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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. A disposable surgical drape for an operating microscope (a) having a
binocular microscope head unit with two barrel-mounted viewing oculars and
a barrel-mounted objective lens and (b) support structure including an
elongate horizontal arm for cantilevered positioning of said head unit,
said drape comprising connected upper and lower continuous panels of thin
pliant elastomeric plastic sheet material, said panels having registering
generally rectangular configuration at a head-unit adaptable region and
being connected to each other along both lateral limiting edges of said
configuration, such connection extending from front to rear limiting edges
of said configuration and along said front limiting edge but to the
exclusion of said rear limiting edge, said upper panel further including
an elongate generally rectangular arm-adaptable region continuously and
integrally formed with the rear limiting edge of said configuration and
extending rearwardly of the rear limiting edge of said lower panel, said
lower panel having a central circular aperture sized for interference with
the rim diameter of the objective barrel, said configuration further
comprising an ocular-adapting region characterized by registering
apertures in both panels near but in offset relation to one of said
connected limiting edges, said panels being further connected to each
other at the perimeter of said registering apertures, and said panels
being perforated along an alignment from said registering apertures to a
near region of said one connected limiting edge, for ready simultaneous
local separation of both panels at the perforation alignment, whereby upon
severance at the perforation alignment, two spaced and now-openble tubular
formations are immediately presented for direct separately protective
manipulated assembly over the two binocular-viewing ocular barrels of the
microscope.
2. A disposable surgical drape for an operating microscope having a
binocular microscope head unit with two barrel-mounted viewing oculars and
a barrel-mounted objective lens, said drape comprising connected upper and
lower continuous panels of thin pliant elastomeric plastic sheet material,
said panels having registering generally rectangular configuration at the
head-unit-adaptable region and being connected to each other along both
lateral limiting edges of said configuration, such connection extending
from front to rear limiting edges of said configuration and along said
front limiting edge but to the exclusion of said rear limiting edge, said
lower panel having a central circular aperture sized for interference with
the rim diameter of the objective barrel, said configuration further
comprising an ocular-adapting region characterized by registering
apertures in both panels near but in offset relation to one of said
connected limiting edges, said panels being further connected to each
other at the perimeter of said registering apertures, and said panels
being perforated along an alignment from saidregistering apertures to a
near region of said one connected limiting edge, for ready simultaneous
local separation of both panels at the perforation alignment, whereby upon
severance at the perforation alignment, two spaced and now-openable
tubular formations are immediately presented for direct separately
protective manipulated assembly over the two binocular-viewing ocular
barrels of the microscope.
3. The drape of claim 2, in which said configuration is characterized by a
convergent tapering arm projection at mutual approach of said front
limiting edge and one of said lateral limiting edges, said panels being
connected along side edges of said tapering arm projection, said latter
connections being continuous but not beyond a locale of predetermined
minimum separation of said side edges, said panels being unconnected over
the separation span at said locale, said predetermined separation being so
related to the rim circumference of a monocular barrel as to permit
manipulated assembly of the thus-open end of the tapering arm projection
over the rim of the monocular barrel.
4. The drape of claim 3, in which said configuration is further
characterized by a second convergent tapering arm projection at mutual
approach of said front limiting edge and the other of said later limiting
edges, said panels being connected at said second tapering arm projection
in correspondence with their connection at said first-mentioned tapering
arm projection.
5. The drape of claim 2, in which said ocular-adapting region is disposed
generally centrally along and with respect to said front limiting edge.
6. The drape of claim 2, in which said one connected limiting edge has a
forwardly bowed arcuate profile local to said ocular-adapting region, said
panels being continuously connected along said profile and said profile
being symmetrically offset from the registering-apertures perimeter
connection, the perforation alignment being effectively disposed at
substantially the central plane of symmetry of said offset.
7. The drape of claim 2, in which said ocular-adapting region is one of
two, along the same connected limiting edge of said configuration.
8. The drape of claim 2, in which said ocular-adapting region is one of
two, each of which is along one of the two connected lateral edges of said
configuration.
