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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. An osteosynthesis device for fixation of a fractured pelvis, comprising
a central multi-part body of variable length between spaced ends of said
body, first and second bone-pin or screw clamps having releasably lockable
ball-joint connection to the respective ends of said body, said body
comprising two interconnectable arm or link members each of which has an
elongate slot, and lock-bolt connection means through the slot of said arm
or link members, said lock-bolt connection means comprising a shank of
length to exceed passage through the slot of each of said arm or link
members to be connected, a head at one end of the shank and of diametral
extent exceeding the width of the arm or link-member slot adjacent
thereto, said shank having a cylindrical portion extending through the
thickness of the arm or link member adjacent said head, said shank being
enlarged and configured distally of said cylindrical portion for keying
engagement with at least a portion of the other arm or link member and
distally projecting beyond said other arm or link member; and locking
means including a seating washer of width exceeding the slot width of the
other arm or link member with the distal end of said shank projecting
beyond said seating washer, a transverse rotatable pin that is centrally
engaged to the distally projecting end of said shank and that has
cylindrical bearing portions eccentric to the central engagement, said
bearing portions riding diametrically opposite portions of said washer.
2. An osteosynthesis aid according to claim 1, in which the number of said
interconnectable arm or link members is at least three, two of which have
the body-end connections to said bone-pin or screw clamps, at least one of
said arm or link members being a link having an elongate slot between
closed longitudinal ends, and in which said lock-bolt connection means is
one of two, for selective locking of said link to the respective two
members which have said body-end connections to said clamps.
3. An osteogenic device according to claim 1, in which an interconnection
link has a first lock-bolt connection via slot of one of said arm or link
members and a second lock-bolt connection via the slot of the other of
said arm or link members.
4. An osteosynthesis device according to claim 3, in which said
interconnection link has an elongate slot extending near but short of its
respective longitudinal ends, said first and second lock-bolt connections
being via the slot of said interconnection link.
5. An osteosynthesis device for external fixation of a bone, comprising a
central multi-part body of variable length between spaced ends of said
body, first and second bone-pin or screw clamps having a releasably
lockable ball-joint connection to the respective ends of said body; said
body comprising at least two arm or link members, each of which has an
elongate slot, and a lock bolt through the slot of each of two of said arm
or link members, for releasably locked retention of said link members in a
selected position of adjusted angular relation and overall length; said
lock bolt comprising a shank of length to exceed passage through the slot
of each of two arm or link members to be connected, a head at one end of
the shank and of diametral extent exceeding the width of the arm or
link-member slot adjacent thereto, said shank having a cylindrical portion
extending through the thickness of the arm or link member adjacent said
head, said shank being enlarged and configured distally of said
cylindrical portion for keying engagement with at least a portion of the
other arm or link member and distally projecting beyond said other arm or
link member; and locking means including a seating washer of width
exceeding the slot width of the other arm or link member with the distal
end of said shank projecting beyond said seating washer, a transverse
rotatable pin that is centrally engaged to the distally projecting end of
said shank and that has cylindrical bearing portions eccentric to the
central engagement, said bearing portions riding diametrically opposite
portions of said washer.
6. An osteosynthesis device according to claim 5, wherein the slots extend
along substantially the entire length of each of said arm or link members.
7. An osteosynthesis device according to claim 5, wherein said central
engagement is via a transverse bore in the distally projecting end of said
shank.
8. An osteosynthesis device according to claim 5, wherein said washer has a
central opening configured for keying engagement to the distal end of said
shank.
9. An osteosynthesis device according to claim 5, wherein diametrically
opposed concave cylindrically arcuate bearing portions of said washer are
configured for rotatable location and support of the cylindrical bearing
portions of said pin.
10. An osteosynthesis device according to claim 5, in which the number of
arm or link members is three, first and second of said arm or link members
providing the respective ends of said body, and the third arm or link
member having a first lock-bolt connection to said first arm or link
member and having a second lock-bolt connection to said second arm or link
member. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention pertains to an osteosynthesis aid for bone fixation,
particularly for application to pelvic-bone structure.
