Light in the Larynx: a Miniaturized Robotic Optical Fiber for In-office Laser Surgery of the Vocal Folds
Alex J. Chiluisa, Nicholas E. Pacheco, Hoang S. Do, Ryan M. Tougas,, Emily V. Minch, Rositsa Mihaleva, Yao Shen, Yuxiang Liu, Thomas L. Carroll,, and Loris Fichera

TL;DR
This paper introduces a miniaturized robotic optical fiber designed for in-office laser surgery of vocal folds, enhancing access and control compared to traditional fibers, with validation through simulations and phantom experiments.
Contribution
It presents a novel steerable laser fiber integrated into a compact hand-held robot, improving surgical access in vocal fold procedures.
Findings
Enhanced surgical access demonstrated in simulations
Device is compatible with standard endoscopes
Operable with a single hand during procedures
Abstract
This letter reports the design, construction, and experimental validation of a novel hand-held robot for in-office laser surgery of the vocal folds. In-office endoscopic laser surgery is an emerging trend in Laryngology: It promises to deliver the same patient outcomes of traditional surgical treatment (i.e., in the operating room), at a fraction of the cost. Unfortunately, office procedures can be challenging to perform; the optical fibers used for laser delivery can only emit light forward in a line-of-sight fashion, which severely limits anatomical access. The robot we present in this letter aims to overcome these challenges. The end effector of the robot is a steerable laser fiber, created through the combination of a thin optical fiber (0.225 mm) with a tendon-actuated Nickel-Titanium notched sheath that provides bending. This device can be seamlessly used with most commercially…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVoice and Speech Disorders · Head and Neck Cancer Studies · Tracheal and airway disorders
