Invention Grant
- Patent Title: Surgical access port stabilization
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Application No.: US15786891Application Date: 2017-10-18
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Publication No.: US10682130B2Publication Date: 2020-06-16
- Inventor: Michael White , Stephane Gully , Jan Klett , Peter Senn , Joern Richter
- Applicant: Medos International Sarl
- Applicant Address: CH Le Locle
- Assignee: Medos International Sarl
- Current Assignee: Medos International Sarl
- Current Assignee Address: CH Le Locle
- Agency: Nutter McClennen & Fish LLP
- Main IPC: A61B17/02
- IPC: A61B17/02 ; A61B90/00 ; A61B90/50 ; A61B90/57 ; A61B1/00 ; A61B1/012 ; A61B1/018 ; A61B1/05 ; A61B1/055 ; A61B1/07 ; A61B1/12 ; A61B1/233 ; A61B1/267 ; A61B1/313 ; A61B1/317 ; A61B1/32 ; A61B5/04 ; A61B5/06 ; A61B5/00 ; A61B17/00 ; A61B17/32 ; A61B17/34 ; A61B17/60 ; A61B17/70 ; A61B18/18 ; A61F2/44 ; A61F2/46 ; A61B34/20 ; A61B34/00 ; A61B90/30 ; A61B17/16 ; A61B17/17 ; A61B17/56 ; A61B18/00

Abstract:
Surgical access port stabilization systems and methods are described herein. Such systems and methods can be employed to provide ipsilateral stabilization of a surgical access port, e.g., during spinal surgeries. In one embodiment, a surgical system can include an access port configured for percutaneous insertion into a patient to define a channel to a surgical site and an anchor configured for insertion into the patient's bone. Further, the access port can be coupled to the anchor such that a longitudinal axis of the access port and a longitudinal axis of the anchor are non-coaxial. With such a system, a surgeon or other user can access a surgical site through the access port without the need for external or other stabilization of the access port, but can instead position the access port relative to an anchor already placed in the patient's body.
Public/Granted literature
- US20180098788A1 SURGICAL ACCESS PORT STABILIZATION Public/Granted day:2018-04-12
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