METHOD, DEVICE, AND SYSTEM FOR SHAVING AND SHAPING OF A JOINT
20170348011 · 2017-12-07
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B2090/033
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/1725
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/1637
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/742
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61B17/17
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/02
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
Described herein are methods and devices useful for reaming and shaping the surfaces of a joint in a mammalian body. The reaming and shaping devices and methods are particularly useful in preparation of a joint for a minimally invasive joint replacement or resurfacing, though they may be used as part of any appropriate arthroplasty procedure.
Claims
1-19. (canceled)
20. A method of modifying a shape of a joint surface of a mammalian joint comprising: placing a cutting tool comprising a plurality of cutting surfaces at the joint surface, the plurality of cutting surfaces comprising an arc extending longitudinally to form an arc angle between a north apex and an end of the cutting surface, the plurality of cutting surfaces each including a concave surface and a convex surface,; moving the plurality of cutting surfaces with respect to the joint surface; and removing joint tissue from the joint surface by rotating the cutting tool comprising the plurality of cutting surfaces about the central axis by contacting a first side of the joint tissue with the concave surface of the cutting surfaces and by contacting a second side of the joint tissue with the convex surface of the cutting surfaces to thereby modify the shape of the joint surface.
21. The method of claim 20 wherein the convex surface is on an opposing side of the plurality of cutting surfaces from the concave surface.
22. The method of claim 20 wherein the joint surface is a first joint surface corresponding to a first bone, the method further comprising simultaneously removing joint surface tissue from a second joint surface corresponding to a second bone with the convex surface of the plurality of cutting surfaces of the cutting tool.
23. The method of claim 22 wherein the first bone includes a portion of an acetabular cup and the second bone includes a portion of a femoral head.
24. The method of claim 20 further comprising assembling at least a portion of the cutting tool within or about a joint space of the joint.
25. The method of claim 20 wherein placing the cutting tool at the joint surface further comprises arthroscopically placing the plurality of cutting surfaces in a joint space of the joint.
26. The method of claim 25 further comprising attaching the plurality of cutting surfaces to the cutting tool in situ in the joint space of the joint.
27. The method of claim 20 wherein the joint surface is a first joint surface corresponding to a first bone, the method further comprising simultaneously removing joint surface tissue from a second joint surface corresponding to a second bone with the cutting tool.
28. The method of claim 20 further comprising forming a groove or depression in the joint surface.
29. The method of claim 20 further comprising moving at least a portion of the cutting surfaces toward a point on the central axis.
30. The method of claim 20 wherein each of the cutting surfaces have an attached end defining a pivot, the method further comprising pivoting each of the cutting surface at the pivot.
31. The method of claim 20 further comprising, before the moving steps: placing a guide pin in the joint; placing a cannulated drill on the guide pin; placing the cutting tool in the joint coaxially with the guide pin; and activating the cutting tool.
32. The method of claim 31 further comprising distracting the joint before the placing step.
33. The method of claim 31 further comprising compressing the joint after the placing step.
34. The method of claim 31 further comprising applying a treatment solution to the cutting tool after the placing the cutting tool in the joint step and during the activating step.
35. The method of claim 34 wherein the applying step further comprises applying cooled saline.
36. The method of claim 20 wherein moving the cutting surfaces comprises gripping the joint surface with the cutting surfaces.
37. The method of claim 20 wherein moving the cutting surfaces comprises releasing the cutting surfaces from the joint surface.
38. The method of claim 20 further comprising engaging a stop mechanism to prevent over-reaming of the joint surface.
39. The method of claim 20 wherein the joint is selected from the group consisting of finger joints, hip joints, knee joints, shoulder joints, and toe joints.
40. The method of claim 20 further comprising delivering a controlled distraction or compression force to the joint.
41. The method of claim 40 further comprising modifying the controlled force using a hydraulic, pneumatic, or mechanical mechanism.
42. The method of claim 20 further comprising the cutting tool providing tactile feedback to a user when removing joint tissue.
