BONE ANCHORING SCREWS PROVIDED WITH A PLURALITY OF SOCKET TYPES
20220313329 · 2022-10-06
Inventors
Cpc classification
F16B23/0023
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16B23/0038
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16B23/0092
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
A61B17/8605
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A bone anchoring screw comprises a head, a shaft and a threaded portion arranged successively along a common axis, the head having a recess comprising at least two stages arranged in succession along the common axis, the first stage having a diameter larger than the diameter of the second stage, in which one of the two stages comprises at least one socket of a first type and the other of the two stages comprises at least one socket of the first type and one other type.
Claims
1. A bone anchoring screw, comprising: a head; a shaft; and a threaded portion; wherein the head, the shaft, and the threaded portion are arranged successively along a common axis, the head has a recess comprising at least two stages arranged in succession along the common axis, a first stage of the at least two stages has a diameter larger than a diameter of a second stage of the at least two stages, and one stage of the at least two stages comprises at least one socket of a first type and another stage of the at least two stages comprises at least one socket of the first type and at least one socket of another type.
2. The bone anchoring screw of claim 1, wherein in the another stage, the at least one socket of the first type and the at least one socket of the another type are, respectively, a six-lobed socket (Tl) and a hexagon socket head cap, or the at least one socket of the first type and the at least one socket of the another type are, respectively, a hexagon socket head cap and a six-lobed socket.
3. The bone anchoring screw of claim 2, wherein at least one stage of the at least two stages extends at least between a transverse surface on a side of the shaft forming a shoulder and a transverse crown on a side of the head, the at least one stage of the at least two stages having a recess formed by a union of a six-lobed socket and a hexagon socket head cap, each of the six-lobed socket and the hexagon socket being centered on the common axis and opening on the side of the head.
4. The bone anchoring screw of claim 3, wherein the at least one stage has, in a section transverse to the common axis, a contour successively having, in alternation, a vertex of the hexagon socket head cap and a vertex of a six-lobed socket.
5. The bone anchoring screw of claim 4, wherein an angle formed between two successive vertices is substantially equal to 30° around the common axis.
6. The bone anchoring screw of claim 4, wherein the six-lobed socket has a radius r.sub.6lc of a circumscribed circle and the hexagon socket head cap has a radius r.sub.6pc of a circumscribed circle and a radius r.sub.6pi of an inscribed circle, and the radii satisfy the following inequality:
√{square root over (3)}/r.sub.6pi=
7. The bone anchoring screw of claim 3, wherein at least one stage of the at least two stages of the recess comprises a union of a Z-type crosshead socket and an H-type crosshead socket.
8. The bone anchoring screw of claim 7, wherein four small branches of the Z-type crosshead socket are contained in four branches of the H-type crosshead socket.
9. The bone anchoring screw of claim 7, wherein a diameter of the H-type crosshead socket is larger than a diameter of the hexagon socket head cap.
10. The bone anchoring screw of claim 7, wherein a vertex of a large branch of the Z-type crosshead socket, a center of the socket, and a vertex of the hexagon socket head cap are aligned.
11. The bone anchoring screw of claim 1, wherein the types of sockets of the at least two stages are the same.
12. The bone anchoring screw of claim 1, further comprising an intermediate stage between the first stage and the second stage.
13. The bone anchoring screw of claim 12, wherein the recess in the intermediate stage comprises fewer types of sockets than the recess in the first stage and/or the second stage.
14. The bone anchoring screw of claim 1, wherein at least one of the sockets of one stage of the at least two stages can be obtained by homothety of at least one of the sockets of another stage of the at least two stages or obtained by homothety and rotation of at least one of the sockets of the another stage.
15. The bone anchoring screw of claim 5, wherein the six-lobed socket has a radius r.sub.6lc of a circumscribed circle and the hexagon socket head cap has a radius r.sub.6pc of a circumscribed circle and a radius r.sub.6pi of an inscribed circle, and the radii satisfy the following inequality:
16. The bone anchoring screw of claim 6, wherein at least one stage of the at least two stages of the recess comprises a union of a Z-type crosshead socket and an H-type crosshead socket.