German Patent No. 3,917,916 C1 discloses and describes an external fixation
device, particularly for application to the pelvis. The device comprises
two bone-pin or screw-holding clamps, and these clamps are ball-joint
connected and selectively clamped to a central body. The central body
consists of two pivotally connected elongate arms each of which has
telescopically guided parts which provide a measure of arm-length
adjustability. The telescopic adjustments and the pivotal connection of
the arms are both releasably securable to hold given adjustment thereof.
The known device is rather expensive and has a limited range of length
adjustability, so that several different sizes must be kept in stock in
order to provide the surgeon with the proper osteosynthesis aid for a
specific case of use.
BRIEF STATEMENT OF THE INVENTION
The principal object of the invention is to provide an osteosynthesis aid
for use in connection with pelvic bones, offering a great range of
possible releasably locked adjustment but of simple low-cost construction;
and it is also an object to provide in such a simple device for the
previously available feature of selectively adjusted articulation. A
specific object is to provide improved releasably lockable means for
positive retention of any desired adjustment.
The invention achieves these objects with a fixator of releasably lockable
the character indicated wherein the central body, between ball-joint
connected bone-pin or screw clamps, comprises two elongate link members or
arms each of which has an elongate slot; and a lock bolt through both
slots (i.e., through the slot of each arm or link) serves the combined
purpose of selectively locking the central body for overall length between
ball-joint connections and for a selected angular relation between the
respective arms. A further elongate and slotted link is optionally usable
with a second lock bolt to provide further length and bowed adjustment
upon lock-bolt connection of the link to each of the respective ball-joint
connected arm members.
More specifically, each of the ball-joint equipped arms has a slot which
extends preferably over virtually the entire length of the arm, into
proximity with the associated bone-pin or screw holding clamps, and the
fixation of these holding clamps is effected via lock-bolt connection of
the arms. Thus, the arms can be pushed together to a minimum overall
length dimension, wherein the fixation devices are in near-contact with
each other, and they can also be pulled apart to a maximum size such that
the lock bolt establishes a limit stop at the other slot extremes. In this
way, substantially greater changes in length are possible than in the
prior art, while at the same time the entire device is of extremely
economical construction, so that a two-fold advantage is obtained, namely,
on the one hand, fewer individual parts are necessary and, on the other
hand, the manufacture of the device is less expensive. Furthermore, one
lock-bolt setting serves to retain a length adjustment and a selected
pivoted or articulation-angle setting of the slotted arms with respect to
each other. Various lock-bolt configurations are described.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Preferred embodiments of the invention will be described in detail in
conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a partly exploded view in perspective of a fixator device of the
invention, featuring a first selectively operable locking device;
FIG. 2 is a similar view of optional connection-link components usable with
the fixator of FIG. 1, with an exploded showing of the locking device of
FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a perspective view of the complete fixator, to show an assembly
of the parts of FIGS. 1 and 2.
FIG. 4 is a view similar to FIG. 1, to show a different locking device;
FIG. 5 is a view similar to FIG. 2, with an exploded showing of the locking
device of FIG. 4;
FIG. 5A is an exploded view of dissassembled elements of one of the parts
of FIG. 5;
FIG. 5B is a view similar to FIG. 5A to show a modified construction;
FIG. 6 is another view similar to FIG. 1, to show another different locking
device; and
FIG. 7 is another view similar to FIG. 2, with an exploded showing of the
locking device of FIG. 6.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
In FIG. 1, an osteosynthesis aid or external fixator device is shown with
two bone-pin or screw holding clamps 2, 3 of known construction, and ball
joints 4 and 5, with detachable securing devices 6 and 7 by which to
establish interconnection via a central body 1; the devices 4/6 and 5/7
will each be understood to constitute a releasably lockable ball joint,
providing an adjustably secured angular relation between the elongation
axis of each pin or screw holding clamp 2 (3) and the longitudinal axis of
the adjacent end of body 1.
The detachable securing devices 6 and 7 are also of known construction, so
that their further description is unnecessary.
The central body 1 consists of two elongate arms or links in the form of
narrow rigid members, each having a slot (10, 11) which extends over
substantially the entire length of each arm, one end of each arm being
formed with part of an associated detachable securing device (6, 7) and
the other end of each arm being closed around the end of its slot (10,
11). When arms 8, 9 are caused to intersect one above the other as shown
in FIG. 1, the respective slots (10, 11) establish adjustable passage for
the bolt 12 of a lock-bolt mechanism, consisting of a machine bolt 12 and
a nut 14, preferably with interposed friction or lock washers 13 at
seating bolt-head and nut engagement with the respective arms 8, 9.
