56 research outputs found

    Tendon-Driven Notched Needle for Robot-Assisted Prostate Interventions

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    M.S

    Robotic System Development for Precision MRI-Guided Needle-Based Interventions

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    This dissertation describes the development of a methodology for implementing robotic systems for interventional procedures under intraoperative Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) guidance. MRI is an ideal imaging modality for surgical guidance of diagnostic and therapeutic procedures, thanks to its ability to perform high resolution, real-time, and high soft tissue contrast imaging without ionizing radiation. However, the strong magnetic field and sensitivity to radio frequency signals, as well as tightly confined scanner bore render great challenges to developing robotic systems within MRI environment. Discussed are potential solutions to address engineering topics related to development of MRI-compatible electro-mechanical systems and modeling of steerable needle interventions. A robotic framework is developed based on a modular design approach, supporting varying MRI-guided interventional procedures, with stereotactic neurosurgery and prostate cancer therapy as two driving exemplary applications. A piezoelectrically actuated electro-mechanical system is designed to provide precise needle placement in the bore of the scanner under interactive MRI-guidance, while overcoming the challenges inherent to MRI-guided procedures. This work presents the development of the robotic system in the aspects of requirements definition, clinical work flow development, mechanism optimization, control system design and experimental evaluation. A steerable needle is beneficial for interventional procedures with its capability to produce curved path, avoiding anatomical obstacles or compensating for needle placement errors. Two kinds of steerable needles are discussed, i.e. asymmetric-tip needle and concentric-tube cannula. A novel Gaussian-based ContinUous Rotation and Variable-curvature (CURV) model is proposed to steer asymmetric-tip needle, which enables variable curvature of the needle trajectory with independent control of needle rotation and insertion. While concentric-tube cannula is suitable for clinical applications where a curved trajectory is needed without relying on tissue interaction force. This dissertation addresses fundamental challenges in developing and deploying MRI-compatible robotic systems, and enables the technologies for MRI-guided needle-based interventions. This study applied and evaluated these techniques to a system for prostate biopsy that is currently in clinical trials, developed a neurosurgery robot prototype for interstitial thermal therapy of brain cancer under MRI guidance, and demonstrated needle steering using both asymmetric tip and pre-bent concentric-tube cannula approaches on a testbed

    Using the Fringe Field of MRI Scanner for the Navigation of Microguidewires in the Vascular System

