Tissue Preservation Chamber 2012

Introduction to the Project

Problem Statement

Each year, over 1.5 million people in the U.S. are in need of tissue transplant. According to the New York Organ Donor Network(1) , about eighteen people die every day waiting for organ transplants in the U.S. and only one person is added to the waiting list every ten minutes. Only a small faction of people in need of new organ receive successful transplant because many organs are often contaminated or damaged during the transportation or the preservation process due to exposure to contaminated air and extreme temperature.

Currently, tissues are frozen at very low temperature for storage and transportation. However, such method greatly lowers viability of organs, further reducing the chances of successful transplant. Therefore the new method of preservation must be carried out at room temperature or body temperature.

We plan to redesign an existing allograft preservation chamber to solve these problems. Our new design will provide greater protection for the tissue while maintaining sterility for prolonged period of time. Our improved design will keep tissues securely isolated from outside environment in order to minimize contamination. Furthermore, new chamber will allow fluid media to be constantly exchanged without complete exposure of tissues. The new design will also have mechanisms to indicate numerous failures such as freezing and contamination in order to make sure millions of people receive only healthy and viable organs.

Introductory Video

EID103 allograft preservation chamber introductory video

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Ptktp80lbg

Team Members

Click names or photos to access personal pages

David Chen Nathanael Steven Jae Sung Song

———— David Chen —————- Nathanael Steven ————— Jae Sung Song ——-

————– ME 2015 ———————— BSE 2015 ————————- ME 2015 ————

Schedule Time Table

Initials indicate when members are not free

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
9:00 DC,JS JS DC,NS,JS DC
10:00 DC,JS JS DC,NS,JS DC
11:00 DC,NS JS DC,NS DC,NS,JS
12:00 Fres.Sem DC,NS DC,NS
1:00 JS JS
2:00 DC,NS,JS DC,NS JS DC,NS EID 103
3:00 DC,NS,JS DC,NS DC,NS(If there's a Physics exam}
4:00 DC,NS,JS DC,NS JS
5:00
6:00 NS DC,NS NS EID 103
7:00 NS DC,NS NS EID 103
8:00
9:00

Progress

Project Schedule and Minutes

Achievements

Documents

Assignments

Reference

 
start/classes/principlesofdesign/allograftpreservation_2012/start.txt · Last modified: 2012/05/09 03:23 by jsong
 
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