17. The bone anchoring screw of claim 16, wherein four small branches of the Z-type crosshead socket are contained in four branches of the H-type crosshead socket.
18. The bone anchoring screw of claim 8, wherein a diameter of the H-type crosshead socket is larger than a diameter of the hexagon socket head cap.
19. The bone anchoring screw of claim 9, wherein a vertex of a large branch of the Z-type crosshead socket, a center of the socket, and a vertex of the hexagon socket head cap are aligned.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0034] Other advantages and particularities of the present disclosure will become apparent on reading the detailed description of implementations and embodiments, which are in no way limiting, with regard to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
[0041]
[0042]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0043] Since the embodiments described hereinafter are not limiting in nature, it is possible, in particular, to consider variants of embodiments of the present disclosure that comprise only a selection of the features that are described, provided that this selection of features is sufficient to confer a technical advantage or to differentiate embodiments of the present disclosure from the prior art. This selection comprises at least one preferably functional feature without structural details, or with only a portion of the structural details if this portion alone is sufficient to confer a technical advantage or to differentiate the present disclosure from the prior art.
[0044] Although the present disclosure is not limited to screws for orthopedic use, it finds particular utility in this field.
[0045] A first embodiment of a screw 100 according to the present disclosure is described with reference to the upper part of
[0046] A first transition portion (not numbered), also called the first shaft portion, is disposed axially between the head 102 and the first threaded portion 104.
[0047] A second transition portion (not numbered), also called the second shaft portion, is disposed axially between the first threaded portion 104 and the second threaded portion 106.
[0048] With reference to the lower part of
[0049] In this example, the axial extension of the recess 110 is 4.37 mm and the half-cone angle formed by countersinking is 62°.
[0050] The depth of the recess 110 may advantageously be greater than the depth of the head 102, preferably greater than the depth of the head 102 and of the first transition portion, more preferably greater than the depth of the head 102 and of the first transition portion and a fraction of the depth of the first threaded portion 104. This characteristic makes it possible to optimize the compactness of the screw.
[0051] Each of the stages has a diameter smaller than the stage immediately adjacent to the side of the head 102 and larger than the diameter of the stage immediately adjacent to the side of the tip 108.
[0052] The first stage 102a has a diameter smaller than the outside diameter of the screw 100.
[0053] The cone 102t has a diameter smaller than the diameter of the last stage.
[0054] The series of diameters, respectively da, db, dc of the stages 102a, 102b, 102c is a decreasing series.
[0055] With reference to the left part of
[0056] Alternatively, the series of depths of the stages can be constant, increasing or arbitrary.
[0057] The contours, respectively, Ca, Cb and Cd, of the stages with 102a, 102b and 102c are shown.
[0058] Each of the contours results from the union of two surfaces, one of the surfaces resulting from a six-lobed socket according to the ISO 10664 standard and the other from the surfaces resulting from a hexagon socket head cap.
[0059] For a good understanding of the present disclosure,
[0060] With reference to the upper part of
[0064] With reference to the lower part of
[0068] Also, in the example shown in
[0072] The recess 110 is the result of the union of the two three-stage screws that have just been described.
[0073] Each of the contours successively has, alternately, a vertex of a hexagon socket head cap and a vertex of a six-lobed socket. The angle formed between two consecutive vertices is 30°, so as to obtain a contour invariance by 60° rotation.
[0074] For each of the stages, the median transverse planes of the six-lobed socket and the hexagon socket head cap are the same.
