NEWS: Image-guided surgery
http://www.theengineer.co.uk/Articles/313016/Image-guided+surgery.htm
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Published: 10 September 2009 12:30 PM
Source: The Engineer Online
A new image-guided surgical instrument system that is currently under
development in the US will be able to pinpoint the place that surgeons should
make an incision on patients who have scar tissue.
Researchers at the University of Texas at Arlington's College of Engineering
are developing the Multifunctional Image Guided Surgical (MIGS) system,
which integrates a depth-resolved optical imaging system, a laser scalpel, a
miniature multi-axis translation system and a control system.
Digant Davé, assistant professor in bioengineering, is leading the team
developing the system and has secured two grants totalling $614,000 (£368,950)
from the National Institutes of Health to complete its development.
Quite often, patients who have had previous surgeries, radiation treatments,
tumours or inflammation have adhesion between different tissues, leaving
surgeons without the normal tissue plane guidance they rely upon to identify
various organs.
'(But the new MIGS system) will enable us to see through scar tissue
and identify critical regions between delicate structures, then enable us to
use a very fine laser to cut through,' said Dr Edward Livingston, professor and
chief of gastrointestinal and endocrine surgery at UT Southwestern and a
professor of biomedical engineering.
'Imagine a joystick with which the surgeon can position the imager and
scalpel at the right location to see buried tissue layers and perform surgery,'
said Davé.
Davé added that the completed MIGS platform will require the development of
a compact and robust 3D optical imaging probe and the integration of a fibre
laser scalpel with the imaging probe to enable tissue cutting to be made
precisely.
The project will be conducted at UT Arlington's Optical Medical Imaging
Laboratories located in the Advanced Imaging Research Center at the UT
Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. Besides Dr Livingston, UT Arlington
Bioengineering Prof Liping Tang and Virginia Tech Prof Shashank Priya are
collaborating with Davé.
Davé expects to complete the platform within the two-year period covered by
the funding grants.
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