|
NIH GRANT FOCUSES ON MANUFACTURING OF ULTRA-SMALL
MEDICAL INSTRUMENTS
University Park, Pa. (College of Engineering
News Release) – A
team of Penn State engineers and doctors have received
a $386,000 grant from the National Institutes of Health
(NIH) to continue development of ultra-small surgical instruments
that would allow doctors to use fewer incisions during
medical procedures.
The two-year grant, titled “Nanoparticulate
Enabled Surgical Instruments,” is headed by Mary
Frecker, professor of mechanical engineering.
Frecker has
been working for a number of years on developing small,
multifunctional surgical instruments, which she likens
to a Swiss Army knife. The idea behind the tools is to
minimize the amount of time surgeons spend exchanging instruments
during minimally invasive procedures such as laparoscopy.
In a new type of endoscopic procedure called
natural orifice transluminal endoscopic surgery (NOTES),
a surgeon may access the abdomen through the mouth and
esophagus to conduct a gastrointestinal procedure. This
type of work is sometimes called ‘incision-less
surgery,’ as it does not involve making any cuts
in the skin.
“Surgeons have to insert instruments
through the working channel of a flexible endoscope that
is about a meter long,” Frecker states. “When
the surgeon needs to switch tool tips, he or she has to
snake it all the way out of the working channel.”
Her
previous work, which is patented, yielded instruments that
were a mere 5 mm in diameter. Frecker’s team is now
creating even smaller tools on the order of 1 mm or smaller
in diameter.
“What we’d like to be able to
do with surgical instruments is make them very small and
make them very versatile,” she explains. “We’re
really at the limit with what we can do with conventional
materials and conventional manufacturing techniques.”
The
NIH grant allows Frecker’s team to examine advanced
manufacturing techniques for these ultra-small surgical
instruments.
Frecker is working with Jim Adair, professor
of materials science and engineering, whose research group
is pioneering a new manufacturing process involving nanoparticulate
materials.
“The focus in this project is how to fabricate
new instruments using this new manufacturing process,” she
says.
Frecker continues, “The process starts with
fabricating molds using photolithography. The molds are
then filled with a nanoparticulate material. The material
we’ve been focusing on is called zirconia, which
has nanometer-sized grains. The idea with using this material
with the very, very small grains is that we can make parts
with really small feature sizes and sharp edges.”
Once
filled with the nanoparticulate material, the molds are
then burned away during sintering, leaving a free-standing
part.
“We can make thousands of these things in a
batch very cheaply,” she says.
Frecker’s team
has also been working closely with physicians at the Milton
S. Hershey Medical Center to refine the instruments. Doctors
have been testing the ultra-small instruments in surgical
simulators and giving feedback to Frecker’s team
for design refinements.
“One area we think these
instruments will be useful in the future is NOTES,” Frecker
says, adding that the ultra-small instruments might even
allow for procedures that can’t be done with existing
technology.
Working with Frecker on the grant are Adair;
Christopher Muhlstein, assistant professor of materials
science and engineering; Alan Snyder, professor of bioengineering;
Eric Mockensturm, associate professor of mechanical engineering;
Randy Haluck, surgeon at Hershey Medical Center; and Abraham
Mathew, gastroenterologist at Hershey Medical Center.
The
project is supported by grant number R21EB006488 from the
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering.
The content of this article is solely the responsibility
of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official
views of the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and
Bioengineering or the NIH.
* * *
Editors: Dr. Frecker can
be reached at mxf36@psu.edu or at 814-865-1617.
Contact:
Curtis Chan Phone: 814-865-5544 E-mail: news@engr.psu.edu
|