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    Le traitement du cancer, la prĂ©vention des accidents vasculaires cĂ©rĂ©braux et le diagnostic ou le traitement des maladies vasculaires pĂ©riphĂ©riques sont tous des cas d'application d'interventions Ă  base de cathĂ©ter par le biais d'un traitement invasif minimal. Cependant, la pratique du cathĂ©tĂ©risme est gĂ©nĂ©ralement pratiquĂ©e manuellement et dĂ©pend fortement de l'expĂ©rience et des compĂ©tences de l'interventionniste. La robotisation du cathĂ©tĂ©risme a Ă©tĂ© Ă©tudiĂ©e pour faciliter la procĂ©dure en augmentant les niveaux d’autonomie par rapport Ă  cette pratique clinique. En ce qui concerne ce problĂšme, un des problĂšmes concerne le placement super sĂ©lectif du cathĂ©ter dans les artĂšres plus Ă©troites nĂ©cessitant une miniaturisation de l'instrument cathĂ©ter / fil de guidage attachĂ©. Un microguide qui fonctionne dans des vaisseaux sanguins Ă©troits et tortueux subit diffĂ©rentes forces mĂ©caniques telles que le frottement avec la paroi du vaisseau. Ces forces peuvent empĂȘcher la progression de la pointe du fil de guidage dans les vaisseaux. Une mĂ©thode proposĂ©e consiste Ă  appliquer une force de traction Ă  la pointe du microguide pour diriger et insĂ©rer le dispositif tout en poussant l’instrument attachĂ© Ă  partir de l’autre extrĂ©mitĂ© n’est plus pratique, et Ă  exploiter le gradient du champ de franges IRM surnommĂ© Fringe Field Navigation (FFN ) est proposĂ©e comme solution pour assurer cet actionnement. Le concept de FFN repose sur le positionnement d'un patient sur six DOF dans le champ pĂ©riphĂ©rique du scanner IRM afin de permettre un actionnement directionnel pour la navigation du fil-guide. Ce travail rend compte des dĂ©veloppements requis pour la mise en oeuvre de la FFN et l’étude du potentiel et des possibilitĂ©s qu’elle offre au cathĂ©tĂ©risme, en veillant au renforcement de l’autonomie. La cartographie du champ de franges d'un scanner IRM 3T est effectuĂ©e et la structure du champ de franges en ce qui concerne son uniformitĂ© locale est examinĂ©e. Une mĂ©thode pour la navigation d'un fil de guidage le long d'un chemin vasculaire souhaitĂ© basĂ©e sur le positionnement robotique du patient Ă  six DOF est dĂ©veloppĂ©e. Des expĂ©riences de FFN guidĂ©es par rayons X in vitro et in vivo sur un modĂšle porcin sont effectuĂ©es pour naviguer dans un fil de guidage dans la multibifurcation et les vaisseaux Ă©troits. Une caractĂ©ristique unique de FFN est le haut gradient du champ magnĂ©tique. Il est dĂ©montrĂ© in vitro et in vivo que cette force surmonte le problĂšme de l'insertion d'un fil microguide dans des vaisseaux tortueux et Ă©troits pour permettre de faire avancer le fil-guide avec une distale douce au-delĂ  de la limite d'insertion manuelle. La robustesse de FFN contre les erreurs de positionnement du patient est Ă©tudiĂ©e en relation avec l'uniformitĂ© locale dans le champ pĂ©riphĂ©rique. La force Ă©levĂ©e du champ magnĂ©tique disponible dans le champ de franges IRM peut amener les matĂ©riaux magnĂ©tiques doux Ă  son Ă©tat de saturation. Ici, le concept d'utilisation d'un ressort est prĂ©sentĂ© comme une alternative vi dĂ©formable aux aimants permanents solides pour la pointe du fil-guide. La navigation d'un microguide avec une pointe de ressort en structure vasculaire complexe est Ă©galement rĂ©alisĂ©e in vitro. L'autonomie de FFN en ce qui concerne la planification d'une procĂ©dure avec autonomie de tĂąche obtenue dans ce travail augmente le potentiel de FFN en automatisant certaines Ă©tapes d'une procĂ©dure. En conclusion, FFN pour naviguer dans les microguides dans la structure vasculaire complexe avec autonomie pour effectuer le positionnement du patient et contrĂŽler l'insertion du fil de guidage - avec dĂ©monstration in vivo dans un modĂšle porcin - peut ĂȘtre considĂ©rĂ© comme un nouvel outil robotique facilitant le cathĂ©tĂ©risme vasculaire. tout en aidant Ă  cibler les vaisseaux lointains dans le systĂšme vasculaire.----------ABSTRACT Treatment of cancer, prevention of stroke, and diagnosis or treatment of peripheral vascular diseases are all the cases of application of catheter-based interventions through a minimal-invasive treatment. However, performing catheterization is generally practiced manually, and it highly depends on the experience and the skills of the interventionist. Robotization of catheterization has been investigated to facilitate the procedure by increasing the levels of autonomy to this clinical practice. Regarding it, one issue is the super selective placement of the catheter in the narrower arteries that require miniaturization of the tethered catheter/guidewire instrument. A microguidewire that operates in narrow and tortuous blood vessels experiences different mechanical forces like friction with the vessel wall. These forces can prevent the advancement of the tip of the guidewire in the vessels. A proposed method is applying a pulling force at the tip of the microguidewire to steer and insert the device while pushing the tethered instrument from the other end is no longer practical, and exploiting the gradient of the MRI fringe field dubbed as Fringe Field Navigation (FFN) is proposed as a solution to provide this actuation. The concept of FFN is based on six DOF positioning of a patient in the fringe field of the MRI scanner to enable directional actuation for the navigation of the guidewire. This work reports on the required developments for implementing FFN and investigating the potential and the possibilities that FFN introduces to the catheterization, with attention to enhancing the autonomy. Mapping the fringe field of a 3T MRI scanner is performed, and the structure of the fringe field regarding its local uniformity is investigated. A method for the navigation of a guidewire along a desired vascular path based on six DOF robotic patient positioning is developed. In vitro and in vivo x-ray Guided FFN experiments on a swine model of are performed to navigate a guidewire in the multibifurcation and narrow vessels. A unique feature of FFN is the high gradient of the magnetic field. It is demonstrated in vitro and in vivo that this force overcomes the issue of insertion of a microguidewire in tortuous and narrow vessels to enable advancing the guidewire with a soft distal beyond the limit of manual insertion. Robustness of FFN against the error in the positioning of the patient is investigated in relation to the local uniformity in the fringe field. The high strength of the magnetic field available in MRI fringe field can bring soft magnetic materials to its saturation state. Here, the concept of using a spring is introduced as a deformable alternative to solid permanent magnets for the tip of the guidewire. Navigation of a microguidewire with a viii spring tip in complex vascular structure is also performed in vitro. The autonomy of FFN regarding planning a procedure with Task Autonomy achieved in this work enhances the potential of FFN by automatization of certain steps of a procedure. As a conclusion, FFN to navigate microguidewires in the complex vascular structure with autonomy in performing tasks of patient positioning and controlling the insertion of the guidewire – with in vivo demonstration in swine model – can be considered as a novel robotic tool for facilitating the vascular catheterization while helping to target remote vessels in the vascular system

