49 research outputs found

    Banding for access related ischaemia: Our experience in Kuantan, Malaysia

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    We reviewed our result of banding procedures for steal syndrome identied from theatre lists and cross referenced with the theatre log book. We performed 8 banding procedures in 8 patients, between June 2012 and April 2014. All presented with grade II–III steal syndrome. Complete symptoms resolution and salvage access occurred in all cases except in 1 patient. We concluded, employing banding as a flow limiting procedure has been a success in dealing with access related ischaemia

    An Optofluidic Lens Biochip and an x-ray Readable Blood Pressure Microsensor: Versatile Tools for in vitro and in vivo Diagnostics.

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    Three different microfabricated devices were presented for use in vivo and in vitro diagnostic biomedical applications: an optofluidic-lens biochip, a hand held digital imaging system and an x-ray readable blood pressure sensor for monitoring restenosis. An optofluidic biochip–termed the ‘Microfluidic-based Oil-Immersion Lens’ (mOIL) biochip were designed, fabricated and test for high-resolution imaging of various biological samples. The biochip consists of an array of high refractive index (n = 1.77) sapphire ball lenses sitting on top of an oil-filled microfluidic network of microchambers. The combination of the high optical quality lenses with the immersion oil results in a numerical aperture (NA) of 1.2 which is comparable to the high NA of oil immersion microscope objectives. The biochip can be used as an add-on-module to a stereoscope to improve the resolution from 10 microns down to 0.7 microns. It also has a scalable field of view (FOV) as the total FOV increases linearly with the number of lenses in the biochip (each lens has ~200 microns FOV). By combining the mOIL biochip with a CMOS sensor, a LED light source in 3D printed housing, a compact (40 grams, 4cmx4cmx4cm) high resolution (~0.4 microns) hand held imaging system was developed. The applicability of this system was demonstrated by counting red and white blood cells and imaging fluorescently labelled cells. In blood smear samples, blood cells, sickle cells, and malaria-infected cells were easily identified. To monitor restenosis, an x-ray readable implantable blood pressure sensor was developed. The sensor is based on the use of an x-ray absorbing liquid contained in a microchamber. The microchamber has a flexible membrane that is exposed to blood pressure. When the membrane deflects, the liquid moves into the microfluidic-gauge. The length of the microfluidic-gauge can be measured and consequently the applied pressure exerted on the diaphragm can be calculated. The prototype sensor has dimensions of 1x0.6x10mm and adequate resolution (19mmHg) to detect restenosis in coronary artery stents from a standard chest x-ray. Further improvements of our prototype will open up the possibility of measuring pressure drop in a coronary artery stent in a non-invasively manner.PhDMacromolecular Science and EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/111384/1/toning_1.pd

    Front Lines of Thoracic Surgery

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    Front Lines of Thoracic Surgery collects up-to-date contributions on some of the most debated topics in today's clinical practice of cardiac, aortic, and general thoracic surgery,and anesthesia as viewed by authors personally involved in their evolution. The strong and genuine enthusiasm of the authors was clearly perceptible in all their contributions and I'm sure that will further stimulate the reader to understand their messages. Moreover, the strict adhesion of the authors' original observations and findings to the evidence base proves that facts are the best guarantee of scientific value. This is not a standard textbook where the whole discipline is organically presented, but authors' contributions are simply listed in their pertaining subclasses of Thoracic Surgery. I'm sure that this original and very promising editorial format which has and free availability at its core further increases this book's value and it will be of interest to healthcare professionals and scientists dedicated to this field

    Added value of acute multimodal CT-based imaging (MCTI) : a comprehensive analysis

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    Introduction: MCTI is used to assess acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients.We postulated that use of MCTI improves patient outcome regardingindependence and mortality.Methods: From the ASTRAL registry, all patients with an AIS and a non-contrast-CT (NCCT), angio-CT (CTA) or perfusion-CT (CTP) within24 h from onset were included. Demographic, clinical, biological, radio-logical, and follow-up caracteristics were collected. Significant predictorsof MCTI use were fitted in a multivariate analysis. Patients undergoingCTA or CTA&CTP were compared with NCCT patients with regards tofavourable outcome (mRS ≤ 2) at 3 months, 12 months mortality, strokemechanism, short-term renal function, use of ancillary diagnostic tests,duration of hospitalization and 12 months stroke recurrence

    XXII International Conference on Mechanics in Medicine and Biology - Abstracts Book

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    This book contain the abstracts presented the XXII ICMMB, held in Bologna in September 2022. The abstracts are divided following the sessions scheduled during the conference

    Image-Based Force Estimation and Haptic Rendering For Robot-Assisted Cardiovascular Intervention

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    Clinical studies have indicated that the loss of haptic perception is the prime limitation of robot-assisted cardiovascular intervention technology, hindering its global adoption. It causes compromised situational awareness for the surgeon during the intervention and may lead to health risks for the patients. This doctoral research was aimed at developing technology for addressing the limitation of the robot-assisted intervention technology in the provision of haptic feedback. The literature review showed that sensor-free force estimation (haptic cue) on endovascular devices, intuitive surgeon interface design, and haptic rendering within the surgeon interface were the major knowledge gaps. For sensor-free force estimation, first, an image-based force estimation methods based on inverse finite-element methods (iFEM) was developed and validated. Next, to address the limitation of the iFEM method in real-time performance, an inverse Cosserat rod model (iCORD) with a computationally efficient solution for endovascular devices was developed and validated. Afterward, the iCORD was adopted for analytical tip force estimation on steerable catheters. The experimental studies confirmed the accuracy and real-time performance of the iCORD for sensor-free force estimation. Afterward, a wearable drift-free rotation measurement device (MiCarp) was developed to facilitate the design of an intuitive surgeon interface by decoupling the rotation measurement from the insertion measurement. The validation studies showed that MiCarp had a superior performance for spatial rotation measurement compared to other modalities. In the end, a novel haptic feedback system based on smart magnetoelastic elastomers was developed, analytically modeled, and experimentally validated. The proposed haptics-enabled surgeon module had an unbounded workspace for interventional tasks and provided an intuitive interface. Experimental validation, at component and system levels, confirmed the usability of the proposed methods for robot-assisted intervention systems
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