Using the fringe field of a clinical MRI scanner enables robotic navigation of tethered instruments in deeper vascular regions.

Sci Robot

Nanorobotics Laboratory, Department of Computer and Software Engineering, Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Polytechnique Montréal, Montréal, QC, Canada.

Published: November 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers are exploring ways to navigate smaller medical instruments through blood vessels to access deeper areas for better diagnostics and therapies.
  • To achieve this, they developed a method called fringe field navigation (FFN), which utilizes a pulling force created by magnetic gradients from MRI scanners, making it easier to steer the instruments.
  • Their experiments demonstrated that FFN allows for more efficient navigation of microguidewires in complicated vasculatures compared to traditional manual techniques, facilitating the use of smaller and more effective medical devices.

Article Abstract

Navigating tethered instruments through the vasculatures to reach deeper physiological locations presently inaccessible would extend the applicability of many medical interventions, including but not limited to local diagnostics, imaging, and therapies. Navigation through narrower vessels requires minimizing the diameter of the instrument, resulting in a decrease of its stiffness until steerability becomes unpractical, while pushing the instrument at the insertion site to counteract the friction forces from the vessel walls caused by the bending of the instrument. To reach beyond the limit of using a pushing force alone, we report a method relying on a complementary directional pulling force at the tip created by gradients resulting from the magnetic fringe field emanating outside a clinical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner. The pulling force resulting from gradients exceeding 2 tesla per meter in a space that supports human-scale interventions allows the use of smaller magnets, such as the deformable spring as described here, at the tip of the instrument. Directional forces are achieved by robotically positioning the patient at predetermined successive locations inside the fringe field, a method that we refer to as fringe field navigation (FFN). We show through in vitro and in vivo experiments that x-ray-guided FFN could navigate microguidewires through complex vasculatures well beyond the limit of manual procedures and existing magnetic platforms. Our approach facilitated miniaturization of the instrument by replacing the torque from a relatively weak magnetic field with a configuration designed to exploit the superconducting magnet-based directional forces available in clinical MRI rooms.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/scirobotics.aax7342DOI Listing

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