9. The drape of claim 2, in which said ocular-adapting region is one of
two, along adjacent connected limiting edges of said configuration.
10. The drape of claim 2, in which said ocular-adapting region is one of
three, at spaced locales along the connected front limiting edge of said
configuration.
11. The drape of claim 2, in which to the exclusion of said upper panel
said lower panel has a second circular aperture at lateral offset from
said central circular aperture, said second circular aperture being sized
for interference fit to the rim of the lens barrel of an illuminator
associated with the head unit.
12. The drape of claim 11, in which said second circular aperture is one of
two at equal and opposite lateral offsets from said central circular
aperture.
13. The drape of claim 11, in which said second circular aperture is offset
both laterally and rearwardly of said central circular aperture.
14. The drape of claim 12, in which both said second circular apertures are
offset rearwardly as well as laterally of said central circular aperture.
15. The drape of claim 2, in which said lower panel is of clear transparent
material.
16. The drape of claim 2, in which said upper panel is of color-tinted
material and said lower panel is colorless and clear.
17. The drape of claim 2, in which said panels are of polypropylene.
18. A surgical-drape kit, comprising the drape of claim 2, and at least one
objective-lens adapter ring, said ring having a bore which at least at on
axial end is sized for interference fit with the objective-lens barrel
when applied with the periphery of the central circular aperture of said
lower panel interposed therebetween.
19. The kit of claim 18, in which the other axial end of said bore has a
lens-receiving counterbore.
20. The kit of claim 19, and including at least one single-piece disposable
plane-parallel transparent protective cover plate with an angularly spaced
plurality of mounting feet sized for removably retained seating engagement
with said ring and within said counterbore.
21. The kit of claim 20, in which said cover plate is but one of a
plurality of like cover plates, whereby in the course of a single surgical
operation a succession of clean cover plates may be readily installed to
said ring without interfering with the ring attachment of said drape to
the objective-lens barrel, thereby providing effectively continuous and
unattenuated microscope viewing.
22. The kit of claim 20, in which the plurality of mounting feet is there.
23. The kit of claim 20, in which said plate is circular and of diameter
less than the counterbore diameter, said feet projecting radially outward
to interference-fit relation with the counterbore, and said feet each
including an axial projection in the direction away from counterbore
engagement, for manual-access and manipulation purposes.
24. The kit of claim 23, in which each axial projection terminates with a
radially outward lug extending radially outward of the outside diameter of
said ring, thereby facilitating lug engagement for cover-plate
manipulation to the exclusion of said ring. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a disposable-drape construction for use as a
sterile cover for a microscope in the course of a surgical operating
procedure.
Disposable drapes of the character indicated have been disclosed in various
issued patents, notably U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,528,720 (Treace), No. 3,542,450
(Terhune), No. 3,698,791 (Walchle, et al.), and No. 4,045,118 (Geraci).
All of these schemes employ an elongated sleeve or sock of sterilized,
thin, transparent plastic film, open at one end for substantially complete
enveloping assembly over not only a microscope head unit, but also all the
way along the articulated system of cantilevered arms by which the head is
positioned at adjusted offset and elevation with respect to a fixed mount,
such as a floor-mounted vertical column or stand. Tape, bands and the like
are required to gather and retain excess sleeve material along the
cantilevered arm structure; special fittings and elements are assembled to
the drape to facilitate lens rim adaptation; special provision must be
made for the exhaust of heat developed by the illuminator associated with
the microscope; tear-off pieces must be disposed of when severed; and in
general an excessive quantity of drape material is required. In one way or
another, these are all disadvantages, inconveniences, and wasteful
features of prior-art constructions.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the invention to provide an improved surgical drape of
the character indicated, avoiding or materially reducing disadvantages,
inconveniences and waste that have characterized prior constructions.
A specific object is to meet the above object with a construction involving
and requiring no appendages to the drape film assembly per se, when packed
for storage, in readiness for use, thus making for compact storage and
low-cost construction.
Another specific object is to provide improved ocular-adaptation structural
features in such a drape.
