross-section of said central section comprise a central arc of constant radius smaller than said condylar arcs of said lateral and medial condyles wherein radius of said condylar arc decreases after approximately 60 degrees flexion.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTIONS OF DRAWINGS
[0013] Embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0032] The total knee replacement (TKR), herein disclosed in embodiments, is designed for application when both of the cruciate ligaments are resected. This type of TKR is the most commonly used today, and allows for ease of surgery and consistency of technique. This requires that the stability normally provided by the cruciate ligaments must be provided by guiding surfaces that come in contact between the femoral and tibial components. The disclosed TKR employs such guiding surfaces, but additionally employs the force of gravity to activate the TKR thereby achieving the required kinematic characteristics. The required kinematics can be summarized as follows: for the neutral path, as the knee is flexed, the lateral contact point displaces posteriorly to the posterior of the tibia, while the medial contact point displaces only a few millimeters, most occurring after 90 degrees flexion. Throughout flexion there is laxity in both anterior-posterior (AP) and internal-external rotation. The lateral laxity is much larger than the medial and occurs primarily by the contact point displacing anteriorly. On the other hand the medial contact point displaces posteriorly. The medial side is very stable to anterior displacement. The Guiding Surfaces of the invention guide such a motion, a key factor being that the motion guidance occurs when there is compressive knee acting across the joint, together with varying amounts of shear force and rotational torque.
[0033] Laxity of an anatomical joint may be defined as slackness or looseness of the joint. For purposes of this application, laxity may be provided and quantified as the degree of non-conformity between two contacting surfaces wherein the non-conformity permits the displacement of one surface with respect to the other in response to the application of a shear force.
[0034] As shown in
[0035] The peripheral shape of the tibial component 120 is the same as the periphery of an average tibia when it is resected horizontally to receive the tibial component. This component shape allows the various soft tissues including ligaments, capsule and muscles, to flow naturally around the implant surfaces. This will prevent pain from over-stretched soft tissues, and instability from too loose soft tissues. It will also allow for normal muscle mechanics.
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[0038] Referring to
[0039] The mid-medial sections 240 are shown in
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[0041] In an embodiment, the dimensions provided are suitable for a TKR appropriate for an average size male knee. The linear dimensions of the TKR may be scaled by a constant scaling factor for other knee sizes. In this case, the angles specified should be preserved. The horizontal spacing between the high points 300 on the femoral surface and the low points 310 on the tibial surface are spaced by approximately 48 mm24 mm). The femoral radius 320 at those locations is approximately 22 mm and the tibial radius 330 is approximately 28 mm. The central concave radius 340 of the femoral component 110 is approximately 13 mm and the corresponding radius 350 of the tibial component 120 is approximately 11 mm. The height 360 of the patella bearing surface 125 from the distal extreme of the condyles 300 is approximately 7 mm. The surface 305 connecting the patella bearing surface 125 with the distal extreme of the condyles 300 slopes at an angle of approximately 23 degrees with respect to a transverse plane 315.
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[0043] The cross-sections of the bearing surfaces of femoral component are related. As shown in
STATEMENT REGARDING PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0044] While the invention has been described with respect to the foregoing, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that various changes and/or modifications can be made to the invention without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.