Drill/driver hybrid instrument for interphalangeal fusion
US-9687256-B2 · Jun 27, 2017 · US
US2016287300A1 · US · A1
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-2016287300-A1 |
| Application number | US-201414418771-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | A1 |
| Filing date | Mar 28, 2014 |
| Priority date | Mar 28, 2014 |
| Publication date | Oct 6, 2016 |
| Grant date | — |
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A method and device to correct hammertoes. The device is a bone implant that includes an elongated body having a first threaded portion with a first thread pitch and a second threaded portion with a second thread pitch. When the implant is implanted into a joint and rotated about its longitudinal axis when mated with a driver bit, a target joint may be compressed using the pitch differential between the first and second threads. The first and second threads may also be disposed at opposing angles, to help prevent pistoning of the compressed bones. The implant can have one or two driving heads, to accommodate the different methods of insertion. The method involves surgically opening the PIP joint, driving a first portion of a bone implant in one direction into one of the proximal and middle phalanges, aligning the toe such that the second portion of the implant is aligned with the other of the proximal and middle phalanges, and driving the implant in the opposite direction, using a driver bit inserted through the tip of the toe and through an intramedullary canal in the distal and middle phalanges, such that the second portion is driven into the other of the proximal and middle phalanges.
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We claim: 1 . A bone implant comprising: an elongated body having a first portion bearing a first thread, and a second portion bearing a second thread, wherein the first thread has a first thread pitch and a first thread angle, wherein the second thread has a second thread pitch and a second thread angle, wherein the first thread angle and second thread angle are in an opposing configuration, and wherein the first portion has a driving end adapted to mate with a driver. 2 . The bone implant of claim 1 wherein the first thread pitch is 0.039 inches. 3 . The bone implant of claim 1 wherein the second thread pitch is 0.069 inches. 4 . The bone implant of claim 1 wherein the first thread angle is 25 degrees from perpendicular to a longitudinal axis of the body. 5 . The bone implant of claim 1 wherein the second thread angle is 115 degrees from a longitudinal axis of the body. 6 . The bone implant of claim 1 wherein the driving end defines a female depression configured to mate with a male driver bit. 7 . The bone implant of claim 1 wherein the body further comprises an unthreaded transition between the first portion and the second portion. 8 . The bone implant of claim 1 wherein the first portion is implanted into a patient's proximal phalanx, and the second portion is implanted into the patient's middle phalanx. 9 . The bone implant of claim 8 wherein the bone implant creates a compressive force across the patient's proximal inter-phalangeal joint. 10 . A bone implant comprising: an elongated body having a first portion bearing a first thread and defining a first driving end, and a second portion bearing a second thread and defining a second driving end, wherein the first thread has a first thread pitch and a first thread angle, wherein the second thread has a second thread pitch and a second thread angle, and wherein the first driving end is adapted to mate with a first driver bit and the second driving end is adapted to mate with a second driver bit. 11 . The bone implant of claim 10 wherein the first thread pitch is 0.039 inches. 12 . The bone implant of claim 10 wherein the second thread pitch is 0.069 inches. 13 . The bone implant of claim 10 wherein the first thread angle and the second thread angle are in an opposing configuration. 14 . The bone implant of claim 10 wherein the first driving end defines a female depression configured to mate with a male driver bit and the second driving end has a male extension configured to mate with a female driver bit. 15 . The bone implant of claim 10 wherein the body defines a cannula therethrough. 16 . The bone implant of claim 10 wherein the body further comprises an unthreaded transition between the first portion and the second portion. 17 . The bone implant of claim 10 wherein the first portion is implanted into a patient's middle phalanx and the second portion is implanted into a patient's proximal phalanx. 18 . The bone implant of claim 17 wherein the bone implant creates a compressive force across the patient's proximal inter-phalangeal joint. 19 . A method of correcting hammertoes comprising the steps of: making a dorsal incision in a patient's toe along the patient's proximal inter-phalangeal joint, bending the patient's toe such that the proximal inter-phalangeal joint is open and a part of the proximal and middle phalanges are exposed, inserting into the proximal phalanx a bone implant having a first portion bearing a first thread and a second portion bearing a second thread and defining a driving end, such that the first portion penetrates the proximal phalanx and the first thread engages bone tissue of the proximal phalanx, drilling an intramedullary canal through the patient's distal and middle phalanges, inserting a driver bit adapted to mate with the driving end into the intramedullary canal through the patient's toe tip, straightening the patient's toe such that the second portion of the bone implant aligns with the intramedullary canal, driving the bone implant into the middle phalanx by mating the driver bit with the driving end, until the second portion is anchored in the middle phalanx and the proximal inter-phalangeal joint is compressed, and withdrawing the driver bit through the patient's toe tip. 20 . The method of claim 19 further comprising the step of drilling a second intramedullary canal in the proximal phalanx, before inserting the first portion of the implant into the proximal phalanx. 21 . A method of correcting hammertoes comprising the steps of: making a dorsal incision in a patient's toe along the patient's proximal inter-phalangeal joint, bending the patient's toe such that the proximal inter-phalangeal joint is open and a part of the proximal and middle phalanges are exposed, drilling an intramedullary canal through the patient's distal and middle phalanges, placing in the intramedullary canal a first driver bit adapted to mate with the first driving end, inserting into the middle phalanx, through the intramedullary canal, a bone implant having a first portion bearing a first thread and defining a first driving end and a second portion bearing a second thread and defining a second driving end, such that the first driving end penetrates the middle phalanx and the first thread engages the bone tissue of the middle phalanx, mating with the first driving end the first driver bit adapted to mate with the first driving end, driving the bone implant distally into the middle phalanx by mating with the second driving head a second driver bit adapted to so mate, until the first portion is anchored in the middle phalanx and the second portion is just proud of the proximal inter-phalangeal joint, removing the second driver bit, straightening the patient's toe and inserting the second portion of the bone implant into the proximal phalanx such that the second driving end penetrates the proximal phalanx and the second thread engages the bone tissue of the proximal phalanx, driving the bone implant into the proximal phalanx by rotating in the opposite direction the first driver bit adapted to mate with the first driving end, until the second portion is anchored in the proximal phalanx and the proximal inter-phalangeal joint is compressed, and withdrawing the first driver bit through the patient's toe tip. 22 . The method of claim 21 further comprising the step of drilling a second intramedullary canal in the proximal phalanx, before inserting the second portion of the implant into the proximal phalanx. 23 . The implant of claim 1 wherein the body defines a cannula therethrough.
for feet, e.g. toes · CPC title
Headless screws, e.g. ligament interference screws · CPC title
for small bones, e.g. in the foot, ankle, hand or wrist · CPC title
with thread interrupted or changing its form along shank, other than constant taper · CPC title
for bone compression · CPC title
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