| Literature DB >> 35967598 |
Onder Erin1, Xiaolong Liu1, Jiawei Ge1, Justin Opfermann1, Yotam Barnoy2, Lamar O Mair3, Jin U Kang4, William Gensheimer5, Irving N Weinberg3, Yancy Diaz-Mercado6, Axel Krieger1.
Abstract
The field of magnetic robotics aims to obviate physical connections between the actuators and end-effectors. Such tetherless control may enable new ultra-minimally invasive surgical manipulations in clinical settings. While wireless actuation offers advantages in medical applications, the challenge of providing sufficient force to magnetic needles for tissue penetration remains a barrier to practical application. Applying sufficient force for tissue penetration is required for tasks such as biopsy, suturing, cutting, drug delivery, and accessing deep seated regions of complex structures in organs such as the eye. To expand the force landscape for such magnetic surgical tools, an impact-force based suture needle capable of penetrating in vitro and ex vivo samples with 3-DOF planar motion is proposed. Using custom-built 14G and 25G needles, we demonstrate generation of 410 mN penetration force, a 22.7-fold force increase with more than 20 times smaller volume compared to similar magnetically guided needles. With the MPACT-Needle, in vitro suturing of a gauze mesh onto an agar gel is demonstrated. In addition, we have reduced the tip size to 25G, which is a typical needle size for interventions in the eye, to demonstrate ex vivo penetration in a rabbit eye, mimicking procedures such as corneal injections and transscleral drug delivery.Entities:
Keywords: magnetic systems; medical robotics; miniature robotics; surgical robots; tissue penetration
Year: 2022 PMID: 35967598 PMCID: PMC9364690 DOI: 10.1002/aisy.202200072
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Intell Syst ISSN: 2640-4567