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A Pneumatic-Based Mechanism for Inserting a Flexible Microprobe Into the Brain

journal contribution
posted on 2022-03-01, 00:00 authored by Naser Sharafkhani, Abbas KouzaniAbbas Kouzani, Scott AdamsScott Adams, John LongJohn Long, Julius Orwa
Abstract
Insertion of flexible microprobes into the brain requires withstanding the compressive penetration force by the microprobes. To aid the insertion of the microprobes, most of the existing approaches use pushing mechanisms to provide temporary stiffness increase for the microprobes to prevent buckling during insertion into the brain. However, increasing the microprobe stiffness may result in acute neural tissue damage during insertion. Moreover, any late or premature removal of the temporary stiffness after insertion may lead to further tissue damage due to brain micromotion or inaccuracy in the microprobe positioning. In this study, a novel pneumatic-based insertion mechanism is proposed which simultaneously pulls and pushes a flexible microprobe toward the brain. As part of the brain penetration force in the proposed mechanism is supplied by the tensile force, the applied compressive force, which the microprobe must withstand during insertion, is lower compared with the existing approaches. Therefore, the microprobes with a critical buckling force less than the brain penetration force can be inserted into the brain without buckling. Since there is no need for temporary stiffness increment, neural tissue damage during the microprobe insertion will be much lower compared with the existing insertion approaches. The pneumatic-based insertion mechanism is modeled analytically to investigate the effects of the microprobe configuration and the applied air pressure on the applied tensile and compressive forces to the microprobe. Next, finite element modeling is conducted, and its analysis results not only validate the analytical results but also confirm the efficiency of the mechanism.

History

Journal

Journal of Applied Mechanics

Volume

89

Issue

3

Article number

ARTN 031010

Pagination

1 - 10

Publisher

American Society of Mechanical Engineers

Location

New York, N.Y.

ISSN

0021-8936

eISSN

1528-9036

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal