Register or Login To Download This Patent As A PDF
| United States Patent Application |
20040176761
|
| Kind Code
|
A1
|
|
Desinger, Kai
|
September 9, 2004
|
Electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument for electrothermal
coagulation in tissue
Abstract
There is provided a surgical instrument for electrothermal coagulation of
tissue, which includes a front cylinder at the distal end of the
instrument having a distal tip, an elongate carrier, and two spaced
cylindrical or strip-shaped electrodes at or on the carrier which are
connectable to an HF-ac voltage source.
| Inventors: |
Desinger, Kai; (Berlin, DE)
|
| Correspondence Address:
|
Beck & Tysver, P.L.L.C.
Suite 100
2900 Thomas Avenue S.
Minneapolis
MN
55416
US
|
| Serial No.:
|
806867 |
| Series Code:
|
10
|
| Filed:
|
March 23, 2004 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
606/50 |
| Class at Publication: |
606/050 |
| International Class: |
A61B 018/14 |
Foreign Application Data
| Date | Code | Application Number |
| Dec 18, 1998 | DE | 198 58 599.3 |
Claims
1. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument for electrothermal
coagulation in tissue, comprising: a front cylinder at the distal end of
the instrument with a distal tip, an elongate, electrically insulating
carrier proximally adjoining the front cylinder, at least two spaced
electrodes on the carrier, which are connectable to an AC voltage source,
characterized in that the electrodes are of a strip-shaped configuration
and extend along the carrier.
2. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim 1
wherein the electrodes extend parallel to the longitudinal axis of the
carrier.
3. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim 1
wherein the carrier is of a uniform cross-section in the longitudinal
direction and wherein the electrodes are disposed in mutually
diametrically opposite relationship on the carrier cross-section.
4. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim 1
wherein the electrodes extend on the carrier along spaced helical lines.
5. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument as set forth in
claim 1 wherein the carrier is in the form of a metal tube with an
externally disposed insulating coating.
6. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim 5
wherein the metal tube includes an outer layer of titanium or aluminum
which at its surface carries a Ti-oxide layer or an Al-oxide layer as an
insulating layer.
7. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim 1
further comprising a hollow duct in the longitudinal direction of the
carrier, through which an optical waveguide passes.
8. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim 1
wherein the tip of the front cylinder is of a conical configuration.
9. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim 1
wherein the tip of the front cylinder is of a wedge-shaped configuration.
10. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
1 wherein the electrodes are applied to the carrier in the form of thin
conductive layers.
11. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
1 wherein the carrier comprises flexible material.
12. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
11 wherein the carrier is an optical waveguide, on the insulating outside
sheath of which the electrodes are applied in a strip configuration an
elastically.
13. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
1 wherein the carrier comprises rigid material.
14. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument for electrothermal
coagulation in tissue, comprising: a) a front cylinder at the distal end
of the instrument; b) an elongate carrier proximally adjoining the front
cylinder; c) two electrodes which extend in the longitudinal direction of
the carrier and which are connectable to an AC voltage source; wherein
the carrier includes externally disposed, self-supporting metal bar
profile members which extend in the longitudinal direction and which are
connected together by means of one or more insulating spacer elements and
form the electrodes.
15. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
14 wherein the optical waveguide is passed in the longitudinal direction
between the bar profile members, as a spacer element.
16. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
15 wherein the optical waveguides extend laterally visibly between the
bar profile members.
17. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
14 wherein the cross-section of the bar profile members corresponds to
the segment of a circular area.
18. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
14 wherein the cross-section of the bar profile members which are uniform
in the longitudinal direction corresponds to a peripheral portion of a
tube.
19. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
18 wherein the bar profile members are disposed in mutually opposite
relationship on the outside sheath of an optical waveguide.
20. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument for electrothermal
coagulation in tissue, including a) a front cylinder at the distal end of
the instrument; b) at least one elongate, electrically insulating carrier
proximally behind the front cylinder; c) two spaced cylindrical
electrodes; d) a hollow duct in the longitudinal direction through the
carrier; and e) connecting lines which are passed through the hollow duct
for connecting the electrodes to an AC voltage source; wherein the
electrodes are cylindrical tube portions of metal which are arranged at a
predetermined spacing from each other in the longitudinal direction in
axial alignment with the carrier.
21. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the carrier is a flexible tube of insulating material.
22. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 further comprising a central opening in the front cylinder provided as
a prolongation of the hollow duct, said central opening having arranged
therein a temperature sensor whose connecting line is taken out through
the hollow duct to the proximal end of the instrument.
23. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the outside diameter of the front cylinder approximately
corresponds to the outside diameter of the electrodes.
24. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the axial length of the electrodes is larger than their
diameter.
25. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the axial length of the electrodes is larger than double their
diameter.
26. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the spacing of the two electrodes is approximately equal to or
smaller than the outside diameter of the electrodes.
27. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the distal front cylinder includes insulating material or
metal.
28. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the temperature sensor in the opening in the front cylinder is
embedded in a synthetic resin or adhesive bed.
29. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
28 wherein the outside diameter of the electrodes corresponds to the
outside diameter of the front cylinder and wherein the intermediate space
between the electrodes is filled by insulating material to the outside
diameter of the electrodes.
30. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the first electrode axially extends in the distal direction a
predetermined length over the front cylinder.
31. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the electrodes are formed from self-supporting metal tube
portions.
32. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
31 wherein the first electrode is arranged between the front cylinder and
an insulating tubular first carrier, the second electrode is arranged
between the first carrier and an insulating tubular second carrier, and
wherein the electrodes rest with their end portions on the front
cylinder, and the first and second carriers.
33. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the first electrode extends between the front cylinder and the
insulating tubular carrier and the second electrode extends from the
carrier to the proximal end portion, and wherein the electrodes bear with
their end portions on the front cylinder and the carrier.
34. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
33 wherein the second electrode is proximally covered over a
predetermined axial length with an insulating layer.
35. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 further comprising a flushing tube within the hollow duct, which
extends from the proximal end of the instrument to the front cylinder and
discharges fluid at its distal end into the hollow duct in which the
fluid flows back to the proximal end of the instrument.
36. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the end portions of the electrodes, which overlap the front
cylinder and the carrier or carriers, are covered on their outer
periphery by an insulating layer.
37. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the tip of the front cylinder is of a conical or wedge-shaped
or rounded-off configuration.
38. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 further comprising a self-supporting metal tube between the front
cylinder and the carrier, with a distal tube portion and a proximal tube
portion, a cylindrical insulating layer on the proximal tube portion and
a cylindrical metal layer at the proximal end of the insulating layer,
wherein the distal tube portion forms the first electrode and the
proximal metal layer forms the second electrode.
39. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 further comprising a self-supporting metal tube between the front
cylinder and the carrier, with a distal tube portion and a proximal tube
portion, a cylindrical insulating layer on the distal tube portion and a
cylindrical metal layer at the distal end of the insulating layer,
wherein the distal metal layer forms the first electrode and the proximal
tube portion forms the second electrode.
40. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the carrier has a hollow duct which goes into the hollow duct
of the metal tube or the tube portions, and wherein the connecting lines
for the electrodes are passed through the hollow duct of the carrier to
the proximal end of the instrument.
41. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 further comprising a flushing tube passing through the hollow duct of
the carrier and the metal tube or the tube portions in the longitudinal
direction, said flushing tube extending to the front cylinder, through
which flushing tube fluid is discharged at the distal end into the hollow
duct, which outside the flushing tube in contact with the metal tube
flows back through the hollow duct of the tube and the hollow duct of the
carrier to the proximal end of the instrument.
42. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
38 further comprising an insulating inner tube in the hollow duct of the
carrier and the metal tube, through which a connecting line for the
electrode at the distal end of the tube is passed.
43. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
38 wherein the front cylinder comprises insulating material.
44. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
38 wherein the metal tube comprises aluminum or titanium and that the
insulating layer is formed from the metal tube of aluminum oxide or
titanium oxide.
45. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument for electrothermal
coagulation in tissue, comprising: a) a front cylinder of metal at the
distal end of the instrument; b) an elongate cylindrical carrier of
insulating material proximally adjoining the cylinder; and c) two spaced
cylindrical electrodes; wherein the metal front cylinder is rounded off
at the distal end and adjoining the round end portion has a cylinder
portion of predetermined length, wherein the front cylinder forms the
first electrode and wherein disposed on the carrier at a predetermined
axial spacing from the front cylinder is a metal layer as the second
electrode.
46. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
45 further comprising a hollow duct provided through the carrier and the
front cylinder to the round end portion a flushing tube extending through
said hollow duct and which, at the distal end, discharges fluid which
flows back in the hollow duct--outside the flushing tube--to the proximal
end.
47. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
45 wherein the front cylinder can be secured with its proximal end in an
annular opening of the carrier and that an oxide layer is externally
applied to the metal front cylinder in the overlap region between the
carrier and the front cylinder.
48. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the axial length of the electrodes is greater than the axial
spacing of the two electrodes from each other.
49. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 characterized in the axial length of the electrodes is greater than
the diameter of the electrodes.
50. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 characterized in that the axial length of the electrodes is greater
than the axial length of the lengthwise portion occupied by the insulator
element.
51. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the axial length of the electrodes is greater than the outside
diameter of the front cylinder or the outer conductor respectively.
52. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the axial spacing of the electrodes from each other is
approximately equal to or smaller than the outside diameter of the front
cylinder.
53. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein the self-supporting metal tube or tube portions and/or the
metal cylinder body which are provided to form the electrodes comprise
titanium or aluminum and that the insulating layers which are provided on
the metal tube or the metal tube portions are applied by anodic oxidation
of the metal surface in an electrolyte bath.
54. An electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument according to claim
20 wherein at least one of the connecting lines for connection of the
electrodes has at one end a portion of spring metal which is clamped
radially outwardly in the hollow duct against the inside surfaces of the
electrodes.
Description
[0001] The invention concerns an electrode arrangement for a surgical
instrument for electrothermal coagulation of tissue, which includes a
front cylinder at the distal end of the instrument having a distal tip, a
carrier proximally adjoining the front cylinder, and two electrodes which
are connectable to an ac voltage source.
[0002] Using the application of high-frequency alternating currents (for
example in the frequency range of between 300 KHz and 2 MHz) to generate
high temperatures for tissue coagulation and for tissue division has long
been known in surgery. In a practical context, so-called monopolar
electrode arrangements or bipolar electrode arrangements are used for
introducing the HF-current into the tissue.
[0003] In the case of the monopolar arrangements, an electrode--also
referred to as the neutral electrode--is applied in the form of an
electrode of large area to the skin of the patient in the proximity of
the treatment location and fixed there and earthed or connected to
ground. A second electrode which is manipulated by the operator--also
referred to as the active electrode--is connected to the ac voltage
source. In terms of its shape, the electrode is so adapted to the
respective use, in particular the size of the tissue area to be treated,
that both the operational time and also the thermal loading of the region
of the body or organ involved are reasonable and they coagulate only the
desired area of tissue.
[0004] In the case of arrangements for bipolar HF-thermotherapy, both
electrodes are connected to an HF-generator and arranged with dimensions
which are fixed with respect to each other, for example on an insulating
carrier, and are placed by the operator in the immediate proximity of the
treatment location and generally also actively guided.
[0005] WO 97/17009 discloses a bipolar electrode arrangement with a fluid
duct by way of which flushing fluid can be introduced into the
operational area. Two or three electrodes are arranged in the form of a
cone portion on a conical distal tip of the instrument which can be
introduced into the tissue, wherein the electromagnetic HF-field is
formed between the electrodes and is intended to coagulate the
surrounding tissue.
[0006] WO 96/34569 and the documents referred to in the associated
international search report disclose systems and processes for the
coagulation of body tissue while maintaining a pre-calculated maximum
tissue temperature, in which fluid cooling or thermoelectric cooling is
provided during the actual tissue coagulation procedure. Those known
arrangements are intended for the introduction into body cavities by way
of natural accesses.
[0007] U.S. Pat. No. 4,832,048 as well as WO 95/10320 and WO 99/11186 or
EP 96 945 879.3 and WO 98/19613, WO 96/18349 and WO 81/03272 also
disclose surgical instruments which treat tissue by means of
HF-thermotherapy by means of a bipolar electrode arrangement.
[0008] The known surgical instruments for bipolar HF-thermotherapy are
often expensive to manufacture and, for the various areas of use
involved, they often suffer from disadvantages which frequently result in
locally inaccurate tissue treatment which in particular in part does not
reach the tissue to be treated or thermally overloads sound tissue.
[0009] Therefore the object of the present invention is to develop an
electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument of the kind set forth in
the opening part of this specification, such that it is simple to
manufacture and use and permits precise localizable treatment of the
tissue, while at the same time sparing surrounding sound tissue.
[0010] That object is attained by an electrode arrangement for a surgical
instrument for thermoelectric coagulation of tissue, including an
electrically conductive front cylinder at the distal end of the
instrument, with a distal tip and with a cylindrical first electrode, a
tubular outer conductor proximally adjoining the front cylinder and with
a cylindrical second electrode, an insulator element between the front
cylinder and the outer conductor, wherein the electrodes are connectable
to an ac voltage source, characterised by a bar-shaped inner conductor in
the outer conductor and an insulating tube between the inner conductor
and the outer conductor.
[0011] The advantages of the invention are in particular that the
electrode arrangement is of a particularly simple structure, wherein more
specifically the front cylinder forms an electrode and that the
proximally adjoining outer conductor which is insulated by way of an
insulator element forms the second electrode so that the ac voltage
source is connectable to the front cylinder and from the outside directly
to the outer conductor by way of the bar-shaped inner conductor which is
separated by an insulating tube outer conductor.
[0012] The insulating element has between the front cylinder and the outer
conductor a radial partition which at the outside goes into a cylindrical
casing wall which surrounds the front cylinder and/or the outer conductor
in closely fitting relationship therewith over a predetermined axial
lengthwise portion. The inner conductor is connectable to the front
cylinder through that partition of the insulating element. Preferably,
embodied between the front cylinder and the inner conductor is a
releasable screw connection in which the inner conductor carries at its
distal end a male screwthread which can be screwed to a corresponding
axial female screwthread in the front cylinder. The advantages of this
embodiment are in particular that the cup-like insulator element can be
applied in the form of an insulating layer directly to the metal front
cylinder and/or the metal outer conductor, in such a way that the
separating surface between the front cylinder and the outer conductor and
a lengthwise portion, axially adjoining same, of the outside surface has
a coating with an insulating material. A coating of that kind can be
produced for example in accordance with the invention by anodization of
the surfaces in question in an electrolyte bath if the front cylinder
and/or the outer conductor comprise an anodizable metal, for example
titanium or aluminum.
