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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention pertains to illumination systems and, more
particularly, to in vivo illumination systems for use during surgical
operations.
2. Discussion of the Prior Art
There is a well recognized need for the precise internal or in vivo
application of light during surgical operations, such need being most
readily apparent in ophthalmic operations. In the past, light for such
operations has been available only with complex and expensive equipment
that has the disadvantages of being bulky, difficult to handle and
imprecise in directing light to the desired area. The use of fiber optic
systems to transmit light for such operations has been attempted; however,
the structures required for such fiber optic systems have been overly
expensive due to their requirement of the use of specifically designed
devices for insertion in the body and light sources providing concentrated
light.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, it is a primary object of the present invention to overcome
the above mentioned disadvantages of the prior art by providing an in vivo
illumination system that can be utilized with a simple, inexpensive light
source.
Another object of the present invention is to utilize lenses integrally
formed on a fiber optic cable to concentrate light from an inexpensive
light source, such as the pocket flashlight-type, and transmit the light
to a surgical operating area.
The present invention has a further object in that an adapter assembly
utilizes a spherical lens in the form of a plastic sphere to concentrate
light from a lamp on a lens coupled with a fiber optic cable.
An additional object of the present invention is to integrally form lenses
on the proximal and distal ends of a plastic fiber optic cable passing
through a cannula to permit the fiber optic cable to be utilized to
transmit light for use in vivo in surgical operations.
Yet another object of the present invention is to dispose a distal end of a
fiber optic cable in an opening in a distal end of a cannula to permit
light to be directed to a surgical operating area while fluids are
simultaneously infused into or evacuated from the area via an aperture in
a side wall at the distal end of the cannula.
Some of the advantages of the present invention over the prior art are that
the in vivo illumination system of the present invention is inexpensive to
produce utilizing commercially available components for the adapter
assembly and the cannula and hub assembly and integrally formed lenses on
a plastic fiber optic cable and the in vivo illumination system can be
used with inexpensive light sources such as the battery-powered, pocket
flashlight type.
The present invention is generally characterized in an in vivo illumination
system including a light source including a casing with a lamp therein, an
elongate cannula adapted for insertion in a body and having a proximal end
and a distal end with an opening therein, and a fiber optic cable
extending through the cannula and having a first lens formed at a distal
end thereof and a second lens formed at a proximal end thereof, the first
lens being disposed in the opening in the distal end of the cannula and
the second lens being disposed on the light source casing to collect and
concentrate light from the lamp whereby the first and second lenses
provide concentrated light from the light source at the distal end of the
cannula.
The present invention is further generally characterized in an adapter
assembly for use with a light source having a lamp positioned at an open
end of a casing including a housing adapted to be mounted on the open end
of the light source casing, a condenser lens carried by the housing, and a
spherical lens disposed in the housing to be positioned between the lamp
and the condenser lens for gathering light from the lamp and concentrating
the light on the condenser lens.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent
from the following description of the preferred embodiment taken in
conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of an in vivo illumination system according to
the present invention.
FIG. 2 is a broken section of the light source adapter assembly of the in
vivo illumination system of FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is an enlarged broken view of the hub and cannula assembly of the in
vivo illumination system of FIG. 1.
FIG. 4 is a broken section of the tip of the cannula of FIG. 3.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
An in vivo illumination system 10 according to the present invention is
illustrated in FIG. 1 for use with a light source 12 having a lamp 14
powered by batteries (not shown) mounted in a plastic casing 16, the lamp
being operated under the control of a switch manipulated by means of a
contact arm 18 which also serves as a pocket clip. The light source 12 can
be of any conventional form and construction; however, preferably, the
light source is a small pocket flashlight such as that shown in U.S. Pat.
No. 3,902,058 to Naylor et al. The lamp 14 is positioned at an open end 20
of the casing 16 by means of a plastic washer 22 engaging an inwardly
rolled, annular flange 24 of the casing. The light emitted by lamp 14 is
not well concentrated even though a biconvex lens is normally formed in
the tip of the lamp envelope, as shown at 25; however, pocket flashlight
light sources, such as that disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,902,058, can be
inexpensively produced and provide sufficient light for the purposes for
which they are normally used.
In accordance with the present invention, an adapter assembly 26 is mounted
on the open end 20 of the light source 12 to concentrate the light emitted
by lamp 14. As best shown in FIG. 2, the adapter assembly 26 includes a
cylindrical adapter housing 28 having an end 30 of reduced thickness and a
diameter to be received in the open end 20 of the casing of the light
source in friction fit engagement with the rolled flange 24. The housing
28 has an end wall 32 with a central bore 34 therein terminating at a
conical counterbore 36 at the inner surface of the end wall 32. A plastic
fiber optic cable 38, which may be formed of one or more filaments, passes
through bore 34 and has an enlarged proximal end 40 formed by heating the
end of the plastic fiber optic cable to form a condenser lens having a
conically configured portion 41 seated in the conical counterbore 36 and a
convex face 42. A circular spacer 44 made of a clear plastic material,
such as vinyl, is positioned within the housing 28 abutting the convex
face 42 of the lens 40, and a spherical lens 46 made of a sphere of
transparent, glass-like plastic material, such as polymethylmethacrylate
(Lucite) or polycarbonate (Lexan), is disposed in the housing 24 abutting
the spacer 44, the spacer 44 and the sphere 46 being force fit in the
housing to be held in place by friction and not requiring additional
securing means. The end of lamp 14 is spaced from the spherical lens 46 by
a distance equal to the thickness of spacer 44 by abutment of the end 30
of the adapter housing against washer 22.
