7 research outputs found

    Cable-driven parallel robot assisted confocal imaging of the larynx

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    LaryngoTORS, a transoral laryngeal surgery robot, can manipulate instruments accurately. Confocal imaging has potentials in laryngeal cancer diagnosis but suffer from high scanning requirement. This work studies using LaryngoTORS to assist confocal imaging of larynx

    From Macro to Micro: Autonomous Multiscale Image Fusion for Robotic Surgery

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    In recent years, minimally invasive robotic surgery has shown great promises for enhancing surgical precision and improving patient outcomes. Despite these advances, intraoperative tissue characterisation (such as the identification of cancerous tissue) still relies on traditional biopsy and histology, a process that is time-consuming and often disrupts the normal surgical workflow. In order to provide effective intra-operative decision-making, emerging optical biopsy techniques, such as probe based confocal laser endomicroscopy (pCLE) and optical coherence tomography (OCT), have been developed to provide real-time in vivo, in situ assessment of tissue micro-structures. Clinical deployment of these techniques, however, requires large area surveillance, from macro (mm/cm) to micro (µm) coverage in order to differentiate underlying tissue structures. This article provides a real-time multi-scale fusion scheme for robotic surgery. It demonstrates how the da Vinci surgical robot, used together with the da Vinci Research Kit, can be used for automated 2D scanning of pCLE/OCT probes, providing large area tissue surveillance by image stitching. Open-loop control of the robot provides insufficient precision for probe scanning, and therefore the motion is visually servoed using the live pCLE images (for lateral position) and OCT images (for axial position). The resulting tissue maps can then be fused in real-time with a stereo reconstruction from the laparoscopic video, providing the surgeon with a multi-scale 3D view of the operating site

    Accelerating Surgical Robotics Research: A Review of 10 Years With the da Vinci Research Kit

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    Robotic-assisted surgery is now well-established in clinical practice and has become the gold standard clinical treatment option for several clinical indications. The field of robotic-assisted surgery is expected to grow substantially in the next decade with a range of new robotic devices emerging to address unmet clinical needs across different specialities. A vibrant surgical robotics research community is pivotal for conceptualizing such new systems as well as for developing and training the engineers and scientists to translate them into practice. The da Vinci Research Kit (dVRK), an academic and industry collaborative effort to re-purpose decommissioned da Vinci surgical systems (Intuitive Surgical Inc, CA, USA) as a research platform for surgical robotics research, has been a key initiative for addressing a barrier to entry for new research groups in surgical robotics. In this paper, we present an extensive review of the publications that have been facilitated by the dVRK over the past decade. We classify research efforts into different categories and outline some of the major challenges and needs for the robotics community to maintain this initiative and build upon it

    Cable-driven parallel robot for transoral laser phonosurgery

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    Transoral laser phonosurgery (TLP) is a common surgical procedure in otolaryngology. Currently, two techniques are commonly used: free beam and fibre delivery. For free beam delivery, in combination with laser scanning techniques, accurate laser pattern scanning can be achieved. However, a line-of-sight to the target is required. A suspension laryngoscope is adopted to create a straight working channel for the scanning laser beam, which could introduce lesions to the patient, and the manipulability and ergonomics are poor. For the fibre delivery approach, a flexible fibre is used to transmit the laser beam, and the distal tip of the laser fibre can be manipulated by a flexible robotic tool. The issues related to the limitation of the line-of-sight can be avoided. However, the laser scanning function is currently lost in this approach, and the performance is inferior to that of the laser scanning technique in the free beam approach. A novel cable-driven parallel robot (CDPR), LaryngoTORS, has been developed for TLP. By using a curved laryngeal blade, a straight suspension laryngoscope will not be necessary to use, which is expected to be less traumatic to the patient. Semi-autonomous free path scanning can be executed, and high precision and high repeatability of the free path can be achieved. The performance has been verified in various bench and ex vivo tests. The technical feasibility of the LaryngoTORS robot for TLP was considered and evaluated in this thesis. The LaryngoTORS robot has demonstrated the potential to offer an acceptable and feasible solution to be used in real-world clinical applications of TLP. Furthermore, the LaryngoTORS robot can combine with fibre-based optical biopsy techniques. Experiments of probe-based confocal laser endomicroscopy (pCLE) and hyperspectral fibre-optic sensing were performed. The LaryngoTORS robot demonstrates the potential to be utilised to apply the fibre-based optical biopsy of the larynx.Open Acces

