Carnegie Mellon’s Biomedical Engineering Researchers Developing New Tool to Help Control Blood Loss During Surgery
March 11, 2010
Contact: Chriss Swaney
Carnegie Mellon University
412.268.5776
PITTSBURGH-Carnegie Mellon University's Matt Oberdier is developing a new hydrosurgery system to help physicians better manage excessive bleeding during surgery.
Oberdier,
a Ph.D. candidate in biomedical engineering at Carnegie Mellon, said his system
will be designed to help surgeons readily clear excess blood and control
bleeding during critical stages involving brain operations.
"We
are creating a device that will house a clear, hermetically sealed dome through
which instruments may be passed, and a special pump to apply fluid pressure and
monitor the flow to the surgical area," Oberdier said.
Surgeons
need a clear view during brain operations because they have to navigate deep
inside the skull and control very small blood vessels.
"About
half of all surgeons' time is spent trying to control some level of bleeding
during most operations," said James Burgess, a neurosurgeon at Allegheny
General Hospital and an adjunct lecturer in Carnegie Mellon's Biomedical
Engineering Department. "This new tool will save time and has the potential to
benefit more than 35 million patients worldwide," said Burgess, Oberdier's
co-advisor.
James
Antaki, a professor of biomedical engineering at Carnegie Mellon and Oberdier's
co-advisor, said the future of biomedical engineering rests with the
development of cutting-edge tools for physicians and hospitals. Antaki is part
of an interdisciplinary team that developed a blood pump that provides up to
six months of extended circulatory support for children and infants recovering
from heart surgery or awaiting a heart transplant.
Oberdier
earned a bachelor's degree in chemical engineering in 2003 and a master's
degree in biomedical engineering in 2005 from the University of Akron.