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Materials for multifunctional balloon catheters with capabilities in cardiac electrophysiological mapping and ablation therapy
Author(s) -
DaeHyeong Kim,
Nanshu Lu,
Roozbeh Ghaffari,
YunSoung Kim,
Stephen P. Lee,
Lizhi Xu,
Jian Wu,
Rak-Hwan Kim,
Jizhou Song,
Zhuangjian Liu,
Jonathan Viventi,
Bassel de Graff,
Brian Elolampi,
Moussa Mansour,
Marvin J. Slepian,
SukWon Hwang,
Joshua D. Moss,
Sangmin Won,
Younggang Huang,
Brian Litt,
John A. Rogers
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
nature materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 14.344
H-Index - 483
eISSN - 1476-4660
pISSN - 1476-1122
DOI - 10.1038/nmat2971
Subject(s) - inflatable , context (archaeology) , biocompatible material , biomedical engineering , balloon catheter , radiofrequency ablation , ablation , computer science , balloon , nanotechnology , materials science , medicine , surgery , mechanical engineering , engineering , paleontology , biology
Developing advanced surgical tools for minimally invasive procedures represents an activity of central importance to improving human health. A key challenge is in establishing biocompatible interfaces between the classes of semiconductor device and sensor technologies that might be most useful in this context and the soft, curvilinear surfaces of the body. This paper describes a solution based on materials that integrate directly with the thin elastic membranes of otherwise conventional balloon catheters, to provide diverse, multimodal functionality suitable for clinical use. As examples, we present sensors for measuring temperature, flow, tactile, optical and electrophysiological data, together with radiofrequency electrodes for controlled, local ablation of tissue. Use of such 'instrumented' balloon catheters in live animal models illustrates their operation, as well as their specific utility in cardiac ablation therapy. The same concepts can be applied to other substrates of interest, such as surgical gloves.

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