Biomedical Engineering in Ireland (IT Sligo) Group

The IT Sligo group currently comprises two academic staff (Dr John Hession and Dr Leo Creedon), one technical advisor (Gordon Muir) and four postgraduate students.

  • Members
  • Equipment
  • History
  • Funding
  • Publications
  • Members

    Research is currently focused in the area of orthopaedics and in particular bone fracture. Postgraduate students are involved in various projects dedicated to these areas, a brief outline of which is given below, for more information

    John O’ Toole is using an acoustic emission system to locate the source of bone fractures in bovine bone.

    Michael Cafferty is carrying out an investigation into the effects of vibration and fatigue on bovine bone using an in house materials tester.

    Robert Carroll is using high speed cameras and an acoustic emission system to investigate the formation of damage in bone.

    Padraig Varley is using a vibration system and a computer modelling package to investigate the effect of fractures in ovine bone.

    The laboratory of the Biomedical Engineering Group is equiped with essential equipment for orthopaedic research and is managed by our technical advisor, Gordon Muir. The following is not an exhaustive list of instruments available on site to the research group.

    Equipment

    Instron 8874 Materials Testing Machine

    Topcon, Scanning Electron Microscope

    Veeco, White Light Interferometer (Optical Profiling System)

    Stemmer, High Speed Camera

    Nikon M600 Microscope with JenoptikC5 500 Megapixel Camera and ProgRes CapturePro software.

    Buehler IsoMet Low Speed Saw

    Physical Acoustic Corporation, Acoustic Emission System

    Bruel & Kjaer, Vibration System

    National Instruments, PXI Data Acquisition System

    History

    The Biomedical Engineering Group was established in 1998 when Dr Brendan McCormack joined the staff at IT Sligo.The group grew when Gordon Muir joined the staff and research commenced in three areas:  analysis of the cutting process of biological materials (lead by Ger Reilly), modelling abdominal activity (lead by Dr John Hession) and cell culturing (lead by Dr Brendan McCormack and Dr Jerry Bird) .The mathematical and statistical research component for the group is led by Dr Leo Creedon.

    Graduates of the Biomedical Engineering in Ireland (IT Sligo) Group

    Masters Doctorate
    Eamonn Price John Hession
    Hamid Khalili Parsa Cormac Flynn
    Ashkan Safari  
    Saied Kasiri  
    Tomas Burke  

    Funding

    Over €1 million of funding has being awarded to the group since 1999 for a range of biomedical projects.

    Grant Holder Source of Income Project Start End Amount  ( €)
    McCormack Graduate Training programme(DOE) Monitoring of Bowel Activity 2000 2002 23,000
    McCormack ,Bird ,NUIG HEA/PRTLI3 Macro and Micro Physical Characterisation and Modelling of Vascular Tissue 2002 2005 137,530
    McCormack & Reilly Enterprise Ireland(ATRP)2002/422 Sharpness of Serrated Blades 2002 2006 243,000 
    McCormack & Reilly & UCD Council of Directors, Strand 111 Program for Investigation and Specification of Cutting Edge Sharpness 2002 2006 340,000
    McCormack Hession Enterprise Ireland Innovation Partnerships IP/2002/560 Development of Non –Invasive Monitoring Techniques to Detect Bowel Sounds 2002 2004 9,000
    McCormack Hession Sligo General Hospital Collaborative Project With Clinical Practitioners Into Bowel Activity 2003 2004 2,000
    Reilly PRTLI, TSR, Strand 111 Investigation with Acoustic Emissions to Monitor and Detect Micro cracking in Bone 2008 2012 394,000

    Back to Top