5,417 research outputs found

    Optical Fibre-based Force Sensing Needle Driver for Minimally Invasive Surgery

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    Minimally invasive surgery has been limited from its inception by insufficient haptic feedback to surgeons. The loss of haptic information threatens patients safety and results in longer operation times. To address this problem, various force sensing systems have been developed to provide information about tool–tissue interaction forces. However, the provided results for axial and grasping forces have been inaccurate in most of these studies due to considerable amount of error and uncertainty in their force acquisition method. Furthermore, sterilizability of the sensorized instruments plays a pivotal role in accurate measurement of forces inside a patient\u27s body. Therefore, the objective of this thesis was to develop a sterilizable needle-driver type grasper using fibre Bragg gratings. In order to measure more accurate and reliable tool–tissue interaction forces, optical force sensors were integrated in the grasper jaw to measure axial and grasping forces directly at their exertion point on the tool tip. Two sets of sensor prototypes were developed to prove the feasibility of proposed concept. Implementation of this concept into a needle-driver instrument resulted in the final proposed model of the sensorized laparoscopic instrument. Fibre Bragg gratings were used for measuring forces due to their many advantages for this application such as small size, sterilizability and high sensitivity. Visual force feedback was provided for users based on the acquired real-time force data. Improvement and consideration points related to the current work were identified and potential areas to continue this project in the future are discussed

    Three-Axis Fiber-Optic Body Force Sensor for Flexible Manipulators

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    This paper proposes a force/torque sensor structure that can be easily integrated into a flexible manipulator structure. The sensor's ring-like structure with its hollow inner section provides ample space for auxiliary components, such as cables and tubes, to be passed through and, hence, is very suitable for integration with tendon-driven and fluid-actuated manipulators. The sensor structure can also accommodate the wiring for a distributed sensor system as well as for diagnostic instruments that may be incorporated in the manipulator. Employing a sensing approach based on optical fibers as done here allows for the creation of sensors that are free of electrical currents at the point of sensing and immune to magnetic fields. These sensors are inherently safe when used in the close vicinity of humans and their measuring performance is not impaired when they are operated in or nearby machines, such as magnetic resonance imaging scanners. This type of sensor concept is particularly suitable for inclusion in instruments and robotic tools for minimally invasive surgery. This paper summarizes the design, integration challenges, and calibration of the proposed optical three-axis force sensor. The experimental results confirm the effectiveness of our optical sensing approach and show that after calibrating its stiffness matrix, force and momentum components can be determined accurately

    Three-Axis Fiber-Optic Body Force Sensor for Flexible Manipulators

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    This paper proposes a force/torque sensor structure that can be easily integrated with a flexible manipulator structure. The sensor’s ring-like structure with its hollow inner section provides ample space for auxiliary components, such as cables and tubes, to be passed through and, hence, is very suitable for integration with tendon-driven and fluid-actuated manipulators. The sensor structure can also accommodate the wiring for a distributed sensor system as well as for diagnostic instruments that may be incorporated in the manipulator. Employing a sensing approach based on optical fibers as done here allows for the creation of sensors that are free of electrical currents at the point of sensing and immune to magnetic fields. These sensors are inherently safe when used in the close vicinity of humans and their measuring performance is not impaired when they are operated in or nearby machines such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanners. This type of sensor concept is particularly suitable for inclusion in instruments and robotic tools for minimally invasive surgery (MIS). The paper summarizes the design, integration challenges and calibration of the proposed optical three-axis force sensor. The experimental results confirm the effectiveness of our optical sensing approach and show that after calibrating its stiffness matrix, force and momentum components can be determined accurately

