Filler Means, Feeding Device and Method for the Forming of a Support Structure in a Bone Cavity
The invention relates to dry free-flowing filler (1) for forming a support structure in a bone cavity (4a). Said filler comprises a plurality of biocompatible support bodies (2) which are resistant to deformation or fracture under the physiologicalloads usually occurring in the bone cavity (4a). Said support bodies (2) have a size between 2 mm and 10 mm and an axis (A) and two opposite abutments (2g) spaced apart in the direction of the axis (A).
This application is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/572,035 filed Jan. 12, 2007 which is a U.S. National Phase of PCT/EP05/007936 filed Jul. 14, 2005 which claims priority to European Application No. 04405451.8 filed Jul. 14, 2004. All of these are incorporated herein by reference in their entirty.
The present invention relates to a filler means for the formation of a support structure in a bone cavity. The invention furthermore relates to a feeding device for the filling of a filler means into a bone cavity. Furthermore the invention relates to a method for the filling of a bone cavity with a support structure.
The invention relates to the treatment of bones of humans or animals.
The increasing aging of society leads to an above average increase in diseases of the locomotion and support apparatus, in particular of the bones. Bones can be damaged or weakened in the most diverse manners, for example by trauma, infection, wear, tumor growth or degenerative illnesses such as osteoporosis. In older humans, osteoporosis, that is to say the depletion of the spongiosa, represents a problem because in this way the load carrying ability of the bone is weakened, which has the consequence that bone fractures increasingly occur, above all in the spinal column, at the neck of the femur and at the wrist. A treatment of such bone fractures is difficult, in particular when degenerative changes in an advanced state are present. For the fixation of such bone fractures external or internal splints (plates, screws, implants) are normally used which hold the bone together until it has healed. Such splints cannot, however, be used for all bones. Thus, for example, for the spine the so-called vertebroplastie is used for the treatment of a degenerated or partly fractured vertebral body and the damaged vertebral body is filled with bone cement. The use of bone cement in vertebral bodies however has various disadvantages, in particular that the bone cement can emerge in uncontrolled manner via veins or small bone defects in the vertebral body and can thereby cause damage in adjacent anatomic structures, such as for example on escaping into the spinal passage. Further disadvantages of bone cement are that it warms up strongly during hardening which can damage surrounding tissue or indeed nerves, that the bone cement must be very quickly processed, that no bone can grow in the bone cement and that the bone cement becomes brittle in the course of time.
The document US 2004/0052829 discloses a method for treatment of porous vertebral bodies, in particular of vertebral bodies with an osteoporotic fracture. For this purpose, a biocompatible liquid carrier substance such as water is used which is enriched with biocompatible support bodies. The disadvantage of this method is the fact that a balloon-like container is required which must first be introduced into the vertebral body and which is thereafter filled with the carrier substance containing the support bodies. The balloon-like container is required in order to ensure that both the liquid carrier substance and also the support bodies contained therein remain within the vertebral body. If no balloon-like container were used, then the known danger of outflow would also exist in this method in which the liquid carrier substance and also the support bodies contained therein, which have a size in the micrometer range, can escape out of the damaged vertebral body and can damage adjacent tissue in an uncontrolled manner or propagate in the human body. The known method thus has the disadvantage that it is complicated and expensive to introduce the balloon-like container into the vertebral body, that this can be damaged during the introduction or by the support bodies, so that the carrier substance can flow out and that the vertebral body can not be ideally filled because the balloon-like container “inflates” during the feeding of the liquid carrier substance and thus takes up more space than is necessary per se for the support bodies.
The document US 2004/0097930 discloses a further method for the treatment of vertebral bodies. This method discloses spherical bodies which are introduced into the internal space of the vertebral body. After the operation has been completed, the spinal column is loaded in the axial direction, that is to say in the direction of extent of the spinal column. This loading has the consequence that the ball-like bodies are urged radially to the axis of the spinal column, with the vertebral body bodies sinking in and being deformed. In an unfavorable case the ball-like bodies penetrate the jacket of the vertebral body and can thus be distributed in an uncontrolled manner in the human body. The document moreover discloses four-cornered bodies which are to be introduced into the inner space of the vertebral body. These four-cornered bodies mutually block one another during the supply such that these bodies cannot be introduced into the interior space of vertebral body. The disclosed method thus has the disadvantages that the bodies introduced into the vertebral body want to escape under load and/or that the bodies to be introduced cannot be supplied to the vertebral body.
It is thus the object of the present invention to propose a more advantageous, implantable and in particular injectable filler means which permits defective bones, in particular vertebral bodies, to be ideally supplied in such a way that the bones are able to carry the physiological loads that are present from the time of the implantation onwards.