A further specific object is to provide improved objective-lens adaptation
features in such a drape.
It is also a specific object to provide simplified disposable protective
cover plate structure removably adaptable to protect the objective lens,
in the context of a surgically draped microscope of the invention.
Still another object is to provide an improved surgical drape preformed
with structural features adaptable to a variety of microscope ocular
combinations and configurations.
The foregoing objects and various further features of novelty are achieved
by the invention, wherein a disposable surgical drape of pliable
elastomeric film is precut and seamed for sterile packaging and instant
readiness to assemble to a microscope head. The drape comprises upper and
lower panels which register and are seamed to define a bag-like
configuration which is primarily and assuredly adapted to provide full
closure of the front, sides, top and bottom of the microscope head,
leaving an elongate tail extension of the upper panel as the only cover, a
gravitationally draped cover, for such cantilevered support-arm structure
as may be employed to mount the microscope head. A particular combination
of local seamed-edge contouring, in conjunction with the seamed peripheral
margin of nearby registering apertures, in the two panels, enables
suitable individual sleeve-like enclosures to be selectively available for
assembly to the respective ocular barrels of a binocular viewing assembly,
merely by tearing along an alignment that has been weakened by perforation
slits. Various other features of simplicity and convenience are embodied
in the drape, without requiring structural addition to the film panels of
the drape per se.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Preferred embodiments of the invention will be illustratively described in
conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a simplified view in perspective for the head unit and the
cantilevered support-arm structure of an operating microscope, shown with
a surgical drape assembly of the invention installed thereon;
FIG. 2 is a plan view of the underside of the drape assembly of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is an enlarged exploded view in perspective of objective-lens
adapter and removable cover-plate structure adapted to part of the drape
assembly of FIG. 1;
FIG. 4 is a vertical sectional view of the adapter of FIG. 3;
FIGS. 5 and 6 are, respectively, front-elevation and side-elevation views
of the removable cover plate of FIG. 3; and
FIGS. 7, 8 and 9 are partly broken-away plan views similar to FIG. 2, to
illustrate modifications.
The surgical drape 10 of FIG. 2 is shown in FIG. 1 in application to an
operating microscope, comprising a head unit 11, supported at the
cantilevered end of a succession of selectively clamped articulated arms
12-13-14. Head unit 11 and arms 12-13-14 are selectively clamped by means
15 to desired vertical positioning on a floor-mounted column 16. The head
unit 11 comprises a pair of binocular-viewing oculars 17 and associated
microscope structure including an objective lens 18 (FIG. 3) and an
illuminator 19, for which flexible electrical-supply cable 20 is carried
by the arm structure. It will be understood that the head unit 11 may
additionally incorporate one or more side-mounted monoculars, further
binocular-viewing oculars, or the like, depending upon operational
requirements.
Referring to FIG. 2, the drape 10 is illustratively a connected assembly of
but two parts, being an upper panel 21 and a lower panel 22, both of
suitably soft, pliant, thin elastomeric plastic film, being preferably a
polyolefin film such as the copolymer polypropylene product of Crown
Zellerbach, known as "Crown Zeelon 320", of 1.0-mil thickness. This
particular material has a temperature tolerance and elastomeric,
anti-static, and anti-crackle properties which render it highly
satisfactory for surgical-drape applications. The planiform of the drape
10 has lateral symmetry about a central longitudinal axis 23, which
extends over a head region (dimensionally designated H) and a tail region
(dimensionally designated T). The upper and lower panels 21-22 have
registering profiles over the extent H of the head region, but it is only
the upper panel 21 which extends rearwardly for the extent T of the tail
region. For want of a better term, I say that the registering head regions
of the respective panels 21-22 are generally rectangular, being defined by
and between lateral limiting edges 24, by a front limiting edge of special
contour (to be described), and by the rear limiting edge 25 of the lower
panel 22. The upper panel is a one-piece integrally connected shape
comprising the just-described head region, plus a rectangular tail region
defined by lateral edges 26 and a rear edge 27. The lateral limiting edges
and the contoured front limiting edge of the described head-region
configuration are connected, as by heat-seaming suggested by thin dashed
lines 28 just inside the marginal edges involved. The panels 25 are,
however, not connected at the rear edge of the head region, and so the
assembly consists of a rearwardly openable pliant bag, with an elongate
tail. The bag portion envelops the head unit 11 (and its adjacent support
arm 12), while the tail region of upper panel 21 is merely laid along and
allowed to gravitationally drape over both sides of the articulated arm
structure 13-14, to or near connection to the vertical column 16.