    Wireless tools for neuromodulation

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    Epilepsy is a spectrum of diseases characterized by recurrent seizures. It is estimated that 50 million individuals worldwide are affected and 30% of cases are medically refractory or drug resistant. Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) and deep brain stimulation (DBS) are the only FDA approved device based therapies. Neither therapy offers complete seizure freedom in a majority of users. Novel methodologies are needed to better understand mechanisms and chronic nature of epilepsy. Most tools for neuromodulation in rodents are tethered. The few wireless devices use batteries or are inductively powered. The tether restricts movement, limits behavioral tests, and increases the risk of infection. Batteries are large and heavy with a limited lifetime. Inductive powering suffers from rapid efficiency drops due to alignment mismatches and increased distances. Miniature wireless tools that offer behavioral freedom, data acquisition, and stimulation are needed. This dissertation presents a platform of electrical, optical and radiofrequency (RF) technologies for device based neuromodulation. The platform can be configured with features including: two channels differential recording, one channel electrical stimulation, and one channel optical stimulation. Typical device operation consumes less than 4 mW. The analog front end has a bandwidth of 0.7 Hz - 1 kHz and a gain of 60 dB, and the constant current driver provides biphasic electrical stimulation. For use with optogenetics, the deep brain optical stimulation module provides 27 mW/mm2 of blue light (473 nm) with 21.01 mA. Pairing of stimulating and recording technologies allows closed-loop operation. A wireless powering cage is designed using the resonantly coupled filter energy transfer (RCFET) methodology. RF energy is coupled through magnetic resonance. The cage has a PTE ranging from 1.8-6.28% for a volume of 11 x 11 x 11 in3. This is sufficient to chronically house subjects. The technologies are validated through various in vivo preparations. The tools are designed to study epilepsy, SUDEP, and urinary incontinence but can be configured for other studies. The broad application of these technologies can enable the scientific community to better study chronic diseases and closed-loop therapies

    A Magnetic Laser Scanner for Endoscopic Microsurgery

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    Laser scanners increase the quality of the laser microsurgery enabling fast tissue ablation with less thermal damage. Such technology is part of state-of-the-art freebeam surgical laser systems. However, laser scanning has not been incorporated to fiber-based lasers yet. This is a combination that has potential to greatly improve the quality of laser microsurgeries on difficult-to-reach surgical sites. Current fiberbased tissue ablations are performed in contact with the tissue, resulting in excessive thermal damage to healthy tissue in the vicinity of the ablated tissue. This is far from ideal for delicate microsurgeries, which require high-quality tissue incisions without any thermal damage or char formation. However, the possibility to perform scanning laser microsurgery in confined workspaces is restricted by the large size of currently available actuators, which are typically located outside the patient and require direct line-of-sight to the microsurgical area. Thus, it is desired to have the laser scanning feature in an endoscopic system to provide high incision quality in hard-to-reach surgical sites. This thesis aims to introduce a new endoscopic laser scanner to perform 2D position control and high-speed scanning of a fiber-based laser for operation in narrow workspaces. It also presents a technology concept aimed at assisting in incision depth control during soft-tissue microsurgery. The main objective of the work presented in this thesis is to bring the benefits of free-beam lasers to laser-based endoscopic surgery by designing an end-effector module to be placed at the distal tip of a flexible robot arm. To this end, the design and control of a magnetic laser scanner for endoscopic microsurgeries is presented. The system involves an optical fiber, electromagnetic coils, a permanent magnet and optical lenses in a compact system for laser beam deflection. The actuation mechanism is based on the interaction between the electromagnetic field and the permanent magnets. A cantilevered optical fiber is bended with the magnetic field induced by the electromagnetic coils by creating magnetic torque on the permanent magnet. The magnetic laser scanner provides 2D position control and high-speed scanning of the laser beam. The device includes laser focusing optics to allow non-contact incisions. A proof-of-concept device was manufactured and evaluated. It includes four electromagnetic coils and two plano-convex lenses, and has an external diameter of 13 mm. A 4 74 mm2 scanning range was achieved at a 30 mm distance from the scanner tip. Computer-controlled trajectory executions demonstrated repeatable results with 75 m precision for challenging trajectories. Frequency analysis demonstrated stable response up to 33 Hz for 3 dB limit. The system is able to ablate tissue substitutes with a 1940 nm wavelength surgical diode laser. Tablet-based control interface has been developed for intuitive teleoperation. The performance of the proof-of-concept device is analysed through control accuracy and usability studies. Teleoperation user trials consisting in trajectory-following tasks involved 12 subjects. Results demonstrated users could achieve an accuracy of 39 m with the magnetic laser scanner system. For minimally invasive surgeries, it is essential to perform accurate laser position control. Therefore, a model based feed-forward position control of magnetic laser scanner was developed for automated trajectory executions. First, the dynamical model of the system was identified using the electromagnets current (input) and the laser position (output). Then, the identified model was used to perform feedforward control. Validation experiments were performed with different trajectory types, frequencies and amplitudes. Results showed that desired trajectories can be executed in high-speed scanning mode with less than 90 m (1.4 mrad bending angle) accuracy for frequencies up to 15 Hz. State-of-the-art systems do not provide incision depth control, thus the quality of such control relies entirely on the experience and visual perception of the surgeons. In order to provide intuitive incision depth control in endoscopic microsurgeries, the concept of a technology was presented for the automated laser incisions given a desired depth based on a commercial laser scanner. The technology aims at automatically controlling laser incisions based on high-level commands from the surgeon, i.e. desired incision shape, length and depth. A feed-forward controller provides (i) commands to the robotic laser system and (ii) regulates the parameters of the laser source to achieve the desired results. The controller for the incision depth is extracted from experimental data. The required energy density and the number of passes are calculated to reach the targeted depth. Experimental results demonstrate that targeted depths can be achieved with \ub1100 m accuracy, which proves the feasibility of this approach. The proposed technology has the potential to facilitate the surgeon\u2019s control over laser incisions. The magnetic laser scanner enables high-speed laser positioning in narrow and difficult-to-reach workspaces, promising to bring the benefits of scanning laser microsurgery to flexible endoscopic procedures. In addition, the same technology can be potentially used for optical fiber based imaging, enabling for example the creation of new family of scanning endoscopic OCT or hyperspectral probes