[0075] When a six-lobed socket is rotated centered on a hexagon socket head cap and rotated angularly so that the resulting contour alternately has a vertex of a hexagon socket head cap and a vertex of a six-lobed socket, it is necessary that: [0076] the radius r6lc of the circumscribed circle of the six-lobed socket is greater than the radius r6pi of the inscribed circle (also referred to as the apothem) of the hexagon socket head caps: r6lc>r6pi, [0077] the radius r6pc of the circumscribed circle of the hexagon socket head caps is greater than the radius r6li of the inscribed circle of the six-lobed sockets, r6pc>r6li, [0078] the radius r6pi of the inscribed circle of the hexagon socket head caps is greater than the radius r6li of the inscribed circle of the six-lobed sockets: r6pi>r6li.
[0079] These conditions can be summarized by the following inequality:
[0080] These conditions are verified for each of the three stages, as shown in the following table:
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 r.sub.6li r.sub.6pi r.sub.6pc r.sub.6lc Stage 1 T25 and M5 1625 2000 2309 2250 Stage 2 T15 and M4 1200 1500 1732 1675 Stage 3 T8 and M2.5 0.875 1000 1155 1200
[0081] The geometric transformation that transforms the first contour Ca into the second contour Cb is a 45° angle similarity. The geometric transformation that transforms the second contour Cb into the third contour Cd is also a 45° angle similarity.
[0082] Such a screw can be formed by machining or by additive manufacturing.
[0083] The material used to form the screw can be a material having antibacterial properties.
[0084] According to a first variant of the present disclosure, not shown and described only for how it differs from the first embodiment, the screw may have only two stages instead of three.
[0085] According to a second variant of the present disclosure, not shown and described only for how it differs from the first variant, one of the stages has a contour formed by two different types of sockets of substantially identical diameter, the other of the stages comprising a single socket, of the same type as one of the types forming the contour.
[0086] Referring to
[0087] The screw 200 comprises a recess 210 also formed by three stages a, b, c, referenced 210a, 210b, 210c in the description.
[0088] As will be better understood in the light of the description of
[0093] An H-type crosshead socket has four branches forming a cross, each of the branches having the same dimensions.
[0094] A Z-type crosshead socket is in the shape of an 8-pointed star: four large branches like those of the H-type sockets, and four small branches of the same dimensions and forming a cross rotated by 45° with respect to the cross formed by the four large branches. The dimension of each of the four small branches is smaller than that of the large branches.
[0095] As can be seen in
[0096] Still with reference to
[0100] With reference to
[0104] As can be seen in
[0105] Cleverly, the small diameter branches of a Z-type socket of one stage have an extension that is compatible with (and therefore greater than) that of an H-type crosshead socket for the same stage.
[0106] With reference to
[0107] According to a first variant of the second embodiment, not shown and described only for how it differs from the first embodiment, the screw may have only two stages instead of three.
[0108] According to a second variant of the second embodiment, not shown and described only for how it differs from the second embodiment, and possibly combinable with the first variant of the second embodiment, or the first embodiment or one or several of its variants, one of the stages comprises only (or even only one of) the two H-type and/or Z-type crosshead sockets.
[0109] According to a third variant of the second embodiment, not shown and described only for how it differs from the first and/or the second embodiment, and possibly combinable with the first variant, or the first embodiment or one of its variants, one of the stages comprises only (or even only one of) two six-lobed sockets and/or hexagon socket head caps.
[0110] Referring to
[0111] Each of the stages is formed by: [0112] a six-lobed socket according to the ISO 10664 standard, [0113] a hexagon socket head cap, [0114] a Z-type crosshead socket (Pozidriv type), [0115] an H-type crosshead socket (Phillips type).
[0116] As will be better understood in the light of the description of
[0119] As can be seen in
[0120] Still with reference to
[0123] The first stage further comprises two slot sockets. Each of the slot sockets has an extension plane that is transverse to the common axis. The two extension planes are combined, and perpendicular to the axial plane passing through two opposite vertices of one of the squares.
[0124] With reference to
[0125] The present disclosure is naturally not limited to the examples that have just been described and numerous modifications can be made to these examples without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. In addition, the various features, forms, variants, and embodiments of the present disclosure can be grouped together in various combinations as long as they are not incompatible or mutually exclusive.