The head region of the drape is specially characterized for somewhat
universal optional adaptation to a variety of ocular and objective
circumstances which may exist or be desired for particular operating
microscope procedures. These characterizing features involve no additional
parts for the assembled drape panels 21-22, but in the form of FIG. 2
involve a central circular opening 30 in the lower panel only, and
registering circular openings 31 in both panels 21-22 near but offset from
the contoured front limiting edge 29 of the head-adaptable configuration
of the drape. Like but oppositely directed tapering projections 32-33
characterize the convergence of lateral limiting edges 24 with the
contoured front limiting edge and will be later more fully described. The
opening 30 is of a diameter D.sub.1 sized for interference with the
outside diameter of the front rim of the objective-lens barrel and will be
later more fully described. The registering openings 31 are part of a
formation to adapt to both of the oculars 17 and will now be described.
Since openings 31 are part of a formation to accommodate the oculars 17,
the longitudinal offset A from opening 30 should be of ample length, for
example 11 inches, to accept the most extreme dimensional set-up of the
microscope at head unit 11. The panels 21-22 are connected to each other
at their registering peripheries of openings 31, as by heat-seaming
suggested by light dashed lines 34, and the front limiting edge 29 near
openings 31 is characterized by forward convex arcuate bowing at closest
offset B from openings 31, the offset B being on the central axis 23.
Laterally outward from the offset B, the arcuate convex contour expands in
its offset from openings 31, being eventually merged into the concave
arcuate formation of part of the applicable one of the front corner
projections 32-33. A heavy dashed line 35 denotes a locally weakened,
tearable region of the connected panels 21-22, being suitably an alignment
of spaced longitudinal slits through both panels.
In use, i.e., when an initial application of the head-region bag has been
made over the head unit 11, and with the upper panel 21 uppermost, one
simply pulls laterally at the openings 31 to break the front limiting edge
29 at the perforations 35, thereby defining two like projecting formations
V.sub.1 -V.sub.2, each of which is unsecured and therefore open where they
have been severably related at alignment 35. In all other respects,
formations V.sub.1 -V.sub.2 are convergent and tubular by reason of seamed
connection of panels 21-22 at their registering front limiting edges and
at the rim of their registering circular openings 31. Therefore, each of
the formations V.sub.1 -V.sub.2 may be readily manipulated to fit over and
to the outer rim of a different one of the viewing oculars 17. To
accomplish the foregoing, the effective offset B between front-edge and
circular edge (34) seams is preferably substantially equal to half the
circumference of the rim of an ocular barrel, and if the effective offset
B is slightly less, than the end opening of each formation V.sub.1
(V.sub.2) can be elastically stretched for tensed sealing retention to the
applicable ocular-lens barrel. I have found an opening (31) diameter
D.sub.2 of 3 inches perfectly adequate to assure an unimpeded full range
of interpupilary adjustment of the binocular-viewing oculars 17, in the
described drape application of formations V.sub.1 -V.sub.2 thereto.
Each of the corner projections 32-33 is adapted for sock-like application
to a monocular-viewing tube, should the head unit be so equipped. Taking
the projection 32 as illustrative, it is an arm of the drape assembly, at
mutual approach of two converging edges, namely, a concave arcuate region
of the front limiting edge and the nearby convex arcuate extension of a
lateral limiting edge 24. The panels are secured along these converging
edges, but at their outer end they terminate at a minimum span C of
locally unsecured edge, the span C being substantially one half the
circumference of the outer rim of a monocular. Preferably, each of the
convergent arcuate edges of projection 32 includes one of a pair of
opposed local lobes 36-36', to permit pinched grasping of these lobes for
more ready application over the monocular involved, as will be understood.
