
|
|
Friday, November 27,
1998 |
Bright future for research centre
The National Centre for Laser Applications used laser treatment to
develop innovative manufacturing process for use in invasive coronary
surgery, writes Madeleine Lyons
Rapid advances in the manufacturing process have led to a boom in the
use of laser technology for productionline and automation processes. Now a
laser research centre based at NUI Galway is establishing itself as a
centre of excellence for the application of laser technology to medical
devices.
Following an approach from Arterial Vascular Engineering - one of the
world's largest medical device manufacturers - the National Centre for
Laser Applications recently employed laser treatment to develop an
innovative manufacturing process for use in conducting minimally invasive
coronary surgery.
Arterial Vascular Engineering, which recently took over the activities
of C. R. Bard in Galway, specialises in the production of equipment for
minimally invasive surgery, including coronary angioplasty. The National
Centre for Laser Applications was charged with developing a means of
making this process safer through the application of laser technology.
Coronary surgery can currently be carried out by making an incision in
the patient's wrist and passing a rigid tube along the vascular system to
the heart. At the end of the tube a small inflated balloon gets pushed
beyond any blockage, and pulled back to clear it away. In the case of a
collapsed artery, the balloon is surrounded by a small cage, which remains
as an arterial support after the balloon has been deflated and removed.
The US Food and Drug Administration authority stipulates stringent
requirements and a high level of reliability on products as concise as
this. The problem Arterial Vascular Engineering faced was to develop a
system which enabled the drilling of tiny, precise holes in the rigid
tube. Conventional techniques like pinhole drilling proved unsuitable, so
it turned to the National Centre for Laser Applications to see how laser
could be employed. In a project lasting nine months, the process moved
from the concept phase to prototype fabrication and testing to final
process workstation development.
Now the workstation is on the factory floor at Arterial Vascular
Engineering in Galway, which is producing the new product for export
markets all over the world. According to Mr David Stern, director of
radiology research and development at the Galway facility, the added
functionality of the new product poses a potentially lucrative market
opportunity for his company. It plans to transfer the entire laser process
to its parent company in the US early in the new year.
Because Arterial Vascular Engineering is in the process of securing
patent protection on the product, the National Centre for Laser
Applications will not disclose the details of how its laser process has
been used to improve the tube. However, according to Mr Tony Flaherty, a senior research
scientist at the national laser centre, the new mechanism will
"significantly increase its reliability, and eliminate the possibility of
failure".
Laser technology allows the projection of very controlled amounts of
energy into a very small area, enabling high precision cutting, welding
and drilling, ideal for developing smaller and smaller devices allowing
greater access to obscure parts of the human body. Mr Flaherty believes his company can gain directly from its
innovations, by shifting away from developing products on a contract basis
for other companies and, instead, licensing the technology to clients
while retaining the intellectual property rights. There are also
increasing opportunities for grant-aided development. The Arterial
Vascular Engineering development cost about £26,000, and was 50 per cent
funded by Enterprise Ireland's applied research grant scheme.
"There are long-term benefits to gain from the technology being
developed here. In principle NUI Galway is interested in campus company
spin-offs based around contract research and development for specific
industries," says Mr Flaherty.
Established in 1989, the National Centre for Laser Applications
operates on about £200,000 per year, with funding divided evenly between
industry and State sponsorship. There are 10 people with backgrounds in
chemistry and physics working on a fulltime basis, and in the last four
years the centre has seen annual increases in business of more than 50 per
cent. This reflects how laser technology has reached an acceptable level
of maturity, with sales worldwide growing by 25 per cent each year. The
Arterial Vascular Engineering product is the third laser-based technology
to be transferred by the laser company to Irish industry this year. It
recently completed a successful collaboration with Irish company,
Creganna, which specialises in the supply of parts to high-technology
manufacturers in the electronics and health-care fields. The national
laser centre worked closely with the company to develop a laser process
for accurately stripping polymer coatings in localised areas from steel
tubes. According to Mr Niall Quinn, director of production at Creganna:
"The process has given us a competitive advantage in terms of quality and
productivity. The adoption of laser technology is now a key strategy in
our plans for future expansion of the quality and range of our services."
The centre has also been involved in international collaborations,
perhaps most notably with Aerospatiale, the French manufacturer of
Concorde and Airbus. Because polymers - increasingly used to replace metal
alloy in airframe manufacture - have to be treated with adhesives via a
cumbersome process, the national laser centre devised a way to apply laser
technology to polymer surfaces. This eliminated the use of solvents in the
process.
|