Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Winners announced from 22 entries in COBI’s 2018 Business Plan Competition

Narges Shayesteh Moghaddam, left, is congratulated by Dr. Sonny Ariss for her first place finish in the 2018COBI Business Innovation Competition  for her QuickFlow product.



Left to right, Third place winner, Retractor: Ahmadreza Jahadakbar, Parisa Bayatimalayeri. Second place winner, The Fierce: Tyler Ray, Rebecca Potts, Emily Wallace, Caren Aramouni, Therese Orsagos. First place winner, QuickFlow: Narges Shayesteh Moghaddam.
The winners of the 8th Annual University of Toledo College of Business and Innovation's Business Innovation Competition were announced on April 19, with the first place $10,000 prize awarded to Narges Shayesteh Moghaddam for her QuickFlow product.


Quickflow is a novel device offers several advantages over PMT (Percutaneous Mechanical Thrombectomy) devices currently on the market and provides a higher degree of authority and maneuverability for capturing and removing clots. The prototype device uses a pair of superelastic Nitinol-capturing elements to aid in the collection of a thrombus and minimize distal embolization.

“The incidence of pulmonary embolism is estimated to be 650,000 cases per year, and the mortality rate is estimated at approximately 100,000 deaths per year which making pulmonary embolism the third most common cause of death for hospitalized patients in the US,” Moghaddam said.  “As current treatments specifically for acute massive and submassive PEs patients are not effective, we have decided to develop and commercialize QuickFlow PE a thrombectomy device which addresses the shortcomings of current therapies or surgical procedures, and also provides a non-invasive procedure with lower cost solution.”

“Our device design and the method of deployment distinguish it from the competition in several ways. ThermoMorph’s  (ThermoMorph is a startup company established by inventors from the University of Toledo to develop QuickFlow) device has a smaller profile and can capture and encircle the entire clot for retrieval the whole clots without distal embolization. We are working to develop this device since 2015,” Moghaddam said. “The main problem was how to optimize the baskets to maximize its authority to capture the different size of blood clots without shearing off.”

Other members of the Quickflow team are Dr. Mohammad Elahinia, professor of mechanical engineering, Hamdy Ibrahim and Reza Mehrabi. The coinventors of the device are Dr. Elahinia, Dr. Rajesh Gupta, assistant professor of medicine and an interventional cardiologist, and Dr. Christopher Cooper, professor of medicine, dean of the UT College of Medicine and Life Sciences.

“Our goal is to help increase the number and scale up businesses in Ohio,” Dr. Sonny Ariss, Chair of the COBI Department of Management, told the winners.  “We are willing to support you, to provide free advice about how to spend, where to spend and when not to spend.  Your prize money is a major leap. Don’t underestimate yourself. Surround yourself with a great advisory board.”

“This year the Business Plan Competition had 22 total submissions with business plan ideas ranging from bioengineering to mechanical engineering to recreation and consumer related products,” Dr. Ariss added.

“Of the 22, seven semifinalists were selected for an oral presentation in front of the judges.”
Finishing in second place was the Fierce, by Tyler Ray, Rebecca Potts, Emily Wallace, Caren Aramouni and Therese Orsagos.  FIERCE is the Female Individual Ergonomically Re-designed Carrying Equipment (FIERCE), a new rucksack intended for female soldiers in all branches of the military. It intends to reduce the weight pot onto the spine and increase the weight on the hips through multiple innovations based on the biomechanics and anatomy of the female.

Finishing in third place was Retractor by Parisa Bayatimalayeri, Ahmadreza Jahadakbar, Mohammad Elahinia and E. Ishmael Parsai. The Rectal Retractor is a minimally invasive device to move the rectum away from the vicinity of the radiation field and also the path of the radiation beam allows for delivery of higher doses of radiation per fraction and shorter treatment days while eliminating the undesirable damage to the rectal tissue.

The COBI Business Plan Competition was open to all UT faculty, staff and students.  The first place $10,000 prize is sponsored by O-I; second place $5,000 prize is sponsored by Chuck and Ann Hodge Business Plan Competition Fund; and the third place $2,000 prize is sponsored by PNC Bank.


1 comment:

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