    Computer-Assisted Electroanatomical Guidance for Cardiac Electrophysiology Procedures

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    Cardiac arrhythmias are serious life-threatening episodes aïŹ€ecting both the aging population and younger patients with pre-existing heart conditions. One of the most eïŹ€ective therapeutic procedures is the minimally-invasive catheter-driven endovascular electrophysiology study, whereby electrical potentials and activation patterns in the aïŹ€ected cardiac chambers are measured and subsequent ablation of arrhythmogenic tissue is performed. Despite emerging technologies such as electroanatomical mapping and remote intraoperative navigation systems for improved catheter manipulation and stability, successful ablation of arrhythmias is still highly-dependent on the operator’s skills and experience. This thesis proposes a framework towards standardisation in the electroanatomical mapping and ablation planning by merging knowledge transfer from previous cases and patient-speciïŹc data. In particular, contributions towards four diïŹ€erent procedural aspects were made: optimal electroanatomical mapping, arrhythmia path computation, catheter tip stability analysis, and ablation simulation and optimisation. In order to improve the intraoperative electroanatomical map, anatomical areas of high mapping interest were proposed, as learned from previous electrophysiology studies. Subsequently, the arrhythmic wave propagation on the endocardial surface and potential ablation points were computed. The ablation planning is further enhanced, ïŹrstly by the analysis of the catheter tip stability and the probability of slippage at sparse locations on the endocardium and, secondly, by the simulation of the ablation result from the computation of convolutional matrices which model mathematically the ablation process. The methods proposed by this thesis were validated on data from patients with complex congenital heart disease, who present unusual cardiac anatomy and consequently atypical arrhythmias. The proposed methods also build a generic framework for computer guidance of electrophysiology, with results showing complementary information that can be easily integrated into the clinical workïŹ‚ow.Open Acces

    A Survey on the Current Status and Future Challenges Towards Objective Skills Assessment in Endovascular Surgery

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    Minimally-invasive endovascular interventions have evolved rapidly over the past decade, facilitated by breakthroughs in medical imaging and sensing, instrumentation and most recently robotics. Catheter based operations are potentially safer and applicable to a wider patient population due to the reduced comorbidity. As a result endovascular surgery has become the preferred treatment option for conditions previously treated with open surgery and as such the number of patients undergoing endovascular interventions is increasing every year. This fact coupled with a proclivity for reduced working hours, results in a requirement for efficient training and assessment of new surgeons, that deviates from the “see one, do one, teach one” model introduced by William Halsted, so that trainees obtain operational expertise in a shorter period. Developing more objective assessment tools based on quantitative metrics is now a recognised need in interventional training and this manuscript reports the current literature for endovascular skills assessment and the associated emerging technologies. A systematic search was performed on PubMed (MEDLINE), Google Scholar, IEEXplore and known journals using the keywords, “endovascular surgery”, “surgical skills”, “endovascular skills”, “surgical training endovascular” and “catheter skills”. Focusing explicitly on endovascular surgical skills, we group related works into three categories based on the metrics used; structured scales and checklists, simulation-based and motion-based metrics. This review highlights the key findings in each category and also provides suggestions for new research opportunities towards fully objective and automated surgical assessment solutions

    Characterizing Cardiac Electrophysiology during Radiofrequency Ablation : An Integrative Ex vivo, In silico, and In vivo Approach

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    Catheter ablation is a major treatment for atrial tachycardias. Hereby, the precise monitoring of the lesion formation is an important success factor. This book presents computational, wet-lab, and clinical studies with the aim of evaluating the signal characteristics of the intracardiac electrograms (IEGMs) recorded around ablation lesions from different perspectives. The detailed analysis of the IEGMs can optimize the description of durable and complex lesions during the ablation procedure
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