It can be seen that the pin or screw holding clamps 2 and 3 and the
securing devices 6 and 7 can now be adjusted to such proximity that the
securing devices 6 and 7 practically touch each other and that, on the
other hand, these structural parts can be pulled apart to such an extent
that the lock bolt 12 passes through the extreme ends of slots 10, 11,
i.e., at the ends most remote from securing devices 6 and 7. Also, upon
tightening the bolt to the nut, via the lock washers as described, not
only is the selected length secured (as between the ball joints 4, 5) but
so also is the selected angular relation between arms 8 and 9.
For even greater spacing of the locations of bone-pin or screw clamping,
the described fixator device of FIG. 1 is part of a kit which additionally
includes the parts of FIG. 2, namely, an elongate link member 15 having a
slot 17 extending substantially the full longitudinal extent of link
member 15, as well as an additional lock-bolt mechanism 16, identical to
that at 12 in FIG. 1. FIG. 3 shows an interconnected use of the parts of
FIGS. 1 and 2, with the selective availability of bone-anchorage points
(via holding clamps 2, 3) at extended spacing and bowed interconnection,
so that a fixation of pelvis regions can be effected even for a patient
with a large abdomen.
Merely for the sake of completeness, it is pointed out that the fixing of
the pin or screw holding clamps (2, 3) is preferably established between
the upper and the lower anterior iliac spine or iliac crest.
FIGS. 4 and 5 show adjustably linked structures as in FIGS. 1 and 2, except
for the use of a different locking means 20 to retain an adjusted setting,
as to length and as to angle between thus-connected members.
The lock-bolt mechanism 20 is seen in FIGS. 5 and 5A to comprise four parts
wherein wrenched actuation of an eccentric surface releasably sets the
mechanism. The four parts are (i) a headed pin assembly of two parts,
namely, a disc or head part 21, and a cylindrical shank portion 23 with an
enlarged distal end 22 of generally rectangular section, featuring a
transverse bore 24 through the thickness of said section; (ii) a circular
clamp seat or washer 27 featuring a bore configured for non-rotatable but
axially guided reception of the generally rectangular section of the
distal end 22 of the headed pin, and also featuring like cylindrically
arcuate bearing grooves on opposite sides of the width dimension of the
bore 24 of distal end 22; and (iii) a transverse eccentric-locking pin 25
having spaced cylindrical bearings sized to pass through the transverse
bore 24 of the headed pin 21 and to derive rotational support from the
bearing grooves of the clamp seat or washer 27, with the eccentric
formation 26 of pin 25 located between the spaced cylindrical bearings.
More specifically, the width dimension of the enlarged distal end 22 of pin
21 is such as to permit slidable insertion through the longitudinal slots
of either of two link members to be clamped, and a generally rectangular
central opening in washer 27 will also be seen to accommodate keyed
insertion of distal end 22.
The effective longitudinal length of the cylindrical shank portion 23
should be such as to assure that the enlarged distal end 22 will engage
the longitudinal slot of one to the exclusion of the other of the link
members to be clamped, thereby permitting free link-member articulation
prior to clamping. As seen in FIG. 5A, the cylindrical shank portion 23
has a lower end adapted for threaded engagement to a tapped central bore
of the head part 21; in initial but incomplete assembly of shank 23 to
head part 21, the threaded engagement is to a point short of final or
fully-threaded engagement, substantially to the axial extent of the throw
of the eccentric. Clamped assembly is completed by inserting the
eccentric-locking pin 25 through the transverse bore 24, with the spaced
bearings of pin 25 nested in the spaced bearing grooves of washer 27, and
with the eccentric of pin 25 displaced maximally in the direction of the
loosely threaded engagement of shank 23 to the head or disc part 21. In
this condition, the parts will be understood to be loosely assembled,
permitting slot-positioning selection and angular adjustment of the
involved link members. Thereafter, the threaded engagement is advanced to
completion and is preferably retained, as by suitable set-screw means,
suggested at 28, whereby the clamping action may be releasably established
by wrenched rotation of pin 25, to cause its eccentric surface to jam the
parts via eccentric action on the transverse bore 24.
