Orthopaedic knee prosthesis having controlled condylar curvature

US9326864B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-9326864-B2
Application numberUS-201414486085-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateSep 15, 2014
Priority dateJun 30, 2008
Publication dateMay 3, 2016
Grant dateMay 3, 2016

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  4. Key dates

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  5. First independent claim

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Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

An orthopaedic knee prosthesis includes a tibial bearing and a femoral component configured to articulate with the tibial bearing. The femoral component includes a posterior cam configured to contact a spine of the tibial bearing and a condyle surface curved in the sagittal plane. The radius of curvature of the condyle surface decreases gradually between early-flexion and mid-flexion. Additionally, in some embodiments, the radius of curvature of the condyle surface may be increased during mid-flexion.

First claim

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The invention claimed is: 1. A posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis comprising: a femoral component including (i) a pair of spaced apart condyles defining an intracondylar notch therebetween, at least one of the pair of spaced apart condyles having a condyle surface curved in the sagittal plane and (ii) a posterior cam positioned in the intracondylar notch; and a tibial bearing including (i) a platform having a bearing surface configured to articulate with the condyle surface of the femoral component and (ii) a spine extending upwardly from the platform, wherein the condyle surface of the femoral component (i) contacts the bearing surface at a first contact point on the condyle surface at a first degree of flexion, the first degree of flexion being less than about 30 degrees, (ii) contacts the bearing surface at a second contact point on the condyle surface at a second degree of flexion, the second degree of flexion being in the range of 35 degrees to 90 degrees, (iii) contacts the bearing surface at a third contact point on the condyle surface at a third degree of flexion, the third degree of flexion being greater than the second degree of flexion, and (iv) contacts the bearing surface at a plurality of contact points between the first contact point and the second contact point when the femoral component is moved from the first degree of flexion to the second degree of flexion, wherein the posterior cam of the femoral component contacts the spine of the tibial bearing at a fourth degree of flexion, the fourth degree of flexion being no greater than about 10 degrees more than the third degree of flexion, wherein each contact point of the plurality of contact points is defined by a ray extending from a common origin to the respective contact point of the plurality of contact points, each ray having a length defined by the following polynomial equation: r θ =( a +( b *θ)+( c*θ 2 )+( d*θ 3 )), wherein r θ is the length of the ray defining a contact point at θ degrees of flexion, a is a coefficient value between 20 and 50, and b is a coefficient value in a range of 0.00<b<0.30, wherein (i) c is a coefficient value between −0.010 and 0.00 and (ii) d is a coefficient value between −0.00015 and 0.00, wherein the condyle surface in the sagittal plane has a first radius of curvature at the first contact point and a second radius of curvature at the second contact point, the second radius of curvature being less than the first radius of curvature. 2. The posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis of claim 1 , wherein: the first radius of curvature has an origin, and the distance between the origin of the first radius of curvature and the common origin of the rays is in the range of 0 and 10 millimeters. 3. The posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis of claim 1 , wherein the first degree of flexion is in the range of 0 degrees to 10 degrees, the second degree of flexion is in the range of 45 degrees to 55 degrees, and the third degree of flexion is in the range of about 65 degrees to about 75 degrees. 4. The posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis of claim 3 , wherein the first degree of flexion is about 0 degrees, the second degree of flexion is about 50 degrees, and the third degree of flexion is about 70 degrees. 5. The posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis of claim 1 , wherein: the condyle surface in the sagittal plane has a third radius of curvature at the third contact point, and the condyle surface contacts the bearing surface at a fourth contact point on the condyle surface at the fourth degree of flexion, and the condyle surface has a fourth radius of curvature at the fourth contact point that is less than the second radius of curvature. 6. The posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis of claim 5 , wherein the third radius of curvature is less than the first radius of curvature. 7. The posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis of claim 1 , wherein the fourth degree of flexion is in a range of 70 degrees to 80 degrees. 8. The posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis of claim 1 , wherein: the condyle surface is a first condyle surface of a first condyle of the pair of spaced apart condyles, and the pair of spaced apart condyles includes a second condyle that includes a second condyle surface that is curved in the sagittal plane. 9. The posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis of claim 8 , wherein the first condyle surface and the second condyle surface are symmetrical. 10. The posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis of claim 8 , wherein the first condyle surface and the second condyle surface are asymmetrical. 11. A posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis comprising: a femoral component including (i) a pair of spaced apart condyles defining an intracondylar notch therebetween, at least one of the pair of spaced apart condyles having a condyle surface curved in the sagittal plane and (ii) a posterior cam positioned in the intracondylar notch; and a tibial bearing including (i) a platform having a bearing surface configured to articulate with the condyle surface of the femoral component and (ii) a spine extending upwardly from the platform, wherein the condyle surface of the femoral component (i) contacts the bearing surface at a first contact point on the condyle surface at a first degree of flexion of about 0 degrees, (ii) contacts the bearing surface at a second contact point on the condyle surface at a second degree of flexion, the second degree of flexion being greater than the first degree of flexion and in the range of about 30 degrees to about 50 degrees, (iii) contacts the bearing surface at a third contact point on the condyle surface at a third degree of flexion, the third degree of flexion being greater than the second degree of flexion and in the range of about 70 degrees to about 120 degrees, and (iv) contacts the bearing surface at a fourth contact point on the condyle surface at a fourth degree of flexion, the fourth degree of flexion being greater than the third degree of flexion, wherein the condyle surface in the sagittal plane has a first radius of curvature at the first contact point, a second radius of curvature that is constant between the second contact point and the third contact point, and a third radius of curvature that is constant between the third contact point and the fourth contact point, the first radius of curvature being different from the second radius of curvature and the third radius of curvature, wherein the posterior cam of the femoral component includes an anterior surface configured to initially contact the spine of the tibial bearing at a fourth degree of flexion, the fourth degree of flexion being at least 70 degrees, and wherein the condyle surface has a plurality of radii of curvature between the first contact point and the second contact point to transition from the first radius of curvature to the second radius of curvature over a range of degrees of flexion, each of the plurality of radii of curvature originating from a common origin. 12. The posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis of claim 11 , wherein the second degree of flexion is no greater than about 30 degrees. 13. The posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis of claim 11 , wherein the range of degrees of flexion is about 50 degrees. 14. The posterior stabilized orthopaedic knee prosthesis of claim 11 , wherein the condyle surface contacts the bearing surface at a plurality of contact points between the first contact point and the second contact point when the femoral component is moved from the fir

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • partial circles, i.e. circular segments · CPC title

  • Femoral components · CPC title

  • Conically- or frustoconically-shaped protrusion and recess · CPC title

  • made by longitudinally pushing a protrusion into a complementary-shaped recess, e.g. held by friction fit · CPC title

  • circular · CPC title

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What does patent US9326864B2 cover?
An orthopaedic knee prosthesis includes a tibial bearing and a femoral component configured to articulate with the tibial bearing. The femoral component includes a posterior cam configured to contact a spine of the tibial bearing and a condyle surface curved in the sagittal plane. The radius of curvature of the condyle surface decreases gradually between early-flexion and mid-flexion. Additiona…
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Depuy Ireland
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification A61F2/3886. Mapped technology areas include Human Necessities.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue May 03 2016 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 1 related publication on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).