[0013] Depending on the respective purpose of use the electrode
arrangement for an instrument can be of a flexible nature so that in that
case the inner conductor, the outer conductor, the insulating tube and
possibly also the insulator element comprise an elastic material. In the
case of a flexible surgical instrument of that kind, the bipolar
electrode arrangement can under some circumstances be more easily moved
to the specific treatment location. Alternatively however the inner
conductor and the outer conductor can be of a straight and rigid
configuration, in which case then the front cylinder and the outer
conductor are arranged in mutually coaxially aligned arrangement and can
then be moved to the treatment location by a rectilinear translatory
movement. In regard to certain treatment locations it may also be
particularly advantageous to angle the instrument in the lengthwise
direction.
[0014] In all embodiments the outer conductor and the front cylinder are
of substantially the same outside diameter in order to provide for
unimpeded sliding movement of the electrode arrangement in the tissue.
[0015] Preferably the front cylinder, over its axial lengthwise portion
which is not covered by the insulator element, forms the first electrode
and the outer conductor, over the entire axial lengthwise portion,
insofar as same is not covered by the insulator element, forms the second
cylindrical electrode. The axial length of the electrodes is preferably
greater than the axial length of the insulator element and it is also
greater than the outside diameter of the front cylinder and the outer
conductor. Preferably the length of the outer conductor is a multiple of
the length of the front cylinder. If, in this embodiment, the tissue
adjoining the outside surface of the instrument is coagulated and as a
result becomes of high resistance, then in this embodiment of the
invention the electromagnetic field can be displaced outwardly into
adjoining tissue regions because there is a suitably long second
electrode so that, if the tissue has become of high resistance adjoining
the outside surface, the electromagnetic field can move radially
outwardly and in so doing still ends at the second electrode. With this
embodiment therefore it is possible to implement a coagulation effect
which moves in a defined fashion into the tissue and which comes to an
end when the field extends from the first electrode to the proximal end
of the second electrode.
[0016] Conversely it has been found that the commencement of coagulation
is optimal when the two electrodes are at a relatively small axial
spacing from each other, which is approximately of the order of magnitude
of the outside diameter or only slightly larger.
[0017] In a preferred embodiment of the invention the inner conductor and
the front cylinder are provided with a central hollow duct which issues
from the distal tip of the front cylinder and which contains an optical
waveguide which can be acted upon with visible laser light. In that way
light can be passed to the tip of the applicator. If then for example
that applicator is inserted into thin-walled regions of the body, for
example in the nasal concha for therapy of concha hyperplasia, then the
light issuing at the tip makes it possible to locate the position of the
tip in the nasal concha by the doctor implementing the treatment using
the naked eye. The doctor can therefore see at any time where the tip of
the electrode arrangement is disposed, in the nasal concha. The
above-described surgical instrument is suitable for dynamic use, for
example it is inserted into the enlarged nasal concha and then, with
HF-power activated, withdrawn from the nasal concha, thereby producing a
tubular coagulation zone which has formed around the path of the
electrode arrangement.
[0018] In accordance with a further preferred embodiment of the invention,
the front cylinder which is electrically connected to the inner conductor
and the outer conductor are separated from each other by an insulating
annular body. Preferably the insulating annular body is made from
translucent or partially translucent material and disposed in the annular
body is a light source which discharges its light to the exterior through
the annular body, preferably in the form of stray or scattered light. In
accordance with a preferred embodiment of this instrument the inner
conductor has a hollow duct which terminates in the insulating annular
body and which accommodates an optical waveguide. In the region of the
annular body radially into the fiber core of the optical waveguide the
inner conductor is provided with incisions so that light issues radially
at the incisions from the optical waveguide and, through the annular
body, makes that zone of the bipolar electrode arrangement which is
between the two electrodes and in which therefore coagulation of the
tissue respectively occurs, visible to the doctor carrying out the
treatment. In the case of thin-walled bodies therefore the doctor
performing the treatment always sees directly with his own eyes that
location at which coagulation is taking place. It is thereby possible to
treat the tissue in a particularly accurate and local fashion. Depending
on the requirements involved the tip of the front cylinder may be conical
or wedge-shaped.
[0019] The object of the invention is further attained by an electrode
arrangement for a surgical instrument for electrothermal coagulation of
tissue, including a front cylinder at the distal end of the instrument
with a distal tip, an elongate, electrically insulating carrier
proximally adjoining the front cylinder, at least two spaced electrodes
on the carrier, which are connectable to an ac voltage source,
characterised in that the electrodes are of a strip-shaped configuration
and extend along the carrier.
[0020] The advantages of the invention lie in particular in the simplicity
of structure and the electrodes which extend in a strip-shaped
configuration along the carrier. Particularly when the two electrodes
extend parallel to the longitudinal axis of the carrier, this electrode
arrangement is suitable for therapy in respect of concha hyperplasia. The
applicator, that is to say the electrode arrangement, is used statically
in that case, in other words, the electrode arrangement is pierced into
the enlarged nasal concha and remains fixed in a position with active
HF-power. In that procedure, due to the specific electrode configuration
involved, the desired tubular coagulation zone is produced without the
need to move the applicator in the tissue. A further advantage is the
particularly simple structure which makes it possible to implement
connection of the HF-generator at the proximal end of the carrier
directly--from the exterior--to the electrodes.
[0021] If the electrodes extend parallel to the longitudinal axis of the
carrier and for example are disposed in mutually diametrally opposite
relationship on the preferably circular carrier cross-section, then the
result is two coagulation zones extending in the longitudinal direction,
between the two electrodes. If in contrast the electrodes are disposed on
the carrier along spaced helical lines, then a correspondingly helical
zone of the tissue is treated and coagulated. In the event of an
additional axial movement of the electrode arrangement, a circular
coagulated enclosing passage is then formed around the carrier.
[0022] In accordance with a particularly preferred embodiment of the
invention the carrier is in the form of a metal tube carrying an
externally disposed insulating layer on which the strip-shaped electrodes
are disposed. If the metal tube used comprises a metal which can be
anodically oxidized in an electrolysis bath, for example therefore
titanium or aluminum, then production of the insulating carrier is
particularly simple, more specifically if the outside surface of the
carrier is electrolytically anodized to form a layer of titanium oxide or
aluminum oxide. In this embodiment also it is possible to draw through a
hollow duct which passes axially through the carrier and issues at the
tip of the front cylinder, an optical waveguide which makes the position
of the tip of the front cylinder visible to the operator--when dealing
with correspondingly thin tissue--or in the event of implementing a
treatment just under the skin, whereby the operator can guide the
arrangement in properly targeted fashion. The optical waveguide can be
supplied for example with visible laser light. The distal tip of the
front cylinder is advantageously either of a conical or a wedge-shaped
configuration and the electrodes are applied in the form of thin
conducting metal layers to the carrier.
[0023] In accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention the
carrier can be made from a flexible material on which the strip-shaped
electrodes are carried. The carrier used can be for example an optical
waveguide, on the insulating outer sheath of which the electrodes are
disposed elastically and in a strip-shaped configuration. The electrode
arrangement can then more easily be introduced through body openings to
the treatment location.
[0024] In this embodiment also the axial length of the electrodes is
preferably greater than the outside diameter of the front cylinder and
carrier which are both preferably of the same outside diameter in order
to permit the electrode arrangement to be easily introduced by a sliding
movement into the tissue.
[0025] The object of the invention is further attained by an electrode
arrangement for a surgical instrument for electrothermal coagulation in
the tissue, including a front cylinder of metal or insulating material at
the distal end of the instrument, the front cylinder is frontally pointed
or rounded-off, an elongate carrier proximally adjoining the front
cylinder, two electrodes which extend in the longitudinal direction of
the carrier and which are connectable to an ac voltage source,
characterised in that the carrier includes externally disposed,
self-supporting metal bar profile members which extend in the
longitudinal direction and which are connected together by means of one
or more insulating spacer elements and form the electrodes.
