Design of a Polymer-based Steerable Cannula for Neurosurgical Applications
Nidhi Malhotra, Amber K. Rothe, Revanth Konda, Jaydev P. Desai

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel polymer-based, laser-micromachined, steerable cannula for neurosurgery, offering improved MRI compatibility, safety, and tissue compliance over traditional metal tools.
Contribution
It introduces a new fabrication method for polyimide steerable cannulas using laser micromachining, enabling small, precise joints for neurosurgical applications.
Findings
Successfully fabricated joints as small as 1.5 mm OD
Experimentally characterized the loading behavior of the joints
Demonstrated the feasibility of polymer-based steerable cannulas
Abstract
Robotically steerable compliant surgical tools offer several advantages over rigid tools, including enhanced dexterity, reduced tissue damage, and the ability to generate non-linear trajectories in minimally invasive neurosurgical procedures. Many existing robotic neurosurgical tools are designed using stainless steel or nitinol materials. Using polymer-based materials instead can offer advantages such as reduced interference in magnetic resonance imaging, enhanced safety for guiding electrically powered instruments, and reduced tissue damage due to inherent compliance. Several polymer materials have been used in robotic surgical applications, such as polyimide, polycarbonate, and elastic resin. Various fabrication strategies have also been proposed, including standard microfabrication techniques, thermal drawing, and 3-D printing. In our previous work, a tendon-driven, notched-tube was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSoft Robotics and Applications · Intraoperative Neuromonitoring and Anesthetic Effects · Neuroscience and Neural Engineering
