Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS) needs continuous tool design innovation to support and facilitate the complex task executions of surgeons. In this article, an easily deployable magnetic structure design is presented, which is developed to retract the liver during MIS procedures. During the concept designing phase, a most critical research question, the stability of magnetic anchoring was investigated and analyzed through various experiments. The clinically relevant pulling forces have been applied to N52 neodymium magnets in different size, shape and arrangement to derive the maximum force certain retractor designs could withheld. The numeric results confirmed that the distributed load arrangement would be able to perform a stable human liver retraction. Magnetic encoring technology could have a significant future, encouraging other researchers to investigate the potential of magnetic tissue retraction in MIS procedures that could lead to the development of specialized tools for human clinical deployment.
The rise and advancement of minimally invasive surgery (MIS) has significantly improved patient outcomes, yet its technical challenges—such as tissue manipulation and tissue retraction—are not yet overcome. Robotic surgery offers some compensation for the ergonomic challenges, as retraction typically requires an extra robotic arm, which makes the complete system more costly. Our research aimed to explore the potential of rapidly deployable structures for soft tissue actuation and retraction, developing clinical and technical requirements and putting forward a critically evaluated concept design. With systematic measurements, we aimed to assess the load capacities and force tolerance of different magnetic constructions. Experimental and simulation work was conducted on the magnetic coupling technology to investigate the conditions where the clinically required lifting force of 11.25 N could be achieved for liver retraction. Various structure designs were investigated and tested with N52 neodymium magnets to create stable mechanisms for tissue retraction. The simplified design of a new MIS laparoscopic instrument was developed, including a deployable structure connecting the three internal rod magnets with joints and linkages that could act as an actuator for liver retraction. The deployable structure was designed to anchor strings or bands that could facilitate the lifting or sideways folding of the liver creating sufficient workspace for the target upper abdominal procedures. The critical analysis of the project concluded a notable potential of the developed solution for achieving improved liver retraction with minimal tissue damage and minimal distraction of the surgeon from the main focus of the operation, which could be beneficial, in principle, even at robot-assisted procedures.
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