[0026] The advantages of the last-mentioned embodiment of the invention
are in particular that the electrodes extend in the longitudinal
direction of the carrier and are self-supporting metal bar profile
members forming the carrier, whereby manufacturing steps can be omitted
in manufacture of the electrode arrangement. In a particularly preferred
configuration the one or more insulating spacer elements between the
electrodes is or are optical waveguides which are guided in the
longitudinal direction between the bar profile members and give off light
to the distal tip of the instrument so that the operator can at any time
locate the tip of the instrument by visual means when the instrument is
used in thin-walled parts of the body. In a particularly preferred
feature the externally disposed visible optical waveguides can also be
provided with radial countersinks or incisions ground therein, which
provide that light also issues radially at those locations. That
accordingly shows the operator over what axial distance the
instrument--with HF-energy activated--is also coagulating tissue. The
cross-section of the bar profile members corresponds, when considered
together, preferably to a circular surface area, but alternatively the
cross-section of the bar profile members can also be in the form of a
portion of the periphery of a tube, in which case then the bar profile
members are for example preferably fixed in mutually opposite
relationship on the outside sheath of an optical waveguide and in that
way form a rigid carrier with externally disposed strip-shaped electrodes
extending in the longitudinal direction.
[0027] The object of the invention is further attained by an electrode
arrangement for a surgical instrument for thermoelectrical coagulation in
tissue, including a front cylinder of metal or insulating material at the
distal end of the instrument, wherein the front cylinder is frontally
pointed or rounded-off, an elongate carrier proximally adjoining the
front cylinder, and two electrodes which extend in the longitudinal
direction of the carrier and which are connectable to an ac voltage
source, characterised in that the electrodes (2, 4) are cylindrical tube
portions (82, 84) of metal which are arranged at a predetermined spacing
from each other in axial alignment with the carrier in the longitudinal
direction.
[0028] In accordance with this preferred embodiment of the invention the
first electrode can be in the form of a self-supporting tube portion
which is carried between the front cylinder and an insulating tubular
first carrier and the second electrode can also be in the form of a
self-supporting tube portion arranged between the first carrier and a
second tubular carrier, wherein the end portions of the electrodes are
supported on the front is cylinder, the first and the second carrier over
a predetermined lengthwise portion. Alternatively it is also possible for
the second electrode to extend as far as the proximal end portion.
Particularly preferably in this embodiment the lengthwise portions of the
electrodes which bear on the first and/or the second carrier are covered
with an insulating layer. In addition, provided within the hollow duct is
a flushing tube which extends from the proximal end of the instrument to
the front cylinder, that is to say also through the tube portions which
form the electrodes, and extends as far as the front cylinder and
discharges fluid at the distal end into the hollow duct in which the
fluid--in contact with the electrodes--flows back to the proximal end of
the instrument.
[0029] Cooling of the electrode surfaces by means of a flushing fluid
means that the so-called "
hot-spot" of coagulation is displaced by
approximately between two and three millimeters from the surface of the
instrument into the tissue. The cooling action ensures that the
tissue-electrode contact surface is always kept below a predetermined
temperature and therefore does not dry out to such a severe degree, so
that the introduction of energy into the adjoining tissue is also
guaranteed, over a relatively long period of time. It is quite
particularly advantageous in that respect that the lengthwise portions of
the electrodes which rest on the insulating carriers--or in a specific
embodiment also on the front cylinder which is in the form of an
insulating body--and are therefore not directly cooled by the cooling
fluid, are covered with an insulating layer. In that way those lengthwise
portions which are cooled to a lesser degree and which consequently heat
up to a greater degree than the cooled electrode portions are covered
over by the insulator and therefore come into contact with the adjoining
tissue only by way of the comparatively cooler insulating layer. Thus,
the consequence of covering over the end portions of the electrodes,
which are not cooled by the flushing fluid, by means of insulating
layers, is that the adjoining tissue does not become too
hot even in
those longitudinal portions, and thus it does not dry out.
[0030] In a preferred embodiment of the invention a self-supporting metal
tube is provided between the front cylinder and the carrier. A distal
portion of the metal tube serves as the first electrode, an adjoining
proximal tube portion is surrounded by a cylindrical insulating layer and
carries on that insulating layer a metal layer which serves as the second
electrode. Alternatively, the proximal tube portion may also be used as
the second electrode and then disposed on the distal tube portion is a
cylindrical insulating layer which is coated with a metal layer, wherein
that distal metal layer then serves as the first electrode.
[0031] This embodiment of the invention has the advantage of affording
ease of manufacture and assembly of the bipolar electrode arrangement.
This applies in particular when the metal used is an anodizable material,
for example titanium or aluminum and the cylindrical insulating layer
applied to the tube portion is produced by anodic oxidation (anodization)
of the metal surface, in which case the metal layer deposited thereon can
be produced for example by vapor deposition or electrolytic coating. In
this embodiment the carrier has a hollow duct which is extended into a
hollow duct through the metal tube. The connecting lines for the
electrodes extend from the electrodes through the hollow duct to the
proximal end of the instrument. In accordance with the invention this
preferred embodiment thereof also provides that a flushing tube is taken
through the hollow duct, which extends as far as the front cylinder and
discharges cooling fluid at the distal end into the hollow duct.
[0032] Advantageously, provided as a prolongation of the hollow duct of
the carrier in the front cylinder is an opening in which there is
disposed a temperature sensor whose connecting line is passed through the
hollow duct to the proximal end of the instrument. In that way it is
possible--for example for therapy in respect of benign prostate
hyperplasia to fit a temperature sensor or thermistor into the tip of the
front cylinder, which can be used to measure the tissue temperature.
Preferably the carrier is formed from a flexible insulating hoze or tube
and the electrodes are cylindrical self-supporting tube portions of metal
which are fixed at predetermined spacings on the carrier. In this
embodiment of the invention the outside diameter of the front cylinder
also corresponds to the outside diameter of the electrodes and the axial
length of the electrodes is greater than the diameter, while the axial
spacing of the two electrodes from each other is approximately equal to
or smaller than the outside diameter thereof. It has been found that,
with that dimensioning, the electrical field which causes coagulation of
the tissue can be sufficiently strongly produced and also--after the
tissue adjoining the outside surface is coagulated--can be propagated
sufficiently far into the tissue so that an advantageous large
coagulation zone is produced.
[0033] The temperature sensor in the opening in the front cylinder is
preferably embedded in synthetic resin or in an adhesive bed which
provides for good conduction of the temperature of the metal front
cylinder to the temperature sensor. The outside diameter of the
electrodes and the outside diameter of the front cylinder are identical
and the intermediate space between the electrodes is filled with
insulating material so that this lengthwise portion is also of the
outside diameter which occurs elsewhere. That provides for a uniform
cross-section over the distal tip to the proximal end of the second
electrode, in contrast to which the flexible carrier, adjoining same, can
be of a reduced outside diameter. The consequence of the constant
dimension of the outside diameters in the region of the front cylinder
and the electrodes is that the instrument can be introduced into the
tissue easily and in particular without impediment.
[0034] The object of the invention is further attained by an electrode
arrangement for a surgical instrument for electrothermal coagulation of
tissue, including a front cylinder of metal at the distal end of the
instrument, an elongate cylindrical carrier proximally adjoining the
cylinder and comprising insulating material, two spaced cylindrical
electrodes, characterised in that the metal front cylinder is rounded-off
at the distal end and adjoining the round end portion has a cylinder
portion of predetermined length, that the front cylinder forms the first
electrode, and that a metal layer as the second electrode is disposed on
the carrier at a predetermined axial spacing from the front cylinder.