This object is satisfied with a filler means capable of dry flow having the features of claim 1. The subordinate claims 2 to 24 relate to further advantageously designed filler means. The object is further satisfied with a feeding device for the introduction of the filler means having the features of claim 25. The subordinate claims 26 and 30 relate to further advantageous embodiments. The object is further satisfied with a method for the filling of a bone cavity with support bodies having the features of claim 31. The subordinate claims 32 to 40 relate to further advantageous method steps. The object is further satisfied with a system having the features of claim 41.
The object is in particular satisfied with a filler means capable of dry flow for the formation of a support structure in a bone cavity, with the filler means including a plurality of biocompatible support bodies, which are resistant to deformation or fracture under the physiological loads which normally occur in the bone cavity, with the support body having a size between 2 mm and 10 mm and an axis as well as two oppositely disposed abutment locations which are spaced apart in the direction of the axis. The abutment locations are preferably designed as abutment surfaces.
The expression “capable of dry flow” signifies that the filler means can be injected, but without using any sort of fluid carrier substance which could endow the support bodies with flow characteristics. The support bodies are selected to be sufficiently large in that they can all be displaced in a cannula, while lying behind one another within the cannula, in that a pressure is exerted on the rearmost support body and this force is transmitted to all of the support bodies located in the cannula so that the support bodies are moved in the cannula towards the tip of the cannula. The support bodies are aligned within the cannula in such a way that the abutment locations of two support bodies following one another each contact one another. These support bodies have dry flowing characteristics in that they have a type of flow characteristics within the cannula without a carrier substance, in that the support bodies, in similar manner to an injection, can be fed to a bone cavity via the cannula.
The expression “support body” designates a body which is able to carry the forces which occur in a vertebral body without being substantially deformed or indeed destroyed. A plurality of biocompatible materials are known from which such a support body can be manufactured. For example the support body can be manufactured from
-
- ceramic materials, in particular calcium phosphate/hydroxylapatite, aluminum oxide, zirconium oxide, ATZ ceramic (aluminum zirconium oxide), bioactive glasses, glass ceramic materials, porcelain or a combination thereof or
- metallic materials in particular titanium, tantalum, stainless steel, steel alloys such as cobalt chrome alloy, titanium alloys such as titanium nickel alloy or titanium aluminum niobium/vanadium alloy or a combination thereof, or
- polymers, in particular polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), polyetherether ketone (PEEK), polyethylene (PE), polyethylene terephthalate (PET) or a combination thereof, or biodegradable polymers such as polylactate.
The filler means in accordance with the invention including a plurality of biocompatible support bodies has the advantages that no balloon or other bounding means is required in the bone cavity because, on the one hand, the filler means has no carrier substance such as a liquid which could run out because the filler means is capable of dry flow within the cannula and, on the other hand, because the filler means consists of individual relatively large support bodies which, as a result of their size, can also hardly escape in uncontrolled manner from a severely damaged vertebral body, and which, as a result of their size, cannot become distributed in an uncontrolled manner in the body. The filler means in accordance with the invention is capable of dry flow and can thus be injected into a bone cavity with the aid of a cannula. The filler means in accordance with the invention is thus also suitable in particular for the medical care of bones which are difficult to access such as vertebral bodies.
In a particularly advantageous embodiment the support bodies are designed such that they can mutually wedge one another so that the support bodies which are located in the bone cavity are mutually wedged and thereby form a cohesive support structure. The support bodies are preferably wedged such that they form a self-stable support structure. This is in particular important for loaded spinal columns.
The filler means of the invention permits bone defects, such as fractured bones, in particular weakened, fractured or partly fractured vertebral bodies to be filled with a support structure consisting of individual support bodies. Moreover, vertebral bodies which have been partly fractured can be aligned again. The support structure endows the bone with a stability, transmits forces which occur and can moreover promote bone healing and/or bone formation. The support bodies can, moreover, be filled with a bone healing and/or bone forming substance and/or be coated or have a bone healing and/or bone forming surface structure. The filler means in accordance with the inventions can be introduced into the bone by means of a supply device comprising a small cannula, which enables a caring access to the bone. In an advantageous embodiment the feeding device includes a force measuring device in order to measure the force which acts the support element on occur during introduction in the feed direction. In this way an excessive force is avoided during the introduction. Hereby a breaking through of the outer wall of the vertebral body is avoided. Moreover, the doctor has available an indicator via the introduction force which is able to say something about the state of filling of the vertebral body. In a further advantageous embodiment the feeding device includes a drive device which actuates a plunger provided in the cannula. The drive device exerts a mechanical force on the plunger and on the support bodies arranged in front of it in the feed direction, for example a constant force, a tap or a vibration. In a further embodiment the feeding device has a plunger which extends up to and into the bone cavity with the tip of the plunger serving as a manipulation instrument in order to change the position of the support bodies located within the bone cavity, for example to align them.
