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Catheter steering in interventional cardiology: Mechanical analysis and novel solution

Authors :
Remi I B van Starkenburg
Ewout A. Arkenbout
Aimée Sakes
Tamas Szili-Torok
Paul W. J. Henselmans
Paul Breedveld
Awaz Ali
Cardiology
Source :
Institution of Mechanical Engineers. Proceedings. Part H: Journal of Engineering in Medicine, 233(12), Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. Part H, Journal of Engineering in Medicine, Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers Part H-Journal of En, 233(12), 1207-1218. SAGE Publications Ltd
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

In recent years, steerable catheters have been developed to combat the effects of the dynamic cardiac environment. Mechanically actuated steerable catheters appear the most in the clinical setting; however, they are bound to a number of mechanical limitations. The aim of this research is to gain insight in these limitations and use this information to develop a new prototype of a catheter with increased steerability. The main limitations in mechanically steerable catheters are identified and analysed, after which requirements and solutions are defined to design a multi-steerable catheter. Finally, a prototype is built and a proof-of-concept test is carried out to analyse the steering functions. The mechanical analysis results in the identification of five limitations: (1) low torsion, (2) shaft shortening, (3) high unpredictable friction, (4) coupled tip-shaft movements, and (5) complex cardiac environment. Solutions are found to each of the limitations and result in the design of a novel multi-steerable catheter with four degrees of freedom. A prototype is developed which allows the dual-segmented tip to be steered over multiple planes and in multiple directions, allowing a range of complex motions including S-shaped curves and circular movements. A detailed analysis of limitations underlying mechanically steerable catheters has led to a new design for a multi-steerable catheter for complex cardiac interventions. The four integrated degrees of freedom provide a high variability of tip directions, and repetition of the bending angle is relatively simple and reliable. The ability to steer inside the heart with a variety of complex shaped curves may potentially change conventional approaches in interventional cardiology towards more patient-specific and lower complexity procedures. Future directions are headed towards further design optimizations and the experimental validation of the prototype.

Details

ISSN :
09544119
Volume :
233
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers Part H-Journal of En
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8dc5bc060bdbbd7cb188c2e60a5fcd8d