43. The method of claim 42 wherein the tactile feedback is related to the friction of the cutting surfaces against the joint surface.
44. The method of claim 20 wherein removing joint tissue from the joint surface by rotating the cutting tool includes removing joint tissue simultaneously from more than 180° of the joint surface when viewing the joint surface from an axial view of the central axis of the cutting tool by contacting the joint tissue with the concave surface of the cutting surfaces to thereby modify the shape of the joint surface.
45. The method of claim 20 wherein moving the plurality of cutting surfaces with respect to the joint surface includes moving the plurality of cutting surfaces in a three dimensional curved path corresponding to a curvature of the joint surface.
46. The method of claim 20 wherein the arc angle is greater than 90° between the north apex and the end of the cutting surface.
47. The method of claim 20 wherein each of the cutting surfaces extend over more than 90° of the joint surface.
48. The method of claim 20 wherein the joint includes a portion of a hand.
49. The method of claim 48 wherein the portion of the hand includes a base of a finger.
50. The method of claim 20 wherein the joint includes a portion of a foot.
51. The method of claim 50 wherein the portion of the foot includes a base of a toe.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0073] The novel features of the invention are set forth with particularity in the claims that follow. A better understanding of the features and advantages of the present invention will be obtained by reference to the following detailed description that sets forth illustrative embodiments, in which the principles of the invention are utilized, and the accompanying drawings of which.
[0074] In the drawings:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0103] The present invention includes a method, device, and system to quickly prepare a joint surface for subsequent surgery. Preparation may be done in one step and may not require open exposure of the joint. The benefits include an option for a minimally invasive (arthroscopic) surgery for joint preparation and coordinated reaming and smoothing of the joint surfaces so that the two sides of the joint match. For brevity, the invention is shown configured for use in a hip joint, but may be used on any suitable movable joint (e.g., ball-and-socket, condyle or hinge-structure joints, such as finger, hip, knee, shoulder, toe, etc.).
[0104] A combined reaming and shaping device configured for a hip joint according to one aspect of the disclosure is shown in
[0105] The reaming and shaping end of the device is able to rotate about a central device axis. In one embodiment, the device may be configured to ream an acetabular side of a joint at the same time it shapes a femoral head. The device may be trapped between two joint surfaces to cause the device to simultaneously shave both sides of the joint. A distractor may provide a compressive force to bring the femur close to the acetabulum to generate a reaming reaction force that traps the cutting surfaces between the two joint surfaces as the reaming and shaping end of the device rotates. In one embodiment, the reaming and shaping end of the device may be able to oscillate (e.g. change rotational direction about a central axis). The device may oscillate after performing less than a full revolution, or may oscillate after performing one or more revolutions.
[0106] Cutting surfaces (e.g., blades or petals) 1 are shown in the joint space of a joint attached to the blade rotor 2, the distractor linear actuator module 7, and the drill 13. The cutting surface may be shaped as a long or short, narrow or wide blade. The cutting surface may be arc shaped and may extend longitudinally along the surface of the femoral head. In one embodiment, they may extend 91° to 125°. The device may have one or a plurality of cutting surfaces. The cutting surfaces are able to rotate about a central axis (e.g., the axis of the bone, axis of the blade rotor, or an axis defined by the cutting surface) and to remove thin slivers of bone, cartilage or other material from the joint surface as they rotate. The cutting surface may have surface roughness or sharpness in any form that may cause material to be removed from the joint surface. The cutting surface may have, e.g., sharp, pointed teeth with or without directionality or may have an attached or embedded abrasive material.
[0107] The cutting surfaces may have both convex and concave facial surfaces.
[0108] The cutting surfaces may remove joint surface tissue from more than 180° of the joint surface to modify the joint tissue. The profile (shape) of the cutting surfaces 1 matches the desired joint surface profile. The concave side may have a same or different profile (e.g., spherical, tapered cylinder, chamfered cylinder) than the convex side (e.g., spherical, elliptical). The cutting surface 1 may carry one or more features that may create a groove or depression on the joint surface upon rotation of the cutting surface.