[0035] In this preferred embodiment of the invention, extending through
the carrier is a hollow duct which is extended into the front cylinder
and which accommodates a flushing hoze or tube which at its distal end
discharges flushing fluid which flows back along the inside wall of the
front cylinder and finally between the carrier and the flushing tube to
the proximal end.
[0036] The front cylinder can be fixed with its proximal end in an annular
opening in the carrier and the overlap region between the carrier and the
front cylinder has on its outside an oxide layer on the metal front
cylinder, which ensures that the metal of the front cylinder which is
uncooled at that location does not come into contact in an overheated
condition with the adjoining tissue.
[0037] The carrier can be of both a flexible and a rigid nature and, as
the front cylinder is formed from metal material, this instrument--by
virtue of the active tip--makes it possible to treat edge tumors which
are disposed immediately in front of the rounded-off front cylinder. A
prerequisite for advantageous functioning of this electrode arrangement
is that the dissipation of heat by the cooling circulation is as far as
possible the same at both electrodes. That is achieved if the mean
current density at the first, that is to say distal electrode is greater
than or equal to the current density at the second, proximal electrode.
That condition is met when the surface area A.sub.1 of the first
electrode is smaller than or equal to the surface area A.sub.2 of the
second electrode. Insofar as the surface area component of the round end
portion--with its radius R--is also taken into consideration, that gives
the following relationship in respect of the lengths L.sub.1, L.sub.2 of
the first and second electrodes: L.sub.1+R<L.sub.2. If very great
lengths L.sub.2 of the second electrode are to be implemented and if
nonetheless the degree of flexibility of the applicator is to be
maintained, then the second electrode can be constructed by coating the
flexible carrier with a metal layer.
[0038] The object of the invention is further attained by an electrode
arrangement for a surgical instrument for electrothermal coagulation of
tissue including: an elongate cylindrical carrier comprising a metal tube
or a metal bar, two spaced cylindrical electrodes on the carrier,
characterised in that the first electrode is a distal portion of the
carrier, that on a portion axially adjoining same an insulating layer is
applied to the carrier, and that a cylindrical metal layer as the second
electrode is arranged on the insulating layer at a predetermined axial
spacing from the first electrode.
[0039] In this embodiment of the invention the front cylinder and the
carrier are embodied in the form of an integral metal tube or metal bar
whose distal end is pointed. A distal portion of the metal tube or metal
bar forms the first electrode. Adjoining same, an insulating layer is
applied to the carrier and then a cylindrical metal layer is deposited on
the insulating layer in the proximal region of the insulating layer and
forms the second cylindrical electrode. The insulating layer can be
embodied by a plastic hoze or tube to which a metal coating is applied,
as the second electrode. The metal carrier with the distal tip represents
a bipolar electrode arrangement in the form of a cannula or needle and is
suitable in particular for therapy in respect of enlarged terminal
vessels such as for example finely mottled varicose veins. The electrode
arrangement is pierced with its tip in the longitudinal direction into
the enlarged vessel. Upon activation of the HF-power the blood and the
vessel wall coagulate primarily around the first electrode. When that
happens the vessel contracts so as to afford a closure effect with the
result than then no further blood can flow into the vessel whereby the
vessel is no longer perceptible through the skin and the desired cosmetic
effect is achieved.
[0040] It is particularly advantageous to employ insulating layers which
are used in bipolar electrode arrangements, comprising ceramic material.
The advantage of this material is that it has a high level of mechanical
strength and can be easily produced by means of electrolytic anodization
(eloxation) for example on titanium in the form of titanium oxide or in
the case of aluminum in the form of aluminum oxide. The thickness of the
layer depends on the electrical voltage used in the electrolysis
operation. Instead of titanium, various titanium alloys on which the
ceramic layer is produced by anodic oxidation are also suitable as the
starting material involved. In order to implement complete or partial
coating in that way with titanium or suitable titanium alloys or
aluminum, firstly the corresponding metal body is subjected to a
preliminary chemical cleaning operation in order to obtain grease-free
and oxide-free surfaces. Then, the places which are not to be coated are
masked. Masking can be effected by means of special lacquers or layers
but also by shrink tubes. For anodically applying a ceramic layer, the
starting material, that is to say titanium, titanium alloys or aluminum
is to be electrically contacted and subjected to voltage as the anode.
[0041] In order for example--based on titanium as the starting material
--to apply a titanium oxide ceramic layer, the following steps are to be
taken: in order to convert the titanium at its surface into its ion
phase, a suitably molar acid in aqueous solution is to be used. The molar
solutions in question are between 0.1 and 1 molar H.sub.2SO.sub.4
(sulfuric acid) and H.sub.3PO.sub.4 (phosphoric acid) respectively. By
the application of a suitable dc voltage, oxygen is deposited at the
electrode, the titanium electrode which is to be coated in this case, and
bonds to the ionized titanium surface and is converted to titanium oxide.
Depending on the respective layer thickness involved, the dc voltages and
currents to be used are between 10V and 500V at maximum currents of 1 A.
As a result the oxidation procedure passes through a plurality of
oxidation stages (titanium oxides) depending on the respective length of
the procedure. The layer thicknesses which are to be achieved with these
processes are of the order of magnitude of between 20 and 30 .mu.m. By
means of the layer thicknesses which are to be represented by way of
interference colors, due to the differing light refraction at the
interface with the metal (the oxide layer is transparent), the latter can
be represented proportionally over a color spectrum. With that method it
is possible efficiently to provide specific paramagnetic electrodes of
titanium--or titanium alloys such as TiAl.sub.6V.sub.4--with a dielectric
ceramic layer, being variable in terms of layer thickness and/or color.
[0042] Besides the good dielectric properties of the ceramic layers
produced in that way, the tribological properties are also excellently
well suited to possibly increasing the levels of abrasion strength and
surface quality. These colored ceramic layers are also suitable for the
stable marking of needles, cannulae or probes. A proportional
interference color is to be selected by way of the choice of the layer
thickness. It is possible in that way to set colors of grey, gold, violet
and on to blue.
[0043] In accordance with a further preferred embodiment of the invention
at least one of the connecting lines which serve to connect the
electrodes has at its end a portion of spring metal, preferably spring
wire, which is of such a configuration that it is clamped in the hollow
duct--within the electrodes--radially outwardly against the inside
surface of the electrodes and thereby sufficiently reliably and securely
produces electrical contact. The spring metal portion of the connecting
lines of that configuration is preferably wound to form a spiral or coil
spring which is acted upon by a predetermined tensile stress in the
spiral wire, the winding of which therefore under that tensile stress is
of a reduced diameter so that it can be easily introduced from the
exterior into the cavity of the electrode. The tensile stress acting on
the spring wire is then removed, the spiral spring then attains its full
outside diameter and in so doing bears in self-clamping relationship from
the interior against the inside surfaces of the electrodes. In order
easily to be able to implement introduction of the corresponding spring
portions at the end of the connecting lines, it is possible to use a
corresponding special tool which makes it possible to insert the spiral
spring of reduced diameter, then remove the tensile biasing of the spiral
spring wire, and thus cause the spiral spring to bear against the inside
surface of the electrode.
[0044] Advantageous developments of the invention are characterised by the
features of the appendant claims.
