|
Rick
Harp—founder-president of Carlsbad, CA’s Innovative Medical Designs Inc.,
a company that designs and produces tools for use by the medical device
industry—literally took the admonition, “Physician, heal thyself,” to heart.
But Rick is not a physician.
Instead, he’s a rare individual who is both a mechanical design engineer and a
“master machinist,” who has spent the past 10 years designing and building a
surgical tool that will allow neurosurgeons to repair people’s backbones without
destroying the nerves in the spine. Harp’s motive for taking on such a job was
simple. He sustained severe damage to his neck when he was rear-ended in 1996.
“In 1996 I had been hired as a
consultant to solve a design problem for the Braun Thermal Scan Company, the
company that built the Tympanic Temperature instrument that they put in the
ear,” he says. “They had a new model they just couldn’t figure out, and I solved
it. I was on my way to make a presentation to them when I was rear-ended by a
lady in a four-door Cadillac. I had stopped at a traffic light and bent over for
a quick look at my presentation when she hit me. The result was I sustained a
pretty severe neck whiplash problem.”
Over the next year Harp underwent
extensive therapy, but none of it was able to solve his problem.
“Multiple doctors came to the
conclusion that I needed what is called a cervical fusion,” he says, “and
possibly a lumbar (lower back) operation. Basically, what they wanted to do was
to take a piece of bone from my hip or from a cadaver and place it where the
damaged disc is in my neck. The reason they wanted to do that was to open up the
tubular canals called foramen, which are tunnels where the nerves pass through
the spine. The bottom line was that my nerves were being pinched and my hands
were going so numb I couldn’t operate my machining center anymore.”
But Harp didn’t jump at the chance
to have his spine rebuilt without any real hope of success.
“Sometimes those operations work and
sometimes they don’t,” he says. “I kept going to one doctor after another and
asking, ‘Why do you have to perform this fusion procedure?’ Their answer was
that they wanted to relieve the compression on the nerves. So, I asked, ‘Why
can’t you just go in and open up that bony tunnel next to the nerve?’ Their
answer was, ‘There isn’t any known instrument that can do that.’ That answer
shocked me. In the past I had spent ten years designing surgical tools for
American Hospital Supply, so I said, ‘There’s going to be one, because I’m going
to design it.’ That’s how I got started on this project.”
Medical Background
Rick Harp’s background was uniquely
suited to his taking on such a project.
“As a young man, as a mechanical
design engineer working for the big-three automakers, I used to go talk to the
guys in the machine shop, and what I learned from them was that if I wanted to
be a really good design engineer, I needed to learn to build what I designed. As
a result, over the years I became what some used to call a master machinist. And
since then, whenever I hire a young design
engineer to help me, I make sure
they learn to operate my Fadal and to use the Gibbs cad/cam software that runs
it. I tell them, ‘You want to be a good designer, learn to be a good machinist,
too.”
After 10 years in in Detroit, Harp
came to California and spent 7 years working as an aerospace designer developing
high-tech delivery systems for nuclear weapons for such people as Northrup
Grumman. About 25 years ago he took on a consulting job for American Hospital
Supply and became entranced by the problems of designing medical devices.
“I was planning to go on vacation at the time,” he recalls, “but the chief
engineer at American Hospital Supply asked me to spend just two weeks working
with them to solve a problem they had. I agreed and that did it. I got hooked
and spent the next ten years with them.”
Although Harp is not a physician,
after getting involved with the medical field, he was mentored for 10 years by
an orthopedic surgeon who let him attend numerous operations in the operating
theater.
In 1992 Harp formed his own company,
Innovative Medical Designs, Inc.
“I set my company up with a Fadal VMC 3016 and a GibbsCam package,” he says. “I
did that because I was a medical products designer and because of my belief that
a good designer ought to be able to build the the products he designs. I used
the equipment to build and prove out the products I designed for my clients.”