As best shown in FIG. 3, the fiber optic cable 38 passes through an angled
bore 48 in a plastic hub 50 with a force fit to produce an hermetic seal
between the fiber optic cable 38 and the hub 50 due to the characteristics
of the plastic materials of which they are constructed. The hub 50 is
mounted on a syringe or other source of infusion fluid 52 or a collector
used with a suction source and is of conventional construction; and a
metal flanged sleeve 54 is mounted in an open end 56 of the hub in sealed
relation therewith. An elongate hollow metal cannula 58 is secured at its
proximal end to sleeve 54 in conventional manner, and the cannular 58 has
a distal end 60 with an aperture 62 in a side wall thereof and an axially
aligned conical opening 64. An annular lip 66 extends radially inwardly
from the opening 64 to capture a lens 68 formed at the distal end of the
fiber optic cable 38 which passes through the hub 50, the sleeve 54 and
the needle 58 to the distal end 60 thereof. The lens 68 is formed in the
same manner as the lens 40 at the proximal end of the fiber optic cable
such that a conically configured portion 69 of the lens seats in conical
opening 64; and, since the fiber optic cable is made of plastic, the lens
68 can be deformed to ride over the lip 66 and snap securely into place in
the opening 64, as best shown in FIG. 4.
In operation, the adapter assembly 26 is mounted on the open end 20 of the
light source 12 by simply forcing end 30 into annular flange 24 with a
friction fit, the spacer 44 and the spherical lens 46 being retained in
position by contact with the cylindrical wall of housing 28. The source of
fluid or suction 52 is coupled with the flange of hub 50 in conventional
fashion, and the system is now ready for use.
The in vivo illumination system is useful in many surgical operations but
is particularly adapted for use in ophthalmic surgery wherein illumination
is required by the surgeon for visibility while either fluid pressure is
maintained within the eye or material is evacuated from the eye. To this
latter end, once the cannula is inserted in the eye, fluid can be
evacuated from or infused into the eye from source 52 via hub 50 and
cannula 58, the fluid flowing through aperture 62. The seating of the lens
68 in the opening 64 prevents flow of fluid through the axial opening 64.
Light from lamp 14 is collected by spherical lens 46 and concentrated on
condenser lens 40 at the proximal end of fiber optic cable 38 due to the
spacing of the spherical lens between the lamp and the condenser lens and
the optical characteristics of the spherical lens. The condenser lens 40
further acts to collect and concentrate the light such that fiber optic
cable 38 transmits a great amount of the light available from lamp 14 to
lens 68 at the proximal end of the cannula 58 to provide illumination in
the area of the body in which the surgeon is working. In effect, the
adapter assembly 26 forms a four-lens optical system composed of the
biconvex lens 25 in the tip of lamp 14, the spherical lens 46 which can be
considered to be two back-to-back plano-convex lenses, and the condenser
lens 40 with the spherical lens centrally spaced between biconvex lamp
lens 25 and condenser lens 40.
While the fiber optic cable 38 can be used with a cannula without
simultaneous fluid infusion or evacuation, the illumination system 10 is
particularly advantageous in that illumination and irrigation or
evacuation can be accomplished with the same device requiring only a
single incision. Of course, the adapter assembly 26 can be modified for
use with any desired light source operating from DC batteries or normally
available AC electricity; however, the pocket flashlight type light source
has the advantages of being small, compact, easy to operate, inexpensive
and meeting the rigourous standards for use in an operating room.
The illumination system 10 can be simple and inexpensively implemented by
forming spacer 44 and spherical lens 46 from readily available components
of Lucite or Lexan, forming the lenses 40 and 68 integrally with plastic
fiber optic cable 38, and using a modified commercially available
hypodermic needle and hub to form cannula 58 and hub 50, the hypodermic
needle being cut and bored to form aperture 62 and opening 64 and the hub
having angled bore 48 formed therein to provide a seal for the passage of
the fiber optic cable into the hub while preventing kinking of the fiber
optic cable. While the fiber optic cable 38 is preferably made of a single
filament of plastic, such as Crofon made by DuPont, the fiber optic cable
can be formed of one or more filaments or elements of any suitable light
transmitting material. Of course, the components of the illumination
system could be formed of any suitable materials. For example, the spacer
44 and the lens 46 could be formed of glass or quartz. Similarly, the
illumination system can be used with any type of light source having any
casing configuration, the housing 28 being provided with a suitable
configuration to be mounted on the casing either with an internal or
external friction fit or by means of threading or latches, such as
bayonnet locks.
Inasmuch as the present invention is subject to many variations,
modifications and changes in detail, it is intended that all matter
discussed above or shown in the accompanying drawings be interpreted as
illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
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Description  |
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