In contrast to commercially available equipment that is permanently installed in the operating theatre, Nanoflex’s magnetic field generator is significantly lighter and thus has a wider range of applications. It can be wheeled into the operating theatre as needed and requires only power and water.
ETH engineer Chautems spent over five years in Nelson’s research group developing the magnetic catheter and researching how to downsize the system. “Our goal was to generate a magnetic field within the smallest possible space to bring the size and weight of the equipment down. We finally cracked it by developing a new, now-patented cooling system for the electromagnet,” explains Chautems, who comes from the western part of Switzerland and first joined ETH Zurich for his Bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering. As a result, the smaller and more flexible magnetic navigation system will be significantly cheaper than competing products.
At every big hospital
The company founders’ vision is for every big hospital to have one of their magnetic navigation systems in future. Until then, however, they still have a lot of work to do: “We’re currently testing our prototype on a silicone model of the human body,” Chautems says.
The aim is to obtain approval for the U.S. market in two years. To this end, the young company must not only assess every conceivable risk and establish ways to minimise them, but also present a solid plan for how to manufacture the system in a standardised way and how to operate it with maximum reliability.
The twelve-person team around Chautems and Curran is confident that the system will enter the market, and that the technology will lend itself to other fields as well, such as heart and eye surgery, gastroscopy and foetal surgery.