    Autonomous scanning for endomicroscopic mosaicing and 3D fusion

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    Robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery can benefit from the automation of common, repetitive or well-defined but ergonomically difficult tasks. One such task is the scanning of a pick-up endomicroscopy probe over a complex, undulating tissue surface to enhance the effective field-of-view through video mosaicing. In this paper, the da Vinci® surgical robot, through the dVRK framework, is used for autonomous scanning and 2D mosaicing over a user-defined region of interest. To achieve the level of precision required for high quality mosaic generation, which relies on sufficient overlap between consecutive image frames, visual servoing is performed using a combination of a tracking marker attached to the probe and the endomicroscopy images themselves. The resulting sub-millimetre accuracy of the probe motion allows for the generation of large mosaics with minimal intervention from the surgeon. Images are streamed from the endomicroscope and overlaid live onto the surgeons view, while 2D mosaics are generated in real-time, and fused into a 3D stereo reconstruction of the surgical scene, thus providing intuitive visualisation and fusion of the multi-scale images. The system therefore offers significant potential to enhance surgical procedures, by providing the operator with cellular-scale information over a larger area than could typically be achieved by manual scanning

    Augmented Reality Assistance for Surgical Interventions using Optical See-Through Head-Mounted Displays

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    Augmented Reality (AR) offers an interactive user experience via enhancing the real world environment with computer-generated visual cues and other perceptual information. It has been applied to different applications, e.g. manufacturing, entertainment and healthcare, through different AR media. An Optical See-Through Head-Mounted Display (OST-HMD) is a specialized hardware for AR, where the computer-generated graphics can be overlaid directly onto the user's normal vision via optical combiners. Using OST-HMD for surgical intervention has many potential perceptual advantages. As a novel concept, many technical and clinical challenges exist for OST-HMD-based AR to be clinically useful, which motivates the work presented in this thesis. From the technical aspects, we first investigate the display calibration of OST-HMD, which is an indispensable procedure to create accurate AR overlay. We propose various methods to reduce the user-related error, improve robustness of the calibration, and remodel the calibration as a 3D-3D registration problem. Secondly, we devise methods and develop hardware prototype to increase the user's visual acuity of both real and virtual content through OST-HMD, to aid them in tasks that require high visual acuity, e.g. dental procedures. Thirdly, we investigate the occlusion caused by the OST-HMD hardware, which limits the user's peripheral vision. We propose to use alternative indicators to remind the user of unattended environment motion. From the clinical perspective, we identified many clinical use cases where OST-HMD-based AR is potentially helpful, developed applications integrated with current clinical systems, and conducted proof-of-concept evaluations. We first present a "virtual monitor'' for image-guided surgery. It can replace real radiology monitors in the operating room with easier user control and more flexibility in positioning. We evaluated the "virtual monitor'' for simulated percutaneous spine procedures. Secondly, we developed ARssist, an application for the bedside assistant in robotic surgery. The assistant can see the robotic instruments and endoscope within the patient body with ARssist. We evaluated the efficiency, safety and ergonomics of the assistant during two typical tasks: instrument insertion and manipulation. The performance for inexperienced users is significantly improved with ARssist, and for experienced users, the system significantly enhanced their confidence level. Lastly, we developed ARAMIS, which utilizes real-time 3D reconstruction and visualization to aid the laparoscopic surgeon. It demonstrates the concept of "X-ray see-through'' surgery. Our preliminary evaluation validated the application via a peg transfer task, and also showed significant improvement in hand-eye coordination. Overall, we have demonstrated that OST-HMD based AR application provides ergonomic improvements, e.g. hand-eye coordination. In challenging situations or for novice users, the improvements in ergonomic factors lead to improvement in task performance. With continuous effort as a community, optical see-through augmented reality technology will be a useful interventional aid in the near future
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