DocumentCode
2946312
Title
Automated robotic vitrification of embryos
Author
Jun Liu ; Chaoyang Shi ; Jun Wen ; Pyne, Derek ; Haijiao Liu ; Ru, Changhai ; Yu Sun
Author_Institution
Dept. of Mech. & Ind. Eng., Univ. of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
fYear
2015
fDate
26-30 May 2015
Firstpage
2685
Lastpage
2690
Abstract
This paper reports the first robotic system for vitrification of mammalian embryos. Vitrification is a technique for preserving oocytes and embryos in clinical IVF (in vitro fertilization). The procedure involves multiple steps of stringently timed pick-and-place operation for processing an oocyte/embryo in vitrification media. In IVF clinics, vitrification is conducted manually by highly skilled embryologists. Processing one oocyte/embryo occupies the embryologist 15-20 minutes, depending on protocols chosen to implement. Due to poor reproducibility and inconsistency across operators, success rates and survival rates also vary significantly. Through collaboration with IVF clinics, we are in process to realize robotic vitrification and aim ultimately to standardize clinical vitrification from manual operation to fully automated robotic operation. Our robotic system is embedded with two contact detection methods to determine the relative Z positions of the vitrification micropipette, embryo, and vitrification straw. A 3D tracking algorithm is developed for visually servoed embryo transfer and real-time monitoring of embryo volume changes during vitrification. Excess medium is automatically removed from around the vitrified embryo on the vitrification straw to achieve a high cooling rate. Tests on mouse embryos demonstrate that the system is capable of performing vitrification with a throughput at least three times that of manual operation and achieved a high survival rate (88.9%) and development rate (93.8%).
Keywords
medical robotics; vitrification; 3D tracking algorithm; automated robotic vitrification; clinical IVF; contact detection methods; cooling rate; in vitro fertilization; mammalian embryos; oocyte; real-time monitoring; stringently timed pick-and-place operation; visually servoed embryo transfer; vitrification media; vitrification micropipette; vitrification straw; Embryo; Liquids; Nitrogen; Protocols; Robots; Substrates; Three-dimensional displays;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2015 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Seattle, WA
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICRA.2015.7139562
Filename
7139562
Link To Document