Flexible Instrument with Pre-curved Elements for Surgical Tools

Summary

Vanderbilt researchers have developed a novel system for allowing surgical instruments to navigate around tighter corners and access difficult-to-reach areas in the body. This system uses pre-curved elastic elements added on to the existing instrument. Current surgical instruments are manufactured in a straight-line configuration, which means they must bend in order to reach around obstructions in surgery. By adding pre-curved sections, some of the bending is already accomplished, allowing the instrument to bend around tighter corners.

Addressed Need

  • Current surgical instruments cannot reach every place in the body, resulting in inoperable locations or more invasive surgery techniques
  • Some minimally invasive surgeries are limited by the degrees of freedom of the surgical instruments
  • Improvement of robotic surgical instruments is a key step in the advancement of minimally invasive surgery techniques

Technology Description

The key new idea in this invention is the idea of adding pre-curved elastic elements to surgical instruments. This pre-curvature can be applied to the structural or actuation elements of the surgical device. Pre-curving the structure allows the surgical instrument or robot to navigate through winding lumens or cavities. Adding a pre-curved element to the actuation area of the instrument provides additional degrees of freedom of movement and more control over the instrument’s behavior. This idea applies to a wide variety of tools, including standard endoscopes, robotic endoscopes, and multi-backbone continuum robots.

Unique Properties and Applications

  • Can be used in conjunction with traditional tendons
  • Can be applied to a wide variety of surgical tools
  • Specific surgical applications include:
  • Retroflexed endoscopy, in which the endoscope must turn through an angle between 90 and 360 degrees
  • Peroral endoscopic myotomy, in which the endoscope must enter through the stomach and operate on the muscle through which the endoscope entered the stomach cavity

Intellectual Property Status

Patent Information: