DocumentCode :
1568166
Title :
Mercury-free mouse ICSI with rotationally oscillating drill (Ros-Drill©)
Author :
Ergenc, Ali Fuat ; Li, Ming-Wen ; Toner, Mehmet ; Biggers, John D. ; Lloyd, K. C Kent ; Olgac, Nejat
Author_Institution :
Control Eng. Dept., Istanbul Tech. Univ., Istanbul
fYear :
2009
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
1
Abstract :
ICSI (intracytoplasmic sperm injection) is an important and commonly used assisted reproductive technology (ART) in humans and animals. However, conventional ICSI has proven to be difficult and inefficient, especially in mice. Fortunately, the application of piezo-electric technology to assist the injection process has made ICSI more effective and efficient in recent years. Despite this advance, the pipette tip is unstable in response to the force exerted by the piezoelectric pulse during injection. To some extent, this instability can be mitigated by the use of mercury, which is highly toxic. In an effort to overcome these hurdles, we developed and tested a completely different and mercury-free technology, called the ldquoRos-Drillcopyrdquo (rotationally oscillating drill), which uses a microprocessor-controlled actuator to generate rotational oscillations on a spiked micropipette. ICSI utilizing the Ros-Drillcopy requires neither mercury nor piezoelectricity. Early experimental trials reveal high survival (>70% of the injected oocytes), fertilization (>80% of the survived oocytes), and blastocyst formation rates (~50% of the survived oocytes). After surgical transfer of blastocysts created by Ros-Drillcopy ICSI into pseudopregnant surrogate mothers, healthy pups were born and weaned. Because the Ros-Drill ICSI technique is automated, a very short training period is required, especially for specialists. These studies in mice have revealed, that Ros-Drill ICSI has mentioned advantages over conventional and piezo-assisted ICSI starting with the elimination of mercury in the process.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; piezoelectricity; surgery; Ros-Drill; blastocysts; fertilization; healthy pups; injected oocytes; intracytoplasmic sperm injection; mercury-free mouse ICSI; microprocessor-controlled actuator; piezo-assisted ICSI; piezoelectricity; pseudopregnant surrogate mothers; rotationally oscillating drill; spiked micropipette; surgical transfer; survived oocytes; Biological cells; Biomedical engineering; Control engineering; Engineering in medicine and biology; Hospitals; Humans; Mechanical engineering; Mice; Pediatrics; Subspace constraints;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Bioengineering Conference, 2009 IEEE 35th Annual Northeast
Conference_Location :
Boston, MA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4362-8
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4364-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/NEBC.2009.4967747
Filename :
4967747
Link To Document :
بازگشت