pathology, often developed after piercing (Brent et
al., 1978, Vachiramon et al., 2004, Chang et al., 2005,
Yigit et al. Coll., 2009; Park and Chang, 2013;
Tanaydin et al., 2016). The effectiveness of these
means of compression relies on the reduction of the
post-surgical relapse of the earlobe keloid, observed
to a range of 10 to 30% (Vachiramon et al., 2004, Park
and Chang, 2013, Tanaydin et al. 2016).
Even if these works have been presented, there is
no current consensus or shared “gold standard”
practice for the treatment of the ear, particularly its
compression lobe. One of the causes being the lack of
solid clinical trials on the subject (Louis and Gracia,
2010). We proposed then a work assembling from the
beginning different experts around the development
of a quite unpretentious medical device, which
materialize in fact the center of complex
considerations.
2 THE ADVENTURE OF
EMERGENCE OF THE IDEA
In 2014, a surgeon from our university hospital,
contacted the clinical investigation research center for
a need related to his clinical practice, in fact the
medical problem announced in part 1 of this abstract.
His difficulty concerned then the reccurrences of
keloid scars on an important proportion of his
patients, which he yet treated consciensioulsy with
intralesional resection plus corticosteroids -
triamcinolone acetonide injection.
Meeting the research engineers, he explained his
needs in a system to add to the current care, relatively
to the litterature arguments in favor of a compression
of these specific tissues on one point, and to the
existing proposed solutions on another point.
At the beginning the deal seemed to be fairly
simple:
the possibility of adjustment of the pressure by the
patient himself (within a limit of the maximum
number of magnets imposed by the clinician) would
favorize the observance of the device and its comfort.
For the few existing studies on the subject, correlation
between keloid recurrence of the ear and discomfort
in wearing a device has been proved to be correlated
(Tanaydin et al, 2016), which may be related to poor
adherence to the application of pressure procedure.
Following works in collaborations with other
clinicians (to confort the shared property of the
expressed need), engineering and business local
schools (bibliographic, research & development,
clinical, and market analysis successive training
periods), as well as with engineering research center,
permitted to formalize a state of the art, and the first
drafts of the value analysis and specifications of the
innovation, in terms of ergonomy, adaptability, cost,
aesthetic...
The collaborations led then to the design of a
product as well as evaluations all along the
progression.
3 TECHNOLOGICAL
DEVELOPMENTS: THE “SCAR
WARS” PROJECT
Based on brainstorming and on the kind of “Santa
letter-writing” desires from the clinicians, but also
from the specific anatomical area, and from the
technical constraints, the prototypes were first
computer-aided designed (Figure 1 left) to format,
modelize the idea and project the skateholders into a
first view of the possible object.
From that, discussions led - beginning of 2015 -
to adaptations before an agreement on the general
shape and on primary dimensioning options.
The next step consisted in a 3D printing thanks to
stereolithography: few samples of different sizes
where produces, manipulated and confronted to the
ear lobes of healthy volunteers (from the
team…Figure 1 right).
It permitted to define then the size, but also to
determine the fact that our idea would need to be
constitued of a clip on which magnets could be easily
inserted. We had our proof of concept definition
prototype.
Figure 1: Digital and first physical version of the clip.
At the same time, bench lab tests on magnets
figured out their sizing - and in fact the possible
applied strengths.
A support associated with a dynamometer system
measured the forces in work with different magnets
and depending of the distance between.
According to the results, for a coherent lobe
thickness plus a pressure to be applied (from the
litterature) of 25 to 35 mmHg, we defined that we