[0045] Embodiments of the invention are described in greater detail
hereinafter with reference to the drawing in which:
[0046] FIG. 1 is a view in longitudinal section through a first embodiment
of a bipolar electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument,
[0047] FIG. 2 is a view in longitudinal section through a second
embodiment of a bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0048] FIG. 3 is a view in longitudinal section through a third embodiment
of a bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0049] FIG. 4 is a view in longitudinal section through a fourth
embodiment of a bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0050] FIG. 5 is a view in longitudinal section through a fifth embodiment
of the bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0051] FIG. 6 is a view in longitudinal section through a sixth embodiment
of the bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0052] FIG. 7 is a view in longitudinal section through a seventh
embodiment of the bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0053] FIG. 8 is a view in cross-section through the seventh embodiment,
[0054] FIG. 9 is a view in longitudinal section through an eighth
embodiment of the bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0055] FIG. 10 is a view in cross-section through the eighth embodiment,
[0056] FIG. 11 is a view in longitudinal section through a ninth
embodiment of the bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0057] FIG. 12 is a view in cross-section through the ninth embodiment,
[0058] FIG. 13 is a view in cross-section through a tenth embodiment of
the bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0059] FIG. 14 is a view in cross-section through an eleventh embodiment
of the bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0060] FIG. 15 is a side view of a twelfth embodiment of the bipolar
electrode arrangement;
[0061] FIG. 16 is a view in longitudinal section through the twelfth
embodiment,
[0062] FIG. 17 is a view in longitudinal section through a thirteenth
embodiment of the bipolar electrode arrangement with a pointed front
cylinder of insulating material,
[0063] FIG. 18 is a view in longitudinal section through the thirteenth
embodiment with a metal pointed front cylinder,
[0064] FIG. 19 is a view in longitudinal section through the thirteenth
embodiment with a metal frontally rounded-off front cylinder,
[0065] FIG. 20 is a view in longitudinal section through a fourteenth
embodiment of the bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0066] FIG. 21 is a view in longitudinal section through a fifteenth
embodiment of the bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0067] FIG. 22 is a view in longitudinal section through a sixteenth
embodiment of the bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0068] FIG. 23 is a view in longitudinal section through a seventeenth
embodiment of the bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0069] FIG. 24 is a view in longitudinal section through a eighteenth
embodiment of the bipolar electrode arrangement,
[0070] FIG. 25 is a view in longitudinal section through an alternative
form of the eighteenth embodiment,
[0071] FIG. 26 is a view in longitudinal section through a second
alternative form of the eighteenth embodiment,
[0072] FIG. 27 is a perspective view of a front cylinder with a partial
coating with ceramic material,
[0073] FIG. 28 shows an end portion of a connecting line for the
connection of an electrode,
[0074] FIG. 29 is a perspective view of an electrode formed from a metal
tube with a ceramic coating and a connecting line disposed in the
interior of the tube,
[0075] FIG. 30 is a view in longitudinal section through another
embodiment of bipolar electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument
where the instrument extends angled in the longitudinal direction,
[0076] FIG. 31 is a view in longitudinal section through still another
embodiment of a bipolar electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument
where the instrument extends angled in the longitudinal direction.
[0077] FIG. 1 shows a longitudinal section through a first embodiment of a
bipolar electrode arrangement, which is a component of a surgical
instrument for the electrothermal coagulation of tissue. The electrode
arrangement includes an electrically conductive front cylinder 10 which
forms the distal end of the instrument, that is to say the end which is
remote from the user of the instrument. The front cylinder terminates at
its free end in a point 12 which in the illustrated embodiment terminates
in a conically pointed configuration. Adjoining the front cylinder 10 is
a tubular outer conductor 20 which in its interior accommodates an
insulating hose or tube 30 through which extends a bar-shaped inner
conductor 40. At its distal end the bar-shaped inner conductor 40 has a
male screwthread which can be screwed into a corresponding female
screwthread extending in the axial longitudinal direction and is
electrically and mechanically connected to the front cylinder 10 by means
of that screw connection 14.
[0078] Arranged between the front cylinder 10 and the outer conductor 20
is an insulator element 50 which has a radial partition 52 between the
front cylinder 10 and the distal end wall of the outer conductor 20 and
the insulating tube 30. At the outside on the partition 52 the insulator
element 50 goes into a casing wall 54 which--in the illustrated
embodiment--surrounds the outside surface of the front cylinder 10 in a
condition of bearing snugly thereagainst but which in an alternative
embodiment--directed towards the proximal end--can also surround the
outside surface of the outer conductor 20. The exposed outside surface of
the front cylinder 10 forms a first electrode 2. The exposed outside
surface of the outer conductor 20 forms a second electrode 4. A
high-frequency ac voltage source is connected to the two electrodes--at
the proximal end of the electrode arrangement--when the bipolar electrode
arrangement is introduced into the human or animal tissue to be treated
and the tissue is to be coagulated by the thermal action of the
electrical field.
[0079] FIG. 2 shows a second embodiment of the bipolar electrode
arrangement according to the invention, in which once again a front
cylinder 10 terminates in a conical distal tip 12, while again a
bar-shaped metal inner conductor is surrounded by an insulating tube 30
which in turn is surrounded by a metal tubular outer conductor 20.
Provided between the front cylinder 10 and the end wall of the outer
conductor and the insulating tube 30 is an insulator element 50 which is
in the form of an annular body 58 and which is of a predetermined axial
length which holds the front cylinder 10 and the outer conductor 20 at a
spacing. The front cylinder 10 comprises metal and serves as the
cylindrical first electrode 2. The outer conductor 20 is also made from
metal and serves as the cylindrical second electrode 4. The front
cylinder 10 is connected to the inner conductor 40 by means of a screw
connection 14. Connected to the proximal end of the electrode arrangement
between the outer conductor 20 and the inner conductor 40 is an HF-ac
voltage source if electrothermal coagulation of surrounding tissue is to
be effected.
[0080] FIG. 3 shows an embodiment, corresponding to FIGS. 1 and 2, of a
bipolar electrode arrangement in which the insulator element 50 is of a
cup-shaped configuration, with the cylindrical casing wall 54 being
carried in a suitable annular opening 11 in the front cylinder 10. In
addition the radial partition 52 of the insulator element 50 is passed in
the direction of the proximal end in a tubular configuration--at the
diameter of the insulating tube 30-- against the insulating tube 30 which
terminates a corresponding axial length short of the distal end wall of
the outer conductor 20.
[0081] FIG. 4 shows a fourth embodiment of a bipolar electrode arrangement
1 according to the invention, which substantially corresponds to the
arrangement shown in FIG. 1, with the same parts being denoted by the
same references. In addition to the arrangement shown in FIG. 1,
extending centrally through the bar-shaped inner conductor 14 and in
aligned relationship therewith and also through the front cylinder 10 is
a hollow duct through which passes an optical waveguide which passes
visible light to the distal tip 12 of the electrode arrangement when the
optical waveguide is proximally fed for example with visible laser light.
The optical waveguide 60 includes a sheath 62 surrounding the
light-conducting core 64. A cladding can also be provided around the
sheath 62.
[0082] FIG. 5 shows a further embodiment of the invention which
substantially corresponds to the embodiment of FIG. 4, but in which the
front cylinder 10 has a wedge-shaped tip 12 at its distal end. Once
again, extending through the inner conductor 40 and adjoining same also
through the front cylinder 10 is a central hollow duct through which an
optical waveguide 60 passes with its sheath 62 and the core 64 to the
distal tip 12 and optically indicates the position of the distal tip 12
in the tissue for the user of the electrode arrangement, in particular
when treating tissue in thin-walled parts of the body.