[0109] The cutting surface(s) 1 can be attached to the blade rotor 2 by any suitable means that allows them to pivot with respect to the blade rotor and move with respect to the joint to shape and shave joint tissue. The attachment mechanism may allow the cutting surfaces 1 to be easily attached or removed, e.g., for assembly or disassembly of the cutting surfaces from the blade rotor 2. In one embodiment, the cutting surface 1 is attached to the blade rotor 2 using a slide-to-clip mechanism by means of a key 23 on the cutting surface coupling with a keyway 24 on the blade rotor 2. A plurality of cutting surfaces on a reaming and shaping device may be symmetrically disposed around a central (blade, device, or cutting surface) axis.
[0110] One end of the blade rotor 2 may be removably coupled with the cutting surface(s). The blade rotor 2 may have blade cutting surfaces or edges 22 on its top side that align with the cutting surfaces (blades) to allow smooth and continuous joint surface removal and reshaping. The blade rotor is hollow and may carry a pelvic centering pin 4 inside it. The blade rotor is able to rotate around the pelvic centering pin 4. The other end of the blade rotor 2 holds a spline linear bearing that allows the blade rotor to freely move axially while being able to carry torque at the same time. The torque may be supplied by a drill 13 that remains outside the body during a surgical procedure.
[0111] The pelvic centering pin 4 is a long, thin bone screw that is screwed on the second side of the joint, shown at the center of the acetabulum in the pelvis in
[0112] A bone screw (trochanter screw) 5 holds the device in the femur 6. The trochanter screw 5 is hollow to accommodate the blade rotor 2 and the pelvic centering pin 4. The trochanter screw has self-cutting threads. The trochanter screw 5 holds an attachment port 42 configured to allow the distractor linear actuator module (containing the distractor; 7) to be attached.
[0113] The distractor linear actuator module 7 is fixed on the bone (trochanter) screw 5 which in turn is fixed on the femur 6. The distractor linear actuator module does not rotate. The rotating hollow distractor shaft 8 carries torque from the drill 13 through the flange 14 to the spline 16 that in turn delivers torque to the blade rotor 2.
[0114] The linear bearing 9 allows axial motion of one portion of the distractor. The distractor may have a 2-way actuator, such as a pneumatic actuator, to act on the bone screws and thereby distract or compress the joint space of the joint. The distractor may have a compression air chamber 11 that may supply a compressive force and a distraction air chamber 12 that may supply a distraction force, separated by a two-way piston 17, 18 as shown in
[0115] The drill 13 connects to the distractor linear actuator module 7 at the drill flange 14 to deliver power from the drill into the distractor linear actuator module 7. The centering pin restrictor 15 locks the end of the pelvic centering pin 4 axially so that it can transmit an axial load to cause compression or distraction of the joint. The spline keyway 16 transmits torque but allows free axial positioning of the blade rotor 2 so that it can accommodate a bump or asphericity of the bone during the shaving process.
[0116] The cutting surfaces 1, blade rotor 2, hollow distractor shaft 8, drill 13, flange 14, and spline 16 may all rotate. The bone screw 5, distractor 7, linear bearing 9, distractor piston 17, 18, and ball bearing are fixed to the bone (femur) to allow for rotation of the distractor shaft 20. In one embodiment, the cutting surfaces 1 and blade rotor 2 are caused to rotate by torque supplied by the drill and are non-axially attached to other parts of the distractor and the drill.
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[0119] In another embodiment, a shaper device to shape only a single side of a joint surface utilizes cutting surfaces that move relative to the joint surface. In another embodiment, the shaper re-shapes greater than 30° of a joint surface. In another embodiment, the shaper reshapes more than 180° (e.g., 181°-250°) of a joint surface. The joint surface may be roughly spherical or otherwise protruding. The shaper device may have a guide pin to center the shaving process and a cannulated drill that operates over the guide pin.