The final operation to complete application of the bag portion of the drape
to the head unit 11 involves a secure fitting of the circular aperture 30
to the rim of the objective-lens barrel. This operation involves
additional parts 37-38, shown and to be described in connection with FIGS.
3, 4, 5 and 6. As best seen in FIGS. 3 and 4, the part 37 is a flanged
ring, which may be of suitable injection-molded plastic such as
polystyrene; and the part 38 is a replaceable cover plate, again
injection-molded, but preferably of optically clear acrylic material. Ring
37 has a bore 39 which flares at rounded-corner juncture with a
reinforcing flange 40, at one axial end; bore 39 is sized for interference
fit to the outside diameter of the rim 41 of the barrel of objective lens
18, when the thickness of lower panel 22 is interposed. At its other axial
end, ring 37 has a counterbore 42 which establishes a shouldered seat 43
to which the replaceable cover plate 38 can locate. At the same time,
counterbore 42 makes for a thin compliant sleeve-like periphery of the
ring 37, whereby local radial deflection of the sleeve formation upon
insertion of cover plate 38 is operative to retain plate 38, when abutted
to the seat 43. With lower panel 22 so positioned over the objective lens
18 that opening 30 is within the rim 41, i.e., with panel material around
opening 30 and within the limits of rim 41, ring 37 is axially applied,
thereby locally elastomerically deforming the panel material and
establishing a secure, peripherally sealed mount of the ring 37 to the
objective-lens barrel. Ring 37 then constitutes an externally accessible
adapter mount, for removable reception of the cover plate 38.
As shown in FIGS., 3, 5, and 6, the cover plate 38 comprises a
circular-disc body, including plural spaced peripheral mounting feet 44
integrally formed therewith. The opposed faces of the disc body of plate
38 are plane-parallel, so as to introduce no impairment of microscope
functions. Each of the feet 44 comprises an axially extending portion of
thickness extending to a geometrical circle of diameter D.sub.3 which
exceeds the diameter D.sub.4 of the plane-parallel disc body, and
diameters D.sub.3 -D.sub.4 are selected to respectively interfere with and
clear the diameter D.sub.5 of counterbore 42. Finally, a radially outward
tab at the axially outer end of each of the feet 44 serves for convenience
in manual grasping, and is located at such effective offset from the disc
body as to equal or exceed the depth of counterbore 42; and the maximum
unstressed diameter D.sub.6 of the geometrical circle for these tabs is in
excess of the outer diameter of rings 37 at the sleeve-like region of
counterbore 42. Upon insertion of a cover plate 38 at counterbore 42, the
sleeve-like region surrounding the counterbore is locally and transiently
deformed at spaced points by reason of the D.sub.3 -D.sub.5 interference.
In the course of an operating procedure, a soiled cover plate 38 is
readily removed by grasping the tabs of feet 44, and a fresh clear plate
38 is installed just as readily.
FIG. 7 illustrates a modification of the drape of FIG. 2, in the sense that
the registering head regions of panels 21-22 are contoured and otherwise
formed and secured at their connected front limiting edge, so as to
provide for further binocular-viewing adaptability at lateral offset to
one or the other or both sides of the central axis 23 of longitudinal
symmetry of the drape. In this connection, convex arcuate front-edge
profiles at 46-47 closely resemble the central contouring already
described for V.sub.1 -V.sub.2 in FIG. 2, in conjunction with registering
apertures 31 of FIG. 2. For this reason, these and other corresponding
parts are given the same numbers with primed notation at 46-47 in FIG. 7.
FIG. 7 further illustrates the provision of an additional pair of openings
48 at locations of equal and opposite offset laterally from the
objective-lens opening 30, and formed only in the lower panel 22, for use
in the event that clear light transmission is needed for the illuminator,
and regardless of the lateral offset to which the illuminator may be
positioned for a particular microscope-head set-up, it being understood
that adapter-ring and replaceable cover-plate elements, as described in
connection with FIGS. 3 to 6, may be applied at the applicable opening 48
to enable ready cover-plate installation and replacement for protection of
the objective-lens and its associated barrel structure, as well as for
similar protection of the corresponding illuminator lens and its
associated barrel structure.
The modification of FIG. 8 resembles that of FIG. 7 except that the further
binocular-viewing ocular accommodation by the drape is located generally
centrally along the respective lateral limiting edges 24' of the head-unit
end of the drape assembly. Severance along one of the perforations 35'
will make available two tubular projections V.sub.3 -V.sub.4 for assembly
to oculars of a binocular-viewing system on one side of the head unit 11,
while such severance at 35' on the other lateral side will make the pair
V.sub.3 '-V.sub.4 ' available for a similar purpose.
The arrangement of FIG. 9 is identical to that of FIG. 7, except that the
additional pair of openings 48' (in lower panel 22 only) is not only
offset laterally from the central opening 30, but is also offset
rearwardly thereof. This arrangement will be appreciated as accommodating
illuminator lens-barrel positioning which is similarly offset with respect
to the objective-lens placement in a given head-unit configuration.
The described drape constructions will be seen to meet all stated objects,
providing a range of adaptability to various possible complexities and
asymmetries of multiple-viewing and of illuminator placement. Since the
drape comprises only pliant panels 21-22, the described configurations
lend themselves to simple folding which further facilitates application to
an operating microscope. In FIG. 2, such folds are suggested by fold
creasing first at alignment 49-49', whereby the rear limiting edge 27 may
be folded over the upper surface of upper panel 21 and into substantial
register with the next fold-crease alignment 50-50'. Successive similar
folds at crease alignment 50-50' into substantial edge register with
crease alignment 51-51', and then at crease alignment 51-51' into
substantial edge register with the rear edge 25 of lower panel 22, bring
the tail portion T of upper panel 21 into folded adjacency with the
head-unit accommodating bag; whereupon, similar further successive folds
at 25, and at crease alignment 52-52', bring all folds into overlap of the
objective-lens accommodating region. The three projecting regions may be
folded as along crease alignments 53-54-55 into the underside of the
accumulated folds, whereupon all folds may be further compacted by
laterally inward folding, say into thirds, along crease axis alignments
56-57, for stowage in a single pliant envelope (not shown). What was in
its original flat condition about 60 inches long and 40 inches wide, is
thus compressed by successive folds into a package of dimensions
approximating 71/2 by 131/2 inches, which if further folded in half along
the central axis 23 becomes very easily managed in envelope dimensions of
7 by 8 inches.
To apply the drape, one first unfolds enough to make the head-unit bag
region openable, and applies the same over the front of the head unit 11,
leaving the folded tail region of panel 21 folded until binocular
adaptation is made at V.sub.1 -V.sub.2. Thereafter, it is a simple matter
to continue the unfolding of the tail region while gravitationally
allowing the same to drape over the articulated arms 13-14. Objective-lens
and illuminator-lens adapter fittings 37 are then applied, followed by
cover plates 38, as applicable.
For ease of readability of engraved dial scales and settings on the
microscope and other parts of the head unit 11, it is preferred that the
film used for lower panel 22 be clear while that used for the upper panel
21 is embossed and color tinted.
In supplying the described drapes to hospitals, I prefer that the drape per
se be but part of a kit which additionally includes, in the case of the
drape 10 of FIG. 2 (or the drape of FIG. 8), one objective-lens adapter
ring 37 and a plurality (such as five) removable cover plates 38. For
drapes as in FIG. 7 or in FIG. 9, wherein illuminator-lens protection is
also to be provided, I prefer a kit which includes the drape per se plus
adapter rings 37 for the illuminator as well as the objective lens,
together with a plurality of cover plates 38 for each of the two adapter
rings.
While the invention has been described in detail for the preferred forms
shown, it will be understood that modifications may be made without
departure from the scope of the invention.
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Description  |
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