    Modular MRI Guided Device Development System: Development, Validation and Applications

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    Since the first robotic surgical intervention was performed in 1985 using a PUMA industrial manipulator, development in the field of surgical robotics has been relatively fast paced, despite the tremendous costs involved in developing new robotic interventional devices. This is due to the clear advantages to augmented a clinicians skill and dexterity with the precision and reliability of computer controlled motion. A natural extension of robotic surgical intervention is the integration of image guided interventions, which give the promise of reduced trauma, procedure time and inaccuracies. Despite magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) being one of the most effective imaging modalities for visualizing soft tissue structures within the body, MRI guided surgical robotics has been frustrated by the high magnetic field in the MRI image space and the extreme sensitivity to electromagnetic interference. The primary contributions of this dissertation relate to enabling the use of direct, live MR imaging to guide and assist interventional procedures. These are the two focus areas: creation both of an integrated MRI-guided development platform and of a stereotactic neural intervention system. The integrated series of modules of the development platform represent a significant advancement in the practice of creating MRI guided mechatronic devices, as well as an understanding of design requirements for creating actuated devices to operate within a diagnostic MRI. This knowledge was gained through a systematic approach to understanding, isolating, characterizing, and circumventing difficulties associated with developing MRI-guided interventional systems. These contributions have been validated on the levels of the individual modules, the total development system, and several deployed interventional devices. An overview of this work is presented with a summary of contributions and lessons learned along the way

    Review: optical fiber sensors for civil engineering applications

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    Optical fiber sensor (OFS) technologies have developed rapidly over the last few decades, and various types of OFS have found practical applications in the field of civil engineering. In this paper, which is resulting from the work of the RILEM technical committee “Optical fiber sensors for civil engineering applications”, different kinds of sensing techniques, including change of light intensity, interferometry, fiber Bragg grating, adsorption measurement and distributed sensing, are briefly reviewed to introduce the basic sensing principles. Then, the applications of OFS in highway structures, building structures, geotechnical structures, pipelines as well as cables monitoring are described, with focus on sensor design, installation technique and sensor performance. It is believed that the State-of-the-Art review is helpful to engineers considering the use of OFS in their projects, and can facilitate the wider application of OFS technologies in construction industry

    Roadmap on semiconductor-cell biointerfaces.

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    This roadmap outlines the role semiconductor-based materials play in understanding the complex biophysical dynamics at multiple length scales, as well as the design and implementation of next-generation electronic, optoelectronic, and mechanical devices for biointerfaces. The roadmap emphasizes the advantages of semiconductor building blocks in interfacing, monitoring, and manipulating the activity of biological components, and discusses the possibility of using active semiconductor-cell interfaces for discovering new signaling processes in the biological world

    From Concept to Market: Surgical Robot Development

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    Surgical robotics and supporting technologies have really become a prime example of modern applied information technology infiltrating our everyday lives. The development of these systems spans across four decades, and only the last few years brought the market value and saw the rising customer base imagined already by the early developers. This chapter guides through the historical development of the most important systems, and provide references and lessons learnt for current engineers facing similar challenges. A special emphasis is put on system validation, assessment and clearance, as the most commonly cited barrier hindering the wider deployment of a system
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