
Saturday, August 20, 2011
Catheter in use

Sunday, August 14, 2011
Cathter PR


This image is a much more honest semi-scientific result. It is an overlay of the catheter being controlled with electrical current while reaching around obstacles placed on a flat board. One consequence of the overlay is that it is tough to tell which pieces of catheter belong to which element of the overlay, giving the illusion that the catheter has three segments. I was hoping to create this image by exposing the same piece of film multiple times while I steered the catheter around. This did not create the effect that I was looking for so I ended overlaying the different positions with varying levels of opacity to give the illusion of movement. This one has also been a surprisingly long lived image and I think it still represents clearly what we are trying to do.
And finally, the image that we put in the university engineering magazine. I really wanted to make a clean looking image for the magazine but unfortunately only had some dirty old foam board to use as a background. The catheter itself was also an older prototype which had degraded in appearance after sitting out in the open for too long. In photoshop, I cleaned up the background to give it a more uniform tone and fiddled with the white balance to return the catheter to a more healthy looking hue. I also rotated the dime so that it would look like I had actually been paying attention to little details like that while taking the picture! The coin-curl is the classic pose for a catheter PR photo and I couldn't resist trying to recreate it here even though this particular prototype was not capable of tightly enclosing the coin. Perhaps a quarter or a dollar coin would have been a better choice.

Catheter Cross Section

Atrial Fibrillation
I don't really know how to use any animation software so each frame was made as a .png using Paint.net and warp functions to make the heart move. The frames were sequenced, repeated and assembled into movie files which I then edited together with movie maker. No one would be fooled into thinking we actually paid anyone to do this, but it was used in a local news story about our lab!
Early Liver Retractor Demo
This is another video that I made of an earlier prototype of the liver retractor. It does not include the write portion of the retractor which allows the fingers to be manipulated much more nimbly due to the reduced friction in the line back to the motor box. The steel wire that is controlling the movement of the retractor is wound around motors that are housed in the aluminum box in the background of the video. I used a braided metal hose from home depot to prevent kinking in the line guiding the pull wires back to the box.
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