Laparoscopic morcellation is a technique used in gynecological surgeries such as hysterectomy and myomectomy to remove uteri and uterine fibroids (leiomyomas) through a small abdominal incision. Current morcellators use blades or bipolar energy to cut tissue into small pieces that are then removed through laparoscopic ports in a piecewise manner. These existing approaches have several limitations; (1) they are time consuming as the tissue must be manually moved over the devices during the cutting step and removal is piecewise, (2) they can lead to accidental damage to surrounding healthy tissue inside the body and (3) they do not provide safe containment of tissue during the morcellation process which can lead to seeding (spreading and regrowth) of benign or potentially cancerous tissue. This paper describes a laparoscopic morcellator that overcomes these limitations through a new design that is based on an enclosed, motor-actuated mesh that applies only an inward-directed cutting force to the tissue after it has been loaded into the protective mesh and bag. The deterministic design approach that led to this concept is presented along with the detailed electromechanical design. The prototype is tested on soft vegetables and an animal model to demonstrate successful morcellation and how the device would be compatible with current clinical practice. Results show that the time required to morcellate with the new device for a set of tests on animal tissue is relatively uniform across samples with widely varying parameters. Including tissue manipulation and extraction time, the new device is shown to have an improvement in terms of speed over current morcellators. The mean time for cutting animal tissue ranging from 100 g to 360 g was 30 s with small variations due to initial conditions. The time for cutting is expected to remain approximately constant as tissue size increases. There is also minimal risk of the protective bag ripping due to the inward-cutting action of the mesh, thereby potentially significantly reducing the risk of seeding during clinical procedures; thus, further increasing patient safety. Finally, this design may be applicable to other procedures involving removal of tissue in nongynecologic surgeries, such as full or partial kidney or spleen removal.
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March 2014
Research-Article
A New Laparoscopic Morcellator Using an Actuated Wire Mesh and Bag
Kimberly M. Murdaugh,
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Kimberly M. Murdaugh
Harvard University
,School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Cambridge, MA 02138
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William C. Burke,
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
William C. Burke
Harvard University
,School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Cambridge, MA 02138
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Sloan Zimmerman,
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Sloan Zimmerman
Harvard University
,School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Cambridge, MA 02138
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Ellen Roche,
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Ellen Roche
Harvard University
,School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Cambridge, MA 02138
Wyss Institute
,Boston, MA 02155
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Donal Holland,
Donal Holland
Department of Mechanical and
Manufacturing Engineering,
Manufacturing Engineering,
Trinity College
,Dublin 2, Ireland
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Jon I. Einarsson,
Jon I. Einarsson
Brigham and Women's Hospital
,Boston, MA 02115
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Conor J. Walsh
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Conor J. Walsh
Harvard University
,School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Cambridge, MA 02138
Wyss Institute
,Boston, MA 02155
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Alexander Isakov
Kimberly M. Murdaugh
Harvard University
,School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Cambridge, MA 02138
William C. Burke
Harvard University
,School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Cambridge, MA 02138
Sloan Zimmerman
Harvard University
,School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Cambridge, MA 02138
Ellen Roche
Harvard University
,School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Cambridge, MA 02138
Wyss Institute
,Boston, MA 02155
Donal Holland
Department of Mechanical and
Manufacturing Engineering,
Manufacturing Engineering,
Trinity College
,Dublin 2, Ireland
Jon I. Einarsson
Brigham and Women's Hospital
,Boston, MA 02115
Conor J. Walsh
Harvard University
,School of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
Cambridge, MA 02138
Wyss Institute
,Boston, MA 02155
Manuscript received March 21, 2013; final manuscript received December 16, 2013; published online January 15, 2014. Assoc. Editor: Carl A. Nelson.
J. Med. Devices. Mar 2014, 8(1): 011009 (7 pages)
Published Online: January 15, 2014
Article history
Received:
March 21, 2013
Revision Received:
December 16, 2013
Citation
Isakov, A., Murdaugh, K. M., Burke, W. C., Zimmerman, S., Roche, E., Holland, D., Einarsson, J. I., and Walsh, C. J. (January 15, 2014). "A New Laparoscopic Morcellator Using an Actuated Wire Mesh and Bag." ASME. J. Med. Devices. March 2014; 8(1): 011009. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4026294
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