[0083] FIG. 6 shows a further embodiment of the bipolar electrode
arrangement 1 according to the invention, which substantially corresponds
to the embodiment of FIG. 2 or FIG. 4. Provided between the front
cylinder 10 and the concentric arrangement comprising the outer conductor
20, the insulating tube 30 and the inner conductor 40 is an annular body
58 through which the inner conductor 40 axially extends to the front
cylinder 10. The inner conductor 40 has a central hollow duct which
extends as far as the distal end of the annular body 58 and includes an
optical waveguide 60. The annular body 58 is formed from transparent or
semitransparent material and allows light to pass therethrough to the
exterior. Formed in the inner conductor into the core 64 of the optical
waveguide in the region of the annular body 58 are radial ground
incisions 42, with the consequence that light issues to the exterior from
those incisions radially from the inner conductor 40 and through the
annular body 58 so that the position of the electrical field which is
produced between the first electrode 2 and the second electrode 4 when
HF-power is applied to the inner conductor 40 and the outer conductor 20
can be made optically visible to the operator. Preferably, the annular
body 58 is of such a material or its surface is of such a structure that
the light 3 issuing from the optical waveguide passes to the exterior in
the form of stray or scattered light.
[0084] FIGS. 7 and 8 show a further embodiment of the bipolar electrode
arrangement 1 according to the invention in longitudinal section and in
cross-section. Proximally adjoining a front cylinder 10 having a distal
tip 12 is an elongate, electrically insulating carrier 70 which--in the
illustrated embodiment--is in the form of a metal tube 71 with an
externally disposed insulating layer 72. For example the metal tube
comprises titanium or a titanium alloy and the insulating layer 72 is
produced by anodization of the surface of the tube 71 in the form of a
thin ceramic layer. Applied to the insulating layer 72 are two
strip-shaped electrodes 2, 4 which extend parallel to each other in the
longitudinal direction of the carrier 70 and which--on the periphery of
the insulating layer, see FIG. 8--are disposed in mutually diametrally
opposite relationship. In the case of this electrode arrangement, an
electrical field is produced in the longitudinal direction of the
carrier, namely along the entire strip-shaped electrode 2, 4, so that
corresponding coagulation strips are also produced in the longitudinal
direction of the bipolar electrode arrangement when a corresponding HF-ac
voltage source is applied to the electrodes 2, 4.
[0085] FIGS. 9 and 10 show a further embodiment of a bipolar electrode
arrangement 1 for a surgical instrument according to the invention, this
embodiment representing a development of the embodiment shown in FIGS. 7
and 8. An elongate, uniform, insulating carrier 70 comprises a metal tube
71 which is completely coated with an insulating layer 72 and which has
continuously as far as the distal tip 12 a central hollow duct through
which an optical waveguide 60 extends to the distal tip 12. The optical
waveguide 60 comprises a light-conducting core 64 and a sheath 62
surrounding the core. Disposed externally on the insulating layer 72 in
the longitudinal direction, that is to say in mutual parallel
relationship, are two strip-shaped electrodes 2, 4 which extend over the
entire illustrated length of the carrier 70 and which are fixed on the
insulating layer 72.
[0086] FIGS. 11 and 12 show a further embodiment of the invention which
substantially corresponds to the embodiment shown in FIGS. 9 and 10, but
without using a tubular metal carrier 70. On the contrary FIGS. 11 and 12
show an embodiment in which an optical waveguide 60 with a core 64, a
sheath 62 and a plastic cladding 61 is provided at its free end with a
wedge-shaped tip 12 and which on the sheath or cladding 61 in the
longitudinal direction has two strip-shaped electrodes 2, 4 which are
arranged in mutually opposite relationship at the periphery. In this
embodiment the electrodes 2, 4 are applied in the form of flexible layers
so that the entire bipolar electrode arrangement is flexible.
[0087] FIGS. 13 and 14 show views in cross-section of bipolar electrode
arrangements in which the carrier 70 is formed from self-supporting metal
bar profile members 76 extending in the longitudinal direction. In FIG.
13 two bar profile members 76 of metal are spaced in insulating
relationship by spacer elements 60. The bar profile members 76 are each
approximately of a cross-sectional configuration of a semicircular area
and form elongate electrodes 2, 4 which extend in the longitudinal
direction of the electrode arrangement. In the illustrated embodiment the
spacer elements 60 are in the form of optical waveguides 60. Preferably
fitted at the side surfaces are optical waveguides at which light can
also issue sideways so that, when using a bipolar electrode arrangement
of that kind, the operator can see along the length of the electrodes 2
and 4 light signals which indicate the position of the electrodes 2, 4
over the length thereof.
[0088] FIG. 14 shows an embodiment which corresponds to FIG. 13 and in
which two bar-shaped, self-supporting, metal bar profile members 76 which
in cross-section are in the shape of portions of the wall of a tube are
applied to the outer cladding of an optical waveguide in the longitudinal
direction thereof and are secured in position there and form the
electrodes 2, 4. In the illustrated form the optical waveguide 16 also
has a sheath 62 between the outer cladding 61 and the core 64.
[0089] FIGS. 15 and 16 show an embodiment of a bipolar electrode
arrangement in which a front cylinder 10 at the distal end of the
instrument is provided with a distal conical tip 12 which is adjoined by
an elongate, electrically insulating carrier 70. Two tube portions 82, 84
are pushed on the carrier 70 spaced by way of a spacer portion 83 of
insulating material and secured in position there, to form cylindrical
electrodes 2, 4. Extending axially through the carrier 70 is a central
hollow duct 76 which communicates with an opening 14 in the front
cylinder 10 and accommodates a temperature sensor 100 which is surrounded
by a plastic or adhesive bed 102 and is there fixed in position and by
way of a line 104 supplies a signal to the proximal end of the
instrument, corresponding to the temperature of the front cylinder 10.
Also provided in the hollow duct 76 are connecting lines 90 which
--through the carrier 70-- are connected to the electrodes 2, 4 and can
be connected to the proximal HF-generator.
[0090] The axial length L1 of the first electrode 2 and the axial length
L2 of the second electrode 4-- in all the illustrated embodiments--are
greater than the spacing A between the two electrodes 2, 4. The spacing A
is preferably of the order of magnitude of the outside diameter of the
electrodes 2, 4. The insulating portion 83 is of the same outside
diameter D=2R as the tube portions 82, 84 which form the electrodes 2, 4.
R is the radius of the electrode arrangement which is generally of a
circular-cylindrical configuration. In the embodiment shown in FIGS. 15
and 16 in a particularly preferred case L1=L2.
[0091] FIG. 17 shows an embodiment of a bipolar electrode arrangement in
which a front cylinder 10 with a conical distal tip 12 is fixed to the
end of a first tube portion 82, that first tube portion 82 being secured
with an end portion to a first carrier 70a. A second tube portion 84 is
carried with an end portion on the first carrier 70a and with its other
end portion on a second carrier 70b. The carriers 70a and 70b each have a
respective hollow duct 76, the axis of which aligns with the axis of the
tube portions 82, 84. The tube portions 82, 84 represent the cylindrical
electrodes 2, 4.
[0092] Extending through the hollow duct 76 of the carriers 70a and 70b
and the tube portions 82, 84 is a flushing hoze or tube 110 which
discharges fluid at its distal end, which then in contact with the inside
wall of the tube portions 82, 84 flows back through the hollow duct 76 to
the proximal end and cools the two tube portions 82, 84. At the locations
where the tube portions 82, 84 are pushed over the insulating carriers
70a, 70b and over the insulating front cylinder 10 and glued fast in
position at that location, the tube portions 82, 84 are provided on their
outside surface with an annular insulating layer so that, at those
locations which are only cooled by the fluid to a lesser degree, the
electrode temperature does not experience an unwanted excessive rise
which results in the tissue being undesirably baked fast to the
electrodes or which results in the tissue bearing thereagainst drying out
and thus causes a rise in impedance in that tissue and causes an
interruption in the electrical current through the tissue.
