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VIBRATIONAL GASTROINTESTINAL MICROROBOTICS Research by Michael Nye
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The problem The solution The process The Project
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Introduction Traditionally, capturing pictures of your GI tract means one of two things: 1. Endoscopes on a long line that is manually manipulated 2. A pill that lets the body do the moving
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Endoscopes A wire is manually inserted into the body with an eyepiece or camera on the end Lower resolution Uncomfortable
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Pill cameras A small pill, ingested orally Slow to gather footage No fine control
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Engineering goal This project is a proof of concept. The goal is to demonstrate: 1. A robot can move using only vibration 2. A device can control the direction a robot moves in 3. All of this could be fit into a pill form factor
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Step 1: Design and fabrication A simple platform was designed that would allow for the most flexibility in testing Several skiffs were constructed that fit into this test platform Intended to limit movement to one direction
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The test platform
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Assorted skiffs for testing
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Test platform, fully equipped
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Step 2: Testing Test platform was hooked up to a power supply, and 2 different skiffs were tested Observational data was collected How the robot behaved – speed, direction, stability Observations were then used to refine a 2 nd gen
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Step 2: Testing (continued) 2 nd generation was tested for: Speed Straight paths
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The test surface Even, paper surface 9 inch-long track Incremental marks along finish line
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The skiffs The data The Observations
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General observations Pager motor’s speed matters The device will naturally move in the direction the pager motor faces The motor induces a spin in the device The skiff must be rigid and sturdy
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The skiff designs
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Skiff tests data table Device timed over a 9 inch course Data is the average of 10 runs each Model Travel time (sec) Drift (inch)Velocity (in/s) #3, “Sled” Mk. II8.14.31.1180 #4, “Spider”17.11.40.5272 #5, “Crossbars”12.92.10.6982
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The new designs The end goal The future
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Analysis of observations The motor takes control None of the designs could move straight Design moves itself forwards Very practical design! With a very small motor and low voltage, the robot could move forward fairly steadily All that’s needed is something to keep the robot from drifting side to side
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The Next Step Adapting the test observations to make a pill shaped robot, powered by a pager motor A pill with two pager motors – one facing forward, one facing backwards This will allow it to travel in two directions – each motor will direct the device without assistance Three rails that can extend from the sides of the pill The rails allow the robot to get a stronger contact with the walls of the GI Tract – this will transfer the motion more smoothly The rails should be able to extend and retract, in order to best contact with the walls
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The pill design
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Bibliography Carlsson. "Sedation for Upper Gastrointestinal Endoscopy." Thieme eJournals 27. (1995): 240-243. Web. 2 Dec 2009.. Kovac. "“Video pill” may supplement standard endoscopy." British Medical Journal (2001). Web. 2 Dec 2009.. Panescu. "An imaging pill for gastrointestinal endoscopy." Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine 24.4 (2005): 12-14. Web. 2 Dec 2009.. Ponsky. "Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy." Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 8.7 (2007): 901-904. Web. 2 Dec 2009.. Tearney. "In Vivo Endoscopic Optical Biopsy with Optical Coherence Tomography." Science 276. (1997). Web. 2 Dec 2009..
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Dr. Mark Rentschler, Mr. Levin Sliker, And the CU Boulder Mechanical Engineering Department for providing this opportunity. Special thanks are owed to…
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