In the modification of FIG. 5B, parts are as described for FIG. 5A except
that the cylindrical shank portion 23' is sized for slidable fit to the
smooth central bore of the head or disc part 21'. The shank portion 23'
has a transverse-pin bore which will register with a transverse-pin bore
in disc part 21', once the eccentric region of locking pin 25 is correctly
positioned in the transverse bore 24. At that time, a transverse pin 28'
driven through the aligned transverse bores of disc part 21' and shank
portion 23' will retain the parts in readiness for releasable clamping of
the involved link members, via wrench-driven rotation of the
eccentric-locking pin 25.
In the embodiment of FIGS. 6 and 7, the lock-bolt assembly 30 involves six
parts, in addition to the two link members 8, 9 which are to be adjustably
set and clamped for angular relation and for span between their respective
ball-joint centers at 4 and 5. In FIG. 7, these individual parts are:
(i) a lower slide member 31, shown as a channel with side plates for
guidance along outer sides of one to the exclusion of the other of the two
link members to be clamped; and with an elongate central pedestal 32
rising from the channel base for further stabilization of guidance solely
in the elongate slot of said one link member. An upstanding column 33 of
hexagonal section (and having a tapped central bore) rises integrally from
pedestal 32 and is of sufficient length to extend through the combined
thickness of the two link members to be clamped, and to extend a short
distance beyond, for a keying purpose which will be explained;
(ii) a pair of locking disc members 37, 36 having confronting faces with
complimentary plural tooth formations in angularly distributed array in
order to physically lock the angular relation of disc members 37, 36 when
axially clamped together. In FIG. 7, the lower one (37) of these disc
members will be understood to have a flat annular surface sized for
clamped seating on both legs of the upper one of the involved two link
members to be clamped, as in the case of link member 9 of FIG. 6; this
disc member 37 also has a central bore of hexagonal section to engage
column 33 and to key the same against rotation with respect to the lower
slide 31 and, hence, also with respect to the lower link member (e.g.,
member 8) to be clamped. The upper one (36) of the toothed disc members
has a flat upper surface from which a central projection of square section
rises to an extent sufficient to establish its keyed relation with an
upper slide member 35.
(iii) the upper slide member 35 is also shown as a channel with side
plates, for guidance solely along outer sides of the other link member
(e.g., upper link member 9 in FIG. 6). The base of the channel of slide
member 35 has a central opening of square shape to receive the square
projection of the upper one (36) of the toothed discs, thereby completing
the keyed relation noted above for these two parts.
(iv) a wrenchable bolt 34 and seating washer 38 complete the recital of
parts, it being noted that upon assembly of the described parts of lock
bolt 30, the shank of bolt 34 passes freely through central openings in
washer 38, slide 35, and the toothed discs 36, 37, with threaded
engagement solely to the tapped bore of column 32 of the lower slide 32.
Thus, for the lock-bolt configuration of FIG. 7 in use at 30, in the
combination shown in FIG. 6, it is possible to obtain any desired angular
adjustment of link members 8, 9, within the number of tooth-engageable
relations as between discs 36, 37. And, whatever the selected angular
relationship, a wrenched setting of bolt 35 engagement to the tapped bore
of slide 31, will establish an absolute lock of the involved link members.
The same availability of a locked-up angular relation is also achievable
whenever link member 15 is selected for interconnection to the respective
ball-joint equipped link members 8, 9, wherein lock bolts 30 are used in
replacement of the locking bolts 12 and 16 of FIG. 3.
It will be understood that, for convenience, the expression "lock bolt" or
"lock-bolt mechanism" has been used in connection with devices 20 (FIG. 4)
and 30 (FIG. 6), even though they are not conventional nut and bolt
configurations. And it will be noted that, for all disclosed embodiments,
the particularly involved "lock-bolt mechanism" incorporates its own means
of locked engagement to each of the two link members thereby secured to
each other. This result is achieved without any special upper or lower
surface roughening of either of the arm members that are lock-bolt
secured, so that the surfaces of all arm members (8, 9, 15) need not be
but preferably are of frictionally engageable finish throughout. And in
the case of means 30 (FIG. 6), the angularly adjusted lock-up establishes
a positively keyed relation of the involved arm members.
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Description  |
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