AUBURN, Ala., Oct. 29, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Students from Auburn University’s Mechanical Engineering and Industrial Design programs recently witnessed something pretty special: the public unveiling of a surgical device prototype they helped to develop.
“When it came time to boot up the device at the convention and we saw it worked flawlessly, I felt myself breathe a sigh of relief,” said alumna Haley Duncan, who graduated in the spring. “And when the manufacturers and nurses had positive reactions, it definitely put a smile on my face.”
Duncan and her fellow mechanical engineering classmates Savannah Anderson, Joseph Freeman and Jake Garza, as well as Master of Industrial Design student Sheridan Kromann, were part of a research team that worked with KYRA Medical, Inc., a global manufacturer of medical equipment, to create a new surgical device. As KYRA’s special guests at the Association of Perioperative Registered Nurses’ (AORN) annual conference in Boston earlier this year, they got to witness the premiere of their design in front of industry professionals.
A much-needed solution
When performing arthroscopic procedures, surgeons use a small camera to view and repair joints throughout the body, including hips, knees, wrists and shoulders. While these are minimally invasive surgeries, they require a great deal of saline fluid pumped from IV bags to keep surgical sites clean.
Currently, nurses must change the IV bags quickly every time an alarm goes off — a hectic event that can distract the surgeon and even interrupt the surgery. But the Auburn team’s prototype eliminates that rushed response.
“This device automatically switches over to a new bag as each one empties,” said Shea Tillman, the Bauhaus Professor in the College of Architecture, Design and Construction. “It provides a non-disruptive means of managing and monitoring the fluid for surgical procedures.”
In constant communication
This past year, KYRA staff members held weekly video chats and visited campus several times to collaborate with students and faculty, which included Chad Rose and Michael Zabala from the Samuel Ginn College of Engineering and Tillman.
“KYRA is an established and well-respected medical startup, and the energy their tightly knit team brings to a project like this quickly transferred to our team at Auburn,” Tillman said. “They are a very hands-on ‘prototype-fast-and-early’ group that is excited about sharing what they know about product development with our students.”
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