The deployment of an implant in the body is an often repeated and advantageous procedure performed during the practice of modern medicine. Implants may be used for innumerable purposes including the delivery of therapeutic for short and prolonged periods of time and for the structural support of failing internal cavities and lumens. Implants may be deployed in either case through non-invasive procedures such as endoscopy and through more invasive procedures that require large incisions into the body of a patient. The non-invasive and less-invasive procedures are generally used when the target area is accessible through a lumen of the body while the more invasive procedures may be employed when the target area is located deep within the body or otherwise not readily accessible through a lumen of the body.
Invasive procedures have a higher financial cost and inflict a greater amount of trauma to the patient than non-invasive procedures. Consequently, non-invasive procedures are generally preferred over invasive procedures when given the choice. In certain circumstances, however, it may not be efficient or plausible to perform a procedure non-invasively. In these circumstances, more-invasive procedures may be required despite their shortcomings. For instance, when an implant needs to be deployed deep into the body in an area that is not readily accessible through a lumen or an external orifice an invasive procedure may be the only plausible technique. Similarly, when the target area is located deep within a muscle or tissue that does not have a nearby or sufficiently large lumen to provide access to the target site an invasive procedure may, again, be the only plausible technique. Consequently, in these situations as well as in others, a practitioner may be left with no choice but to perform an invasive procedure to deploy the implant to the targeted area.