Surgery: kinesitherapy – Kinesitherapy – Ultrasonic
Reexamination Certificate
2001-01-31
2003-05-27
Jaworski, Francis J. (Department: 3737)
Surgery: kinesitherapy
Kinesitherapy
Ultrasonic
C607S002000, C606S027000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06569109
ABSTRACT:
This application claims benefit of Japanese Application No. 2000-028090 filed in Japan on Feb. 4, 2000, Japanese application No. 2000-071159 filed in Japan on Mar. 14, 2000, Japanese Application No. 2000-167809 filed in Japan on Jun. 5, 2000, Japanese Application No. 2000-174088 filed in Japan on Jun. 9, 2000, Japanese Application No. 2000-234697 filed in Japan on Aug. 2, 2000, and Japanese Application No. 2000-389387 filed in Japan on Dec. 21, 2000, the contents of which are incorporated by this reference.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an ultrasonic operation system, or more particularly, an ultrasonic operation system characterized by a control action of locking an output frequency on to the resonance frequency of an ultrasonic transducer so as to drive the ultrasonic transducer at the resonance frequency.
2. Related Art Statement
In general, an ultrasonic transducer employed in an ultrasonic knife for surgical use or in an ultrasonic aspirator should preferably be driven at the resonance frequency of the ultrasonic transducer or a frequency close to the resonance frequency. Among related arts, a known art is implemented in a driving apparatus including, for example, a phase-locked loop (PLL). In the driving apparatus, the phase of an induced current is compared with the phase of a driving voltage applied to the ultrasonic transducer, so that a driving frequency at which the ultrasonic transducer is driven will be agreed with the resonance frequency of the ultrasonic transducer.
This type of ultrasonic transducer is expressed as an equivalent circuit shown in
FIG. 24
over a frequency band covering the resonance frequency that serves as a reference frequency. As illustrated, a coil Ld is connected in parallel or series with a braking capacitor Cd included in the ultrasonic transducer. Herein, the inductance of the coil Ld and the capacitance of the capacitor Cd have a relationship of L×C=Ld×Cd to the inductance of another coil L and the capacitance of another capacitor C to as to cancel the capacitance of the capacitor Cd. At the resonance frequency fr=½&pgr;(L×C)(=½&pgr;(L'C)½), the property of the ultrasonic transducer is dominated by only a forward resistance of a resistor R. A phase difference between an applied voltage and an induced current becomes zero. FIG.
25
graphically shows an impedance Z offered by the ultrasonic transducer over a frequency band centered on the resonance frequency fr.
A PLL is activated in order to raise or lower a driving frequency, at which the ultrasonic transducer is driven, so that the phase difference between the phase &thgr;v of an applied voltage and the phase &thgr;i of an induced current will become zero. Consequently, a driving apparatus including the PLL is locked on to the resonance frequency fr.
FIG. 26
shows the phase difference.
Herein, a frequency at which the driving apparatus is activated must fall within a range from a frequency f
1
to a frequency f
2
within which the driving apparatus can be locked on to the resonance frequency. Japanese Unexamined Patent Publication No. 2691011 has disclosed an improvement in which the frequency at which the driving apparatus is activated falls within the range.
FIG. 27
is an explanatory diagram concerning the disclosed related art. An ultrasonic operation system consists mainly of an ultrasonic transducer
1101
, and a driving apparatus composed of a PLL
1102
, an amplification circuit (AMP)
1103
, a detection circuit
1104
, an oscillatory circuit
1105
, and a switch
1106
. The ultrasonic transducer
1101
exhibits a resonance frequency of fr. The PLL
1102
tracks the resonance frequency according to the phase of a driving voltage applied to the ultrasonic transducer
1101
and the phase of an induced current. The amplification circuit
1103
amplifies the power of a frequency-change signal output from the PLL
1102
so as to produce driving power with which the ultrasonic transducer
1101
is driven. The detection circuit
1104
detects the applied voltage and induced current. The oscillatory circuit
1105
produces a reference-frequency signal that represents a reference frequency at which a driving apparatus is activated. The switch
1106
switches the connections of one input terminal of the PLL
1102
depending on whether the switch receives the induced current or reference-frequency signal. When the driving apparatus is activated, the reference-frequency signal (fref) output from the oscillatory circuit
1105
is input to the PLL
1102
. Therefore, a voltage locked on to the reference frequency is applied to the ultrasonic transducer
1101
. Thereafter, the connections of the one terminal of the PLL
1102
are switched in order to select the induced current as an input of the PLL
1102
. Thus, the driving apparatus is locked on to the resonance frequency.
The reference-frequency signal produced by the oscillatory circuit
1105
is adjusted to fall within the frequencies f
1
and f
2
. When the connections through the switch
1106
are changed, a driving frequency at which the ultrasonic transducer is driven falls within a frequency band within which the driving apparatus can be locked on to the resonance frequency. Therefore, the driving apparatus can reliably perform the action of locking the driving frequency on to the resonance frequency.
In an operation system including an ultrasonic knife, probes having various shapes are connected to an ultrasonic transducer and adopted for different purposes of use. Moreover, a plurality of types of ultrasonic transducers that exhibit different resonance frequencies may be used with employment of only one driving apparatus. In this case, handpieces each composed of a transducer and a probe exhibit different resonance frequencies. Consequently, a range from a frequency f
1
to a frequency f
2
within which a driving apparatus can be locked on to the resonance frequency of an ultrasonic transducer is different from handpiece to handpiece. A frequency at which the driving apparatus is activated is swept over a range covering the resonance frequency. Meanwhile, it is detected whether the frequency becomes equal to the resonance frequency. As soon as the frequency becomes equal to the resonance frequency, a PLL is activated to perform a phase locking action. This art is described in Japanese Patent Publication No. 2647713.
However, in the foregoing related art, a circuit for producing a frequency-change signal that represents a frequency at which the driving apparatus is activated and a PLL are of an analog type. It is therefore very hard to suppress an adverse effect caused by a difference of one product from another or to adjust each product. Moreover, when an additional probe or ultrasonic transducer is included, if a frequency at which the probe or ultrasonic transducer should be driven is unprecedented, a frequency setting circuit incorporated in the driving apparatus must be readjusted. This poses a problem.
Moreover, several digital resonance-frequency tracking circuits that are controlled by a CPU have been proposed in efforts to compensate for the drawbacks of the analog type. Since a tracking action depends on computation performed by software, the digital type has a drawback that a control action is performed slowly. If a fast CPU is employed in order to overcome the drawback, a driving apparatus itself becomes expensive. This poses a problem.
Furthermore, when the driving apparatus is applied to an ultrasonic operation system, it is important whether the driving apparatus can respond quickly when activated for oscillation. The driving apparatus must be designed to offer a high response speed.
OBJECTS AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to provide an ultrasonic driving apparatus capable of driving an ultrasonic transducer at a desired frequency more readily and accurately through digital signal processing, and an ultrasonic operation system.
Another object of
Honda Yoshitaka
Ono Hiroo
Sakurai Tomohisa
Takahashi Hiroyuki
Tanaka Kazue
Jaworski Francis J.
Jung William C.
Olympus Optical Co,. Ltd.
Scully Scott Murphy & Presser
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