[0120] The cutting surfaces may be separated from one another during insertion of the device in the joint to allow the device to fit over the joint end. The cutting surfaces may be brought closer together around a spherical or protruding joint surface in preparation for or during use (clam shell design). The cutting surfaces may close over the joint surface and grip the surface during use.
[0121] For brevity, the disclosure shows the device configured for use in a hip joint, although the device can be used on any suitable movable joint (e.g., ball-and-socket, condyloid or hinge structure such as finger, hip, knee, shoulder, toe, etc). The inner shape of the shaper may be any suitable shape corresponding to the joint surface to be shaped (e.g., spherical, elliptical tapered cylinder, chamfered cylinder). In one embodiment, a femoral shaper may be configured to shape a sphere.
[0122] The shaper may re-shape the joint surface to a spherical geometry by removing the cartilage and a small amount of the subchondral bone. In one embodiment, the shaper device may have one cutting surface. The shaper device may have a plurality of cutting surfaces. In one embodiment the shaper has three cutting surfaces.
[0123] The cutting surfaces may be arc shaped. The clam shell cutting surface of a device may comprise one or more separate shell cutting surfaces. The cutting surfaces may be any longitudinal length able to change a shape of the joint. The cutting surfaces may extend so as to encompass the joint surface (e.g. from 15-125°). In one embodiment, the cutting surfaces are longitudinal spherical arcs extending to 91-125° as measured from the top, central axis (North Pole) and extend over the sides of the joint surface. As cutting occurs, the clam shells continuously press down on the femoral head, causing additional shaving of the femoral head surface. The cutting surfaces may have a collar region configured to protect a portion of the bone surface from unwanted shaving at the bottom edge of the cutting surface. Undesirable shaving may lead to bone fractures and/or damaged blood vessels. In one embodiment, the collar region protects the femoral neck.
[0124] One or more (e.g., 2-6) clam shell cutting surface(s) may make up the clam shell shaper. These shells may cover a total of 1-100% of the circumferential (lateral) area of a sphere. The cutting portion or edge of the cutting surface may be any shape or material effective for shaving or trimming joint surface material. The cutting portion may be an abrasive surface (e.g., a file-like shaving surface) or multiple large or small cutting teeth (e.g., grater style).
[0125] The clam shell cutting surfaces may be closed over the femoral head via a clamping mechanism. The clamping mechanism may cause the cutting surfaces to grip the joint surface. A stop mechanism may prevent over-reaming. The stop mechanism may be a spring, a nut, or a mating of the clam shell cutting surfaces. The clam shell cutting surfaces may be engaged and disengaged (i.e., closed and opened) from the femoral head surface via a locking mechanism.
[0126] The clamping mechanism for the clam shell cutting surfaces may apply continuous force to the clam shells to facilitate cutting of the femoral head surface. As shaving occurs, the clamping mechanism may cause the clam shells to close in against the femoral head and expose more of the femoral head surface to the clam shell cutting surfaces. The clamping force may be controlled through any suitable mechanism to cause the cutting surfaces to grip the surface in order to shave the surface and to release the surface to allow the device to be removed. In one embodiment a hydraulic system may control the clamping. In another embodiment, a pneumatic system may be used to control the clamping. In another embodiment a spring may be used to control the clamping. The spring force may be constant during shaving or may decrease during shaving. In one embodiment, the spring may be controlled by the surgeon. One embodiment of a surgeon-controlled spring force may utilize a handle to adjust the spring length using hand pressure. Another embodiment of a surgeon-controlled spring force may be a pressure-activated (squeezing force) sheath around a nut that regulates the spring length.
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[0132] In one embodiment, the disclosure is a method for shaving a joint surface, comprising:
[0133] 1. Placing a guide pin in the femoral head at the point of the central axis of shaving (e.g., North Pole of the femoral head)
[0134] 2. Placing a cannulated drill on the guide pin with the clam shell cutting surfaces fully open.
