期刊论文详细信息
Cell Transplantation
Feedforward Coordinate Control of a Robotic Cell Injection Catheter
Original Articles
Peter K. Law1  Weyland Cheng2 
[1] Cell Therapy Institute, Wuhan, China;Department of Biomedical Engineering, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, China;Cell Therapy Institute, Wuhan, China;
关键词: catheterization;    feedforward systems;    intramyocardial injection;    numerical models;    robotic catheters;   
DOI  :  10.1177/0963689717720294
 received in 2016-09-22, accepted in 2017-01-27,  发布年份 2017
来源: Sage Journals
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Remote and robotically actuated catheters are the stepping-stones toward autonomous catheters, where complex intravascular procedures may be performed with minimal intervention from a physician. This article proposes a concept for the positional, feedforward control of a robotically actuated cell injection catheter used for the injection of myogenic or undifferentiated stem cells into the myocardial infarct boundary zones of the left ventricle. The prototype for the catheter system was built upon a needle-based catheter with a single degree of deflection, a 3-D printed handle combined with actuators, and the Arduino microcontroller platform. A bench setup was used to mimic a left ventricle catheter procedure starting from the femoral artery. Using Matlab and the open-source video modeling tool Tracker, the planar coordinates (y, z) of the catheter position were analyzed, and a feedforward control system was developed based on empirical models. Using the Student’s t test with a sample size of 26, it was determined that for both the y- and z-axes, the mean discrepancy between the calibrated and theoretical coordinate values had no significant difference compared to the hypothetical value of µ = 0. The root mean square error of the calibrated coordinates also showed an 88% improvement in the z-axis and 31% improvement in the y-axis compared to the unmodified trial run. This proof of concept investigation leads to the possibility of further developing a feedfoward control system in vivo using catheters with omnidirectional deflection. Feedforward positional control allows for more flexibility in the design of an automated catheter system where problems such as systemic time delay may be a hindrance in instances requiring an immediate reaction.

【 授权许可】

CC BY-NC   
© The Author(s) 2017

【 预 览 】
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RO202212201692228ZK.pdf 894KB PDF download
Figure 4 74KB Image download
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