A biopsy is a procedure to remove a small piece of tissue or a sample of cells from your body so that a suspicious tissue can be examined in a laboratory. Tissue samples can be taken from almost anywhere in your body, including skin, organs and other structures. The quality of the sample taken by biopsy is very important for diagnosis, although the way the samples are taken and the tissues taken vary. There are different biopsy techniques described in the literature: Needle biopsies, endoscopic biopsies, skin biopsies, surgical biopsies, bone marrow biopsies.
Needle biopsies are used in the diagnosis of many cancers in daily practice. Needle biopsy technique is divided into two: fine needle aspiration biopsy and thick needle biopsies (Tru-cut biopsies). Thick needle biopsies are performed under local or general anesthesia and accompanied by imaging methods. Compared to the needles used in fine needle aspiration biopsies, larger diameter semi-automatic or automatic biopsy needles are used. After the needle is advanced into the tissue, it is fired and tissue is taken into the notch at the tip of the needle. The needle removed from the tissue is opened outside the patient and the tissue in the notch of the needle is removed by different methods, placed in a container filled with formol and sent to the pathology.
In this project, it is aimed to develop a device that will enable the tissue sample in the biopsy needle to be taken into the formol solution without fragmenting (damaging) the tissue sample, without the need for extra personnel other than the physician and to complete the process quickly.
About Project Supervisors
Bekir Bediz