Over the next few years prior to his
accident Harp worked and pursued the passion of his life, which was high-speed
sailing.
“If it floats, I love it,” he says.
“In fact, when the lady rear-ended me, I was busy designing a boat hull that can
physically change shape while under way. It would go from a buoyant hull to a
planing hull. My dream was to enter it into the America’s Cup. But that all
ended with the accident in 1996. That accident changed my life forever.”
Design Problems
One of Harp’s closest friends was a
neurosurgeon with whom he sailed regularly. So, once he began trying to design a
tool that could be used to operate on his spine, he ran his latest ideas past
his friend during their Sunday sailing outings.
“I always brought along sketches,
drawings and models,” he says. “When we finished sailing, we would go for a
hamburger and a drink and I would run my ideas past him. Time after time, for
five years my friend would say, ‘Sorry, Rick, that won’t work. You’ll kill the
patient.”
Finally, however, in 2001 Harp
presented his friend with an idea that raised his eyebrows in surprise.
“I showed him a little aluminum
model of what I now call the SurgiFile,” he says. “My friend pushed back from
the table at the yacht club and said, ‘Rick, I think you have something here.’
And so we took the model to a Dr. Howard Tung, who was assistant professor of
clinical neurosurgery at UC San Diego Medical Center. When Dr. Tung saw the
model, he said, ‘My God, I think that can work!’ And we were off to the races.”
Design Solutions
During the following years Harp had
to solve several major design problems to get a practical, working SurgiFile.
“First, I had to find a way to
protect the nerves from the tool that would be used to cut the bone and open up
the canal around the nerves,” he says. “I finally solved that by inventing a
thin, flat file that operates on top of a metal shield that protects the nerves
below. The file cuts away bone on top while the nerves are pressed down and away
from the action, completely protected from damage.”
But then there was the problem of
how to drive the file, but not use any kind of rotary motion.
“Rotating files in tight places are
dangerous,” he explains. “It’s like a car wheel hitting the street. It tends to
skip sideways. In many aspects of surgery that’s not a problem, but wherever a
doctor is trying to remove bone that’s close to a nerve or an artery, the fact
that this tool can get out of control is literally the kiss of death. A surgeon
first has to do no harm. So, I had to find a way to create a flat shielded
reciprocating file that could be driven at high speed, but without vibration.”
Harp solved the vibration problem by
designing a special toroidal cam follower that he calls a Hybrid Twin Toroid.
Without causing undue vibration, the cam follower converts the rotary motion of
the drive motor into smooth reciprocating motion to drive the flat file.
But there was one last design
problem facing Harp.
“That was to figure out how to keep
the bone filings from building up on the file,” he says. “For that one I turned
to the machine tool designer’s use of through-the-tooling coolant. But in this
case I feed pressurized sterilized water through the end of the SurgiFle. It
squirts 5,000 times a minute or once for every cycle of the reciprocating file.
It keeps the file and the wound clean of bone residue.”
Testing the SurgiFile
So far the SurgiFile has been tested
only on cadavers, Harp reports.
“The SurgiFile was tested on
cadavers in Phoenix, Arizona by world-famous surgeons,” Harp says. “It was
tested by Dr. Larry Khoo, co-director of the comprehensive spine center at UCLA
and the by Dr. Anthony Young, the surgeon who co-wrote the book on minimally
invasive spine surgery. Their conclusion was that the SurgiFile may very well
fundamentally change the way spine surgery is performed.”
The Future
Harp says his company has used up
all the original capital available for development of the SurgiFile.
“We’re two to three years away from
getting FDA approvals and going into high-volume production,” he reports. “We’re
looking for another $10-$15 million of investment capital to keep us going. I
believe we’ll get it, because the SurgiFile works and can improve the lives of
millions of people with debilitating back problems.”
What about his own back problem?
“I’ll be first in line for surgery
with the SurgiFile,” he says. “That’s what this was all about in the first
place.”
—30—
|