[0093] Cooling with a suitable cooling fluid affords the consequence that
the tissue at the contact surface with the electrodes does not exceed a
predetermined temperature and that the coagulation
hot-spot is some
millimeters away from the electrodes.
[0094] FIGS. 18 and 19 correspond to the embodiment of FIG. 17, but the
front cylinder 10 in FIGS. 18 and 19 comprises metal and goes directly
into the first tube portion 82, the first electrode, while the front
cylinder 10 in FIG. 19 is frontally rounded off. In a particularly
preferred embodiment the lengths L1 and L2 of the electrodes 2, 4 are
such that the surface area formed from the front cylinder 10 and the
first electrode is equal to or smaller than the surface area of the
second electrode.
[0095] FIG. 22 shows an embodiment of the bipolar electrode arrangement
which substantially corresponds to that shown in FIG. 17, but in which
the second tube portion 84 which represents the second electrode 4 is
substantially longer than the first tube portion 82 which represents the
first electrode 2. In this embodiment the second tube portion 84
terminates at the proximal end of the instrument and it is therefore
possible to omit a further carrier at the proximal end of the instrument.
The axial length of the second electrode 4 is limited by virtue of the
fact that disposed on the proximal end portion of the second tube portion
84 is an insulating layer 87 which covers over the metal surface of the
second tube portion 84 at that location, for example with a ceramic
coating. The field which produces thermoelectric coagulation is then
formed between the cylindrical metal electrodes 2, 4. In this embodiment
also the end portions of the tube portions 82, 84 which on the inside are
surrounded either by the insulating material of the front cylinder 10 or
the insulating material of the carrier 70 are also coated with an
insulating layer 86 on the outside surface in order to prevent punctiform
overheating of the electrodes at those locations, because of the absence
of cooling.
[0096] FIG. 23 shows a further embodiment of the invention in which a
frontally rounded-off front cylinder 10 goes into a first tube portion 82
which is fixed with its proximal end to an insulating carrier. Provided
at a predetermined spacing from the tube portion 82 on the insulating
carrier is a metal layer 88. The tube 82 forms the cylindrical first
electrode 2, the metal coating on the carrier 70 forms the cylindrical
second electrode 4. The carrier 70 and the tube 82 are each provided with
a central hollow duct 76 and 77 respectively through which a flushing
hoze or tube 110 passes to a position just short of the distal end of the
front cylinder 10, for discharging fluid at the distal end, the fluid
cooling the first electrode by coming into contact with the internal
surface of the first electrode 2. Disposed on the outside surface of the
proximal end portion of the tube 82 is an insulating layer 86 in order to
prevent local overheating of the electrode 2 at that location as that
location is not in contact at the inside with fluid. The front cylinder
10 is formed from metal, its rounded configuration at the distal end is
advantageously suitable for the treatment of edge tumors in which a layer
of coagulated tissue is formed in front of the distal end of the
instrument.
[0097] FIGS. 20 and 21 show further embodiments of a bipolar electrode
arrangement. In both cases the basic structure provides a front cylinder
10 of metal or insulating material, adjoined by a tube 82 which is
secured with the proximal end portion to a carrier 70. The carrier 70 and
the tube 82 each have a respective central hollow duct 76 and 77
respectively through which is passed a flushing hoze or tube 110 which at
its distal end discharges fluid which then in contact with the inside
surface of the tube 82 flows back to the proximal end of the instrument.
In FIG. 18 the distal tube portion 82 has a metallic outside surface and
forms the cylindrical first electrode 2, the proximal tube portion 84
adjoining same is provided with an insulating layer 87 to which there is
applied at the proximal end a metal layer 88 forming the cylindrical
second electrode 4. In the embodiment of FIG. 19 in contrast the distal
tube portion 82 is provided with an insulating layer 87 to which a metal
layer 88 is applied at the distal end; the metal layer 88 forms the first
electrode. In this embodiment the proximal tube portion forms the second
electrode 4.
[0098] FIG. 24 shows a further embodiment of a bipolar electrode
arrangement in which a carrier 70 comprising a metal tube extends to a
wedge-shaped distal tip 12 and is in the shape of a cannula. An
insulating layer 87 is applied to the carrier 70 at a predetermined
spacing from the distal tip 12. In its proximal region the insulating
layer 87 is provided with a metal coating 88. Adjoining the distal tip
12-- with a metal outside surface--is the cylindrical first electrode 2
while the metal coating 88 at the proximal region forms the cylindrical
second electrode 4. Extending through the tube is a hollow duct 76 which
is open at the distal end and which can serve for introducing medication.
[0099] FIGS. 25 and 26 show alternative forms of the embodiment
illustrated in FIG. 24. The embodiment of FIG. 25 differs from that shown
in FIG. 24 insofar as the insulating layer 87 applied to the metal
carrier 70 and the metal layer 88 applied to the insulating layer 87 each
have a respective distal edge which corresponds to the wedge-shaped
distal tip 12 of the carrier 70.
[0100] In the embodiment of FIG. 26, the carrier 70 is in the form of a
metal bar (instead of the tubular carrier 70 in FIG. 24) which has a
wedge-shaped distal tip and to which is applied the insulating layer 87
on which the metal layer 88 is then arranged.
[0101] All illustrated embodiments of the bipolar electrode arrangement 1
are essentially of a circular cross-section of a radius R and are of a
cross-section which is as homogenous as possible over their length.
Irregularities in outside diameter are to be minimised so that the
electrode arrangement can be introduced into the tissue with an easy
sliding movement.
[0102] In all illustrated embodiments the axial length of the electrodes
is greater than the spacing of the electrodes which is substantially of
the order of magnitude of the outside diameter. With this dimensioning,
the arrangement affords advantageous local concentration of the
coagulation procedure and adequate strength in terms of the electrical
field involved. The carrier 70 can either be of a flexible or a rigid
nature.
[0103] In all embodiments in which a flushing hoze or tube discharges
flushing fluid at the distal end of a cavity, there is the option of
providing for temperature control of the electrodes and the carrier
before the electrode arrangement is introduced into the body, that is to
say heating same to over 30.degree. C. and preferably 50.degree. C. In
that way the electrode arrangement can be more easily introduced into the
tissue. As soon then as the electrode arrangement has reached the
treatment location and the actual electrothermal treatment is to be
initiated, then to achieve an optimum coagulation procedure the
instrument is cooled in order to prevent the tissue from drying out at
the electrodes and in order to be able to apply higher levels of power
and stronger electrical fields without the tissue becoming baked fast to
the electrodes.
[0104] FIG. 27 shows a front cylinder 10 which comprises for example
aluminum or titanium or a titanium alloy and which by anodic oxidation,
that is to say in a proximal end region, was provided with a ceramic
layer forming the insulating element 50 whose partition 52 is formed at
the proximal end of the front cylinder and whose casing wall 58 extends
on the outside around an axial lengthwise portion of the front cylinder.
[0105] FIGS. 28 and 29 show an end portion, in the form of a spiral spring
92, of a connecting line 90 which, as shown in FIG. 25, is inserted into
the hollow duct 77 of a metal tube 80 and bears under radial contact
pressure against the inside surface of the tube 80 and contacts same. An
insulating layer 87 is illustrated on the metal tube 80.
[0106] FIGS. 30 and 31 show longitudinal section views of two embodiments
of a bipolar electrode arrangement for a surgical instrument where the
instrument extends angled in the longitudinal direction. Like parts have
like reference numbers. FIGS. 30, 31 include lines 130, 131,
respectively, indicating the instrument angled in the longitudinal
direction.
* * * * *