Cranial insertion of surgical needle utilizing computer-assisted tomography
First Claim
1. Apparatus for use in guidance of insertion of surgical instruments into a patient'"'"'s body by use of computer-assisted tomography equipment which provides a plurality of scans in parallel planes, including a scanning throat and a body-supporting cradle axially positionable relative thereto, the apparatus comprisingframe-like patient restraint means including means for rigid securement to the body-supporting cradle and having an arcuate track portion in a plane parallel to the planes of such scans,said frame-like means being smaller in its outer dimension than the scanning throat, andsurgical instrument support structure mounted adjustably along the arcuate track portion and projecting away from the plane thereof and includingan instrument guide-holder having bore means adjustably securable in a plane parallel to such plane, to slidably accept such a surgical instrument, said guide-holder and that portion of the instrument support structure adjacent thereto being constructed of material having a density substantially of the order of that of body tissue,whereby the guide-holder and the axis of its bore means may be shown on such a computer assisted tomography scan.
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Accused Products
Abstract
The head of a patient is held in place horizontally on the indexable sliding cradle of an X-ray scanner by a vertical ring encircling the head having radiolucent rests supporting the head behind the ears at the mastoid processes and beneath the eyes at the cheekbone area. Adjustable horizontally-projecting instrument support structure is carriage-mounted on an arcuate track in the ring between the forward rests and has a horizontally-bored instrument guide-holder of such density as to appear on an X-ray scan and positionable adjacent to the head with its horizontal bore in the plane of any indexable scanning section of the X-ray scanner. By scanning the head and adjacent guide holder, the holder may be positioned with its bore in the same plane as and on a line directed to a point of interest in the brain. Thereafter, the holder may be utilized to guide a surgical needle to the point of interest.
128 Citations
5 Claims
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1. Apparatus for use in guidance of insertion of surgical instruments into a patient'"'"'s body by use of computer-assisted tomography equipment which provides a plurality of scans in parallel planes, including a scanning throat and a body-supporting cradle axially positionable relative thereto, the apparatus comprising
frame-like patient restraint means including means for rigid securement to the body-supporting cradle and having an arcuate track portion in a plane parallel to the planes of such scans, said frame-like means being smaller in its outer dimension than the scanning throat, and surgical instrument support structure mounted adjustably along the arcuate track portion and projecting away from the plane thereof and including an instrument guide-holder having bore means adjustably securable in a plane parallel to such plane, to slidably accept such a surgical instrument, said guide-holder and that portion of the instrument support structure adjacent thereto being constructed of material having a density substantially of the order of that of body tissue, whereby the guide-holder and the axis of its bore means may be shown on such a computer assisted tomography scan.
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3. Apparatus for use in guidance of insertion of an instrument into brain tissue by use of computer-assisted tomography equipment of the type including a substantially horizontal body-supporting cradle positionable relative to the vertical throat of a scanner which provides a plurality of computer-assisted tomography scans in parallel planes, the cradle having a base portion, comprising
ring-mount means securable by its lower side to such cradle base portion and receiving its upper side a vertical ring-like member of sufficient interior dimensions to accommodate the patient'"'"'s head and of such outer dimension as to be accommodated within the throat of the scanner, the ring-like member being formed substantially in a plane and having projecting to one side of such plane a first pair of rests adjustably positionable to conform to and support the head behind the ears substantially at the mastoid processes, and a second pair of rests adjustably positionable to conform to and support the head beneath the eyes substantially at the cheekbone area, said ring-like member including track means positioned between said second pair of rests, said track means being arcuate in the plane of the ring-like member, the apparatus further comprising instrument support structure carriage-mounted to the arcuate track means of the ring-like member and including arm means projecting perpendicularly from the ring-like member, and an instrument guide-holder adjustably supported by the arm means and having bore means, whose axis is in a plane parallel to the ring-like member, to slidably accept such an instrument for insertion into brain tissue, the guide-holder and that portion of the arm means adjacent thereto being constructed of material having such density that such guide-holder and its bore means may be shown on such scans.
Specification