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An Electronic Force Sensor for Medical Jet Injection

Author(s)
Demas, Nickolas P; Hunter, Ian W
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Article is made available in accordance with the publisher's policy and may be subject to US copyright law. Please refer to the publisher's site for terms of use.
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Abstract
© 2019 by ASME. In medical jet injection, a narrow fluid drug stream is propelled at high velocity into skin without a needle. Previous studies have shown that the volume delivered is highly dependent on a number of factors. This paper details the development of an electronic force sensor for medical jet injection and shows that the normal contact force exerted on the tissue by the nozzle is an additional factor affecting volume delivered. Using this sensor, we measure the forces at the nozzle tip in the normal direction with a sensitivity of 18 μN, calibrated over a range from 1 N to 8 N with a mean absolute error of 8 μN, and a maximum overload of 300 N. We further measure forces at the nozzle tip in the lateral direction with a sensitivity of 8 μN, calibrated over a range from 0.1 N to 7 N, with a mean absolute error of 101mN for lateral contact force magnitude and 1.60 deg for lateral contact force direction. Experimental validation confirms that the force sensor does not adversely affect the accuracy and precision of ejected volume from the jet injector. We use this setup to examine the effect of normal contact force on volume delivered into postmortem porcine tissue. Experimental results demonstrate that volume delivered with normal contact force between 4 N and 8 N is significantly more accurate and precise compared to volume delivered with normal contact force between 0N and 3.9 N.
Date issued
2019
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/135171
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering
Journal
Journal of Medical Devices
Publisher
ASME International

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