Carnegie Mellon Robotics Institute
Takeyoshi Ota, Nicholas Patronik, David Schwartzman, Cameron Riviere, and Marco A. Zenati
Journal of Surgical Research, Vol. 137, No. 2, February, 2007, pp. 242-243.
| Download |
|
Not available for download due to copyright restrictions. Please contact the author(s) for a copy. Copyright notice: This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. These works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder. |
| Abstract |
| Background: We have developed a miniature crawling robot (HeartLander) that navigates on the epicardium. We tested the epicardial pacing lead implantation with the fifth generation prototype of the HeartLander using a beating porcine heart accessed through a closed chest subxiphoid approach. Methods: Heart- Lander consists of two articulated modules that adhere to the epicardium using suction and achieve inchworm-like locomotion. The device was inserted into the pericardial space through a subxiphoid approach. Visualization was achieved with an onboard camera and a fluoroscopy. Left ventricular epicardial pacing lead placement was performed through the working port of the robot. The blood pressure and electrocardiogram were monitored. The heart was excised and examined after the test. Results: The HeartLander walked on the surface of the heart from the apex to the targeted posterior wall. After being screwed down into the myocardium, the epicardial lead was released from the Heart- Lander body. The successful placement of the lead was confirmed by fluoroscopy and actual electrical pacing tests (threshold: 0.5mV/0.5ms). The on-board camera provided adequate visualization of intrapericardial landmarks. No adverse hemodynamic or electrophysiologic events were noted during the trial. A histological study of the excised heart verified that no epicardial damage was caused by the locomotion. Conclusions: The HeartLander prototype demonstrated successful epicardial pacemaker lead placement on a beating porcine heart through a closed chest subxiphoid approach. This approach may be useful for epicardial left ventricular lead implantation for cardiac resynchronization therapy. |
| Keywords |
| medical robotics, cardiac surgery, minimally invasive surgery, cardiac pacing |
| Notes |
Sponsor: National Institutes of Health Associated Center(s) / Consortia:
Medical Robotics Technology Center Associated Lab(s) / Group(s):
Surgical Mechatronics Laboratory Associated Project(s):
HeartLander |
| Text Reference |
| Takeyoshi Ota, Nicholas Patronik, David Schwartzman, Cameron Riviere, and Marco A. Zenati, "Subxiphoid epicardial pacing lead implantation using a miniature crawling robotic device," Journal of Surgical Research, Vol. 137, No. 2, February, 2007, pp. 242-243. |
| BibTeX Reference |
|
@article{Patronik_2007_6715, author = "Takeyoshi Ota and Nicholas Patronik and David Schwartzman and Cameron Riviere and Marco A Zenati", title = "Subxiphoid epicardial pacing lead implantation using a miniature crawling robotic device", journal = "Journal of Surgical Research", pages = "242-243", month = "February", year = "2007", volume = "137", number = "2", } |
| The Robotics Institute is part of the School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University. Contact Us | Update Instructions |