• DocumentCode
    64625
  • Title

    The Heart of the Matter: From guided microtools to 3-D printing and precision genome editing, promising research could lead to new advances in pediatric cardiology.

  • Author

    Chandler, David L.

  • Volume
    6
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    May-June 2015
  • Firstpage
    12
  • Lastpage
    16
  • Abstract
    The smooth, powerful muscles of a newborn baby´s heart are pulsing normally, squeezing in and letting go rhythmically as a 3-mm-wide catheter-like tube snakes its way through, entering via an artery and being guided slowly by a surgeon. When it reaches its target - a protruding knot of malformed muscle tissue within a ventricle that has been partly blocking the valve - the tip of the precisely controlled tube whirs into action, with tiny scissor-like rotating blades gently grinding up the excess tissue as those pieces are sucked back into the device, leaving no floating particles that could lead to a blockage elsewhere. The defect is fully removed, and the heart´s function is restored to normal, leaving the child with the prospect of a normal life. The whole minimally invasive process takes place inside a beating heart and would otherwise have required open-heart surgery, with the heart stopped for a cardiopulmonary bypass.
  • Keywords
    bioMEMS; cardiovascular system; catheters; genomics; muscle; paediatrics; surgery; three-dimensional printing; 3D printing; beating heart; cardiopulmonary bypass; catheter-like tube snakes; guided microtools; malformed muscle tissue; minimally invasive process; open-heart surgery; pediatric cardiology; precision genome editing; protruding knot; scissor-like rotating blades; surgeon; ventricle; Biomedical optical imaging; Cardiology; Catheters; Genetics; Hospitals; Pediatrics; Photoacoustic effects; Surgery;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Pulse, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    2154-2287
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MPUL.2015.2409096
  • Filename
    7106655