The invention will be explained in detail in the following with reference to Figures. There are shown:
The vertebral body 4 shown in
An internal bone space 4a or a bone cavity 4b can be filled with the most diversely shaped support bodies 2.
The
The
The inner cavity 3 of the support bodies 2 in accordance with
The embodiment in accordance with
The
In an advantageous design, as shown in
The cannula can not only have a round internal cross-section as shown in
The tip 6a of the cannula 6 can also be designed without a fastening means 6c. In particular, if a bone cavity 4b has already previously been formed, the support bodies 2 could also be fed, as shown in
In a possible method step an osteo-inductive and/or osteo-conductive substance can be supplied after the support bodies 2 have been introduced into the internal bone space 4a, for example as a liquid or as a fluid, in order to fill the still present hollow cavities in the bone cavity 4b with this substance. The filler means 1 could also be supplied to the internal bone space 4a together with a fluid in that, for example, the support bodies 2 are made available together with the fluid, in particular mixed, in the pressing device 9 for introduction into the internal bone space 4a.
The plunger 9c can have markings 9e in order to monitor the depth of penetration of the plunger 9c. The length of the plunger 9c can be selected such that its front part can be introduced up to and into the internal bone space 4a, for example by up to a centimeter. The tip of the plunger 9c can, as shown in
The pressing device 9 shown in
The pressing device 9 could also include a drive 9g in order to bring about a force, blows or vibrations on the support bodies 2. In an advantageous method step a plurality of support bodies 2 is supplied to the internal bone space 4a and thereafter a vibrating force is exerted on the support bodies 2 in order to compress the support bodies 2 located in the internal bone space 4a and in order to thus obtain a high packing density and in order to thereby feed a large number of support bodies 2 to the internal bone space 4a. The frequency of vibration preferably lies in the range between 1 and 15000 Hz, in particular between 5 and 50 Hz.
In an advantageous embodiment the drive device 9g produces an elastic shock wave which is transferred into the plunger 9a which has the consequence that the length of the plunger 9a is varied, for example by +/−2 mm at a frequency of preferably between 1 and 50 Hz.
The drive device 9g could also be connected to a monitoring device 11 and the maximum force and/or the frequency and/or the stroke could be monitored.
The
The surface of the support body 2 located within the two U-shaped support bodies 2 can be of any desired shape and can for example also have edges or points, also at its end surfaces. The support bodies 2 shown in
The end face of the plunger 9c can be designed in a plurality of shapes and can for example also have the end faces shown in
The support bodies 2 shown in
Claims
1. A dry flowable filler material (1) for the formation of a support structure in an internal bone space (4a), comprising: a plurality of biocompatible support bodies (2) which are resistant to deformation or fracture under physiological loads within the internal bone space (4a), with the support bodies (2) having a size between 2 mm and 10 mm and wherein the support bodies (2) have an axis (A) and also two abutment locations (2g) each facing in opposite directions and spaced apart from each other along the direction of the axis (A), wherein the abutment locations (2g) extend perpendicular to the axis (A), and wherein in between the abutment locations (2g) the support bodies (2) have, in circumferential direction of the axis (A), a polyhedral outer contour with planar surfaces (2f), and wherein the planar surfaces (20 are delimited by edges (2d) extending parallel to the axis (A).
2. The filler material in accordance with claim 1, wherein the support bodies (2) have a 3-cornered to 10-cornered outer contour.
3. The filler material in accordance with claim 2, wherein the support bodies (2) have a 4-cornered, 5-corndered or 6-cornered outer contour.
4. The filler material in accordance with claim 1, wherein the abutment location (2g) has a recess (2c).
5. The filler material in accordance with claim 4, wherein the support bodies (2) have an outer contour shaped such that the outer contour of a support body (2) filled into the internal bone space (4a) can project into the recess (2c) of an adjacently disposed support body (2).
6. The filler material in accordance with claim 5, wherein the outer contour and the recess (2c) of the support bodies (2) are shaped in a mutually fitting manner such that mutual wedging occurs between the outer contour projecting into the recesses (2c) and the recess (2c).
7. The filler material in accordance with claim 6, wherein the wedging is able to produce a cohesive self-stable support structure within the internal bone space (4a).
8. The filler material in accordance with claim 4, wherein the recess (2c) extends concentrically to the axis (A).
9. The filler material in accordance with claim 4, wherein the support bodies (2) have an open inner hollow cavity (3) which opens into oppositely disposed recesses (2c).
