Long-nosed crimp pliers for use in orthopedics
09795431 · 2017-10-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B17/8861
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B17/88
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
Cable and crimp assembly kits for fixing bone fractures include long-nose crimp pliers that have a pair of operating handles and connected opposed long jaws. The long jaws are designed to hold and crush a wire crimp. The jaws are long and narrow enough to be able to insert and crush a crimp through a small incision, such as used by a known wire passer tool, at a deeply located bone without spreading or opening wider the small incision. The long-nosed pliers can be used with a crimp alone or with a crimp and an intermediate part that provisionally holds a tension applied to an associated cable or wire.
Claims
1. A surgical cable and crimp assembly kit comprising: a length of flexible cable; a crushable wire crimp having at least one hole there through sized to receive the flexible cable there through; and crimp pliers comprising: a pair of operating handles; and a pair of opposed jaws sized and shaped to be inserted through a small incision to a bone about which the cable is to be fixed via the wire crimp, each jaw extending from a respective handle and coupled to the other jaw via a hinge mechanism, an extension extending perpendicularly from the tip of each jaw, each extension including a recess formed therein and being disposed opposite to the other extension, the recess sized and shaped to receive the wire crimp such that the pair of jaws is operative to hold and crush the wire crimp there between, each recess being substantially aligned with a length of a corresponding one of the jaws such that the wire crimp is receivable between the pair of jaws along a longitudinal axis of the crimp pliers.
2. The assembly kit of claim 1 wherein each recess is bounded on four sides and faces the recess in the extension of the opposed jaw.
3. The assembly kit of claim 1 wherein each recess is a slot bounded on two opposite sides and faces the slot in the extension of the opposed jaw.
4. The assembly kit of claim 1 wherein the flexible cable is surgical cable suitable for use in bone fracture surgery.
5. The assembly kit of claim 1 further comprising an intermediate part having a front end, a rear end, and a same cross-sectional size and shape as the wire crimp.
6. The assembly kit of claim 5 wherein the pliers further comprise a mark attached to and across the operating handles, the location of the mark across the operating handles calibrated to the combined length of the intermediate part and the wire crimp to indicate that the jaws are located at the wire crimp when the rear end of the intermediate part aligns with the mark.
7. The assembly kit of claim 5 wherein the intermediate part has a set screw at the rear end for provisionally holding the cable.
8. The assembly kit of claim 5 wherein the front end of the intermediate part is configured to attach to an end of the wire crimp.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The objects and advantages of the invention will be apparent upon consideration of the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference characters refer to like parts throughout, and in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
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(18) Long-nosed crimp pliers 1 has a pair of operating handles 3 and connected opposed long jaws 2. Jaws 2 are connected to each other via a hinge mechanism 22. Each jaw 2 is long and narrow and has an extension 24 that extends perpendicularly from the tip of the jaw. Each extension 24 has an internal recess 4 bounded on four sides shaped to accommodate a wire/cable crimp 5. Each extension 24 and recess 4 is positioned opposite the other extension and recess such that jaws 2 are operative to hold and/or crush the crimp there between. A crimp is preferably pre-loaded in recess 4 prior to the crimp's insertion into a patient. This allows pliers 1 to carry crimp 5, as shown in
(19) A surgical technique using long-nosed pliers 1 is illustrated in
(20) Advantageously, the long-nosed pliers of the invention provide surgeons with an easy surgical technique that allows them to properly reduce bone fractures using a cable and crimp system with a minimally invasive technique requiring a short amount of surgical time.
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(22) Long-nosed pliers 8 have a pair of operating handles 10, a mark 11 attached to and across handles 10, and opposed long jaws 9 connected to handles 10. Jaws 9 are also connected to each other via a hinge mechanism 92. Jaws 9 are advantageously long and narrow enough to permit their deep insertion through a minimal incision up to a fractured bone 6. The size of the minimal incision is preferably only that required to permit a wire passer tool to insert a cable through the incision and to loop the cable around a fractured bone. Each jaw 9 has an extension 94 that extends perpendicularly from the tip of the jaw. Each extension 94 has an internal slot 12 bounded on two parallel sides designed to accommodate a wire/cable crimp 13 and an elongated known intermediate part 14, which is used in surgical procedures to reduce bone fractures. Each extension 94 and slot 12 is positioned opposite the other extension and slot such that jaws 9 are operative to hold and/or crush the crimp there between. Crimp 13 preferably has the same external (cross-sectional) shape and size as intermediate part 14, so that it can form a continuous elongated piece when attached to the intermediate part, as illustrated in
(23) A surgical technique using long-nosed pliers 8 is illustrated in
(24) The above steps may be repeated, using as many cables 7, crimps 13, and intermediate parts 14 as necessary to properly reduce the bone fracture. The tension of each cable 7 is provisionally held, and may be adjusted (i.e., tightened or loosened) as needed, by a respective intermediate part 14, until the bone reduction is satisfactory.
(25) After the fracture reduction has been provisionally set, crimp(s) 13 can be crushed by pliers 8 to retain the looped cable(s) 7 surrounding bone 6 with the desired tension. This is done by engaging intermediate part 14 with and between jaws 9 of long-nosed pliers 8. Pliers 8 can then be inserted through the minimal incision used by the wire passer, sliding jaws 9 along intermediate part 14 as pliers 8 advances toward bone 6. Because crimp 13 has the same cross-sectional shape and size as intermediate part 14, jaws 9 continue to slide onto crimp 13 after reaching front end 18 of intermediate part 14 advantageously without needing any additional maneuvers. The long jaws of pliers 8 are deeply introduced into the incision until mark 11 on pliers 8 reaches the rear end 16 of intermediate part 14 (which is located outside the incision and is thus visible to the surgeon), as shown in
(26) These last steps using long-nosed pliers 8 to crush crimp 13 can be repeated for each cable, crimp, and intermediate part assembly used to reduce the fracture.
(27) Advantageously, pliers 8, intermediate part 14, and crimp 13 allow a surgeon to reduce a bone fracture with multiple crimps and cables using a minimally invasive and easy technique.
(28) Accordingly, the invention includes cable and crimp assembly kits. One kit according to the invention includes pliers 1, at least one crimp 5, and a length of flexible wire or cable 7. Crimp 5 may be of the type that includes a through hole and a second hole with an end of cable 7 factory crimped therein. Another kit according to the invention includes pliers 8, at least one crimp 13, at least one intermediate part 14, and a length of flexible wire or cable 7. Crimp 13 also may be of the type that includes a through hole and a second hole with an end of cable 7 factory crimped therein. And another kit according to the invention includes both pliers 1 and 8, a plurality of both crimps 5 and 13, at least one intermediate part 14, and a length of flexible wire or cable 7.
(29) The invention has been described in connection with the preferred embodiments. However, these embodiments are merely for example, and the invention is not restricted to them. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that other variations and modifications can be easily made within the scope of the invention.
(30) For example, the devices and techniques of the first and second embodiments may be used in non-surgical procedures that require the retaining of a tightened wire or cable around a structure in an enclosure via a small opening in the enclosure. More particularly, for example, a pair of pipes in a wall of a building may need to be tightly wired together, and for aesthetic reasons, can only be done through as small a hole or opening in the wall as possible.
(31) In general, and depending on the circumstances, long-nosed pliers 1 may be used to insert a wire crimp through a small incision-like opening in an enclosure as described above with respect to
(32) Alternatively, long-nosed pliers 8 may be used with a crimp and an intermediate part (or similar tool) as described above with respect to
(33) In conclusion, the invention is only intended to be limited by the following claims.