Device and method for deployment of an anchoring device for intervertebral spinal fusion
US-2020008955-A1 · Jan 9, 2020 · US
US11712346B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11712346-B2 |
| Application number | US-202117540381-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Dec 2, 2021 |
| Priority date | Dec 2, 2021 |
| Publication date | Aug 1, 2023 |
| Grant date | Aug 1, 2023 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
Expandable fusion devices, systems, and methods. The expandable fusion device includes one or more integrated deployable retention spikes configured to resist expulsion of the device when installed in the intervertebral disc space. The implant may include upper and lower main endplates, an actuator assembly configured to cause an expansion in height of the upper and lower main endplates, and a sidecar assembly including a sidecar carrier, an upper carrier endplate pivotably coupled to an upper spike, and a lower carrier endplate pivotably coupled to a lower spike such that forward translation of the sidecar carrier pushes against the upper and lower carrier endplates, thereby deploying the upper and lower spikes.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. An expandable implant comprising: upper and lower main endplates configured to engage adjacent vertebrae; an actuator assembly configured to cause an expansion in height of the upper and lower main endplates; and a sidecar assembly including a sidecar carrier, an upper carrier endplate pivotably coupled to an upper spike, and a lower carrier endplate pivotably coupled to a lower spike, wherein forward translation of the sidecar carrier pushes against the upper and lower carrier endplates, thereby deploying the upper and lower spikes wherein the upper carrier endplate includes a first tusk and the lower carrier endplate includes a second tusk, and the first and second tusks extend toward a front of the implant. 2. The expandable implant of claim 1 , wherein the first and second tusks are receivable in respective passageways in the upper and lower main endplates to thereby guide translation of the upper and lower carrier endplates. 3. The expandable implant of claim 2 , wherein the first and second tusks have a polygonal cross-section that corresponds to the shape and dimensions of the respective passageway. 4. The expandable implant of claim 3 , wherein the first and second tusks allow for translation of the upper and lower carrier endplates with respect to the main endplates along a main longitudinal axis of the implant but restricts all other translation and rotation. 5. The expandable implant of claim 1 , wherein each spike extends from a proximal end coupled to the respective carrier endplate to a free end, and wherein the free end is pointed and configured to pierce bone. 6. The expandable implant of claim 1 , wherein each of the upper and lower main endplates include a side extension portion defining a side channel, wherein the side channels house and guide the upper and lower spikes, respectively. 7. The expandable implant of claim 6 , wherein each spike is connected to the respective carrier endplate with a pin, thereby providing a hinged coupling between the carrier endplate and the spike. 8. The expandable implant of claim 7 , wherein when the carrier endplates move forward, the spikes bottom out on a floor of the channels, rotating about an axis of the pins connecting the spike to the carrier endplate, and the spikes emerge from top and bottom planes of the main endplates. 9. An expandable implant comprising: upper and lower main endplates configured to engage adjacent vertebrae; an actuator assembly including a rotatable actuator having a shaft and a rotatable nut; a plurality of driving ramps including a front ramp, a mid-ramp, and a rear ramp positioned along the shaft of the actuator, wherein the upper and lower main endplates are engaged with the plurality of driving ramps, and wherein rotation of the actuator and/or the nut causes movement of one or more of the driving ramps, thereby causing an expansion in height of the upper and lower main endplates; and a sidecar assembly including a sidecar carrier, an upper carrier endplate pivotably coupled to an upper spike, and a lower carrier endplate pivotably coupled to a lower spike, wherein forward translation of the sidecar carrier pushes against the upper and lower carrier endplates, thereby deploying the upper and lower spikes; wherein the rear ramp includes a retention tab configured to prevent retraction of the spikes by preventing movement of the sidecar carrier. 10. The expandable implant of claim 9 , wherein the rear ramp includes a bore for receiving the actuator assembly and a pair of arms positioned on opposite sides of the bore. 11. The expandable implant of claim 10 , wherein the rear ramp includes a dovetail slot along an outside face of one arm, and the sidecar carrier includes a corresponding dovetail that mates with the dovetail of the rear ramp, allowing the sidecar carrier to translate with respect to the rear ramp along a main longitudinal axis of the implant while restricting all other translation or rotation. 12. The expandable implant of claim 11 , wherein the dovetail slot decreases in height towards a back of the rear ramp. 13. The expandable implant of claim 9 , wherein the retention tab is defined by a relief cut that protrudes outward from a side face of the rear ramp, and when the sidecar carrier passes over the retention tab, the retention tab springs outwardly to prevent the sidecar carrier from travelling backwards. 14. The expandable implant of claim 9 , wherein each of the upper and lower main endplates include a side extension portion defining a side channel, wherein the side channels house and guide the upper and lower spikes, respectively. 15. The expandable implant of claim 14 , wherein when the sidecar carrier translates forward, the carrier endplates move forward, the spikes bottom out on a floor of the channels, rotating and driving the spikes outwardly from top and bottom planes of the main endplates. 16. An expandable implant comprising: upper and lower main endplates configured to engage adjacent vertebrae; an actuator assembly including a rotatable actuator and a driving ramp positioned along the actuator configured to cause an expansion in height of the upper and lower main endplates; and integrated retention spikes deployable from the upper and lower main endplates, wherein the integrated retention spikes deploy when a sidecar carrier is translated forward, pushing against upper and lower carrier endplates that are pivotably coupled to the respective retention spikes wherein anterior and posterior heights of the implant are independently adjustable for continuous adjustment of height and lordotic profile. 17. The expandable implant of claim 16 , wherein the retention spikes maintain a constant penetration depth out of the upper and lower main endplates regardless of height or lordotic expansion.
for the fusion of spinal bodies, e.g. intervertebral fusion of adjacent spinal bodies, e.g. fusion cages (intervertebral discs A61F2/442) · CPC title
substantially parallelepipedal, e.g. having a rectangular or trapezoidal cross-section · CPC title
made by longitudinally pushing a protrusion into a complementarily-shaped recess, e.g. held by friction fit · CPC title
made by laterally inserting a protrusion, e.g. a rib into a complementarily-shaped groove · CPC title
Dovetail connection · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.