10. The filler material in accordance with claim 9, wherein the inner hollow cavity (3) is of cylindrical shape and extends in the direction of the axis (A).
11. The filler material in accordance with claim 9, wherein each support body (2) takes up a total volume which includes the volume of a material of the support body (2) and also its inner hollow cavity (3), with the volume of the inner hollow cavity (3) amounting to more than 30% of the total volume.
12. The filler material in accordance with claim 11, wherein the volume of the inner hollow cavity (3) amounts to more than 50% of the total volume.
13. The filler material in accordance with claim 1, wherein all support bodies (2) are identically configured with respect to size and shape.
14. The filler material in accordance with claim 4, wherein the recess (2c) has blocking points (2h).
15. The filler material in accordance with claim 1, wherein the edges (2d) have blocking points (2h).
16. The filler material in accordance with claim 1, wherein the support bodies (2) have an outer diameter (D) and orthogonal to it a height (H) in the direction of the axis (A) and wherein the outer diameter (D) amounts to at least 1.5 times the height (H).
17. The filler material in accordance with claim 1, wherein the support body (2) is configured in shape of a nut having two abutment locations (2g) extending perpendicular to the axis (A) and with a multi-cornered outer counter with edges extending parallel to the axis (A).
18. The filler material in accordance with claim 17, wherein the support body (2) has a cylindrical inner cavity (3) extending in the direction of the axis (A) which opens at both ends into the abutment location (2g).
19. The filler material in accordance with claim 1, wherein the support bodies (2) comprise
- a ceramic material, calcium phosphate/hydroxylapatite, aluminum oxide, zirconium oxide, ATZ ceramic (aluminum zirconium oxide), a bioactive glass, a glass ceramic material, porcelain, or a combination thereof, or
- a metallic material, titanium, tantalum, stainless steel, a steel alloy, a titanium alloy, or a combination thereof, or
- a polymer, polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), polyetheretherketone (PEEK), polyethylene (PE), polyethylene terephthalate (PET), or a combination thereof, or
- a biodegradable polymer.
20. The filler material in accordance with claim 4, wherein the recess (2c) or the interior cavity (3) is filled with at least one osteo-inductive and/or osteo-conductive substance.
21. The filler material in accordance with claim 1, wherein the support bodies (2) comprise a plurality of partial bodies.
22. A feeding device (5) for the supplying of a filler material (1) according to claim 1, wherein the filler material (1) is capable of dry flowing into an internal bone space (4a), wherein the supply device (5) includes a cannula (6) with a cross-section matched to that of the size of the support bodies (2) in such a way that the support bodies (2) can be supplied following one another within the cannula (6) aligned in the direction of the axis (A) to the internal bone space (4a) and with the feeding device (5) including a pressing device (9) having a plunger (9c) displaceable in the cannula (6) with which a force can be exerted in the feeding direction on the support bodies (2) located within the cannula (6) in order to supply the support bodies (2) to the internal bone space (4a) under pressure, wherein the pressing device (9) includes a drive device (9g) which drives the plunger (9c) in the feeding direction, and wherein the driving apparatus (9g) exerts a vibrating force on the plunger (9c).
23. The feeding device in accordance with claim 22, wherein the pressing apparatus (9) includes a force measuring device (9d) for the measuring of the thrust force acting on the support bodies (2) in the feeding direction.
24. The feeding device in accordance with claim 22, wherein the plunger (9c) has a length such that its front part section can be introduced up to and into the internal bone space (4a).
25. The feeding device in accordance with claim 24 including a plunger (9c) having a tip formed on it or movable on it such that it can act on a filler material (1) located within the internal cavity (4a) of the bone and change its position, in particular transverse to the feeding direction.
26. The feeding device in accordance with claim 22, wherein the driving apparatus (9g) produces an elastic shock wave which is transferred into the plunger (9c).
27. A kit for the fixing and further enlargement of a partly fractured vertebral body including
- a plurality of filler materials in accordance with claim 1, and
- a feeding device (5) including a cannula (6) having an internal cross-section matched to the size of the support bodies (2) such that the support bodies (2) can be fed within the cannula (6) following one another in the same aligned position and contacting one another mutually at the abutment locations (2g) to the internal bone space (4a) in the direction of the axis (A) and also comprising a plunger (9c) displaceable in the cannula (6) with which a force can be exerted in the feeding direction (A) onto the rearmost of the support bodies (2) located in the cannula (6).
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 4, 2011
Publication Date: Nov 24, 2011
Inventor: Bruno Sidler (Menziken)
Application Number: 13/198,565
International Classification: A61F 2/28 (20060101); A61M 5/31 (20060101);