[0135] 3. Placing the shaper against the femoral head, and activating the clam shell closing mechanism
[0136] 4. Activating the shaver with the drill mechanism
[0137] 5. Applying/irrigating the shaver and/or joint surface with a treatment solution (e.g., cool saline) during the shaving.
[0138] 6. As cartilage and bone are removed by the cutting teeth, closing the clam shell gradually around the femoral head, thereby shaping the femoral head into a spherical shape.
[0139] 7. Shaving stops once the clam shell has fully closed.
[0140] 8. Opening the clam with the clam shell closing mechanism; removing the shaver and guide pin.
[0141] The shaver may be activated using hydraulic, pneumatic or mechanical means.
[0142] In another embodiment of a joint surface shaper, the device is hand-held, manually operated, and has a low profile. The device may be introduced into the joint space without fully rotating the bone outwards which reduces tissue damage. For brevity, the disclosure shows the device configured for use in a hip joint, but it can be used on any suitable movable joint (e.g., ball-and-socket, condyloid or hinge structure such as finger, hip, knee, shoulder, and toe). The device may be placed on the hip joint surface through a small incision in the skin.
[0143] In one aspect of the disclosure, the device lacks a pelvic centering pin and may be moved or rotated to shave different regions of the joint surface. The shaper may have any final shape (e.g., sphere, ellipse tapered cylinder, chamfered cylinder) corresponding to a desired shape of the joint. In one embodiment, the shaper is configured to generate a spherical shape.
[0144] The shaper may have at least one cutting surfaces. In some embodiments, the shaper has 2, 3, or more cutting surfaces.
[0145] The cutting surfaces may be any shape to shape the joint surface. In one embodiment the cutting surfaces are in the shape of a wide arc and the edges of the cutting surfaces are configured to mate together. The cutting surfaces may be coupled to the joint surface shaper so that the cutting surfaces pivot around an attached end during device use. In one embodiment, the cutting surfaces resemble clamshells and close together.
[0146] The cutting surfaces may have cutting portions (or edges). The cutting portions may take any form able to remove cartilage, bone, or other joint materials from the surface of the joint. The cutting portions may be shaped and sized to grate or shave joint materials. The cutting portions may be a plurality of teeth which may have directionality, or may be similar to a shark's teeth and may have no directionality. The cutting surfaces may be caused to vibrate using a vibrator or piezoelectric element to increase the efficiency of joint surface material removal.
[0147] The size of the head of the shaper may be changed during use. The shaper head may start in an expanded position and be made smaller during device use to allow insertion into the joint and gradual trimming of the joint surface to generate a final, desired shape. The size of the shaper head may be controlled by a restraint system that encircles or otherwise connects a cutting surface with a controller, and causes the cutting surfaces to expand outwardly or move inwardly. In one embodiment, the restraint is a wire-rope encircling a plurality of cutting surfaces and a trigger-handle mechanism controls the degree of restraint.
[0148] The femoral shaper may be moved over the joint surface to shave and shape a joint surface larger than the area covered by the device. The shaper may be moved in any direction (up, down, left, right) where shaping or shaving is desired. In one embodiment, the shaper may be moved as far as 30-45° from a starting axis or axis of a joint.
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[0156] As for additional details pertinent to the present invention, materials and manufacturing techniques may be employed as within the level of those with skill in the relevant art. The same may hold true with respect to method-based aspects of the invention in terms of additional acts commonly or logically employed. Also, it is contemplated that any optional feature of the inventive variations described may be set forth and claimed independently, or in combination with any one or more of the features described herein. Likewise, reference to a singular item, includes the possibility that there are plural of the same items present. More specifically, as used herein and in the appended claims, the singular forms “a,” “and,” “said,” and “the” include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. It is further noted that the claims may be drafted to exclude any optional element. As such, this statement is intended to serve as antecedent basis for use of such exclusive terminology as “solely,” “only” and the like in connection with the recitation of claim elements, or use of a “negative” limitation. Unless defined otherwise herein, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs. The breadth of the present invention is not to be limited by the subject specification, but rather only by the plain meaning of the claim terms employed.