193 research outputs found

    Modeling and Force Estimation of Cardiac Catheters for Haptics-enabled Tele-intervention

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    Robot-assisted cardiovascular intervention (RCI) systems have shown success in reducing the x-ray exposure to surgeons and patients during cardiovascular interventional procedures. RCI systems typically are teleoperated systems with leader-follower architecture. With such system architecture, the surgeon is placed out of the x-ray exposure zone and uses a console to control the robot remotely. Despite its success in reducing x-ray exposure, clinicians have identified the lack of force feedback as to its main technological limitation that can lead to vascular perforation of the patient’s vessels and even their death. The objective of this thesis was to develop, verify, and validate mechatronics technology for real-time accurate and robust haptic feedback rendering for RCI systems. To attain the thesis objective, first, a thorough review of the state-of-the-art clinical requirements, modeling approaches and methods, and current knowledge gaps for the provision of force feedback for RCI systems was performed. Afterward, a real-time tip force estimation method based on image-based shape-sensing and learning-from-simulation was developed and validated. The learning-based model was fairly accurate but required a large database for training which was computationally expensive. Next, a new mechanistic model, i.e., finite arc method (FAM) for soft robots was proposed, formulated, solved, and validated that allowed for fast and accurate modeling of catheter deformation. With FAM, the required training database for the proposed learning-from-simulation method would be generated with high speed and accuracy. In the end, to robustly relay the estimated forces from real-time imaging from the follower robot to the leader haptic device, a novel impedance-based force feedback rendering modality was proposed and implemented on a representative teleoperated RCI system for experimental validation. The proposed method was compared with the classical direct force reflection method and showed enhanced stability, robustness, and accuracy in the presence of communication disruption. The results of this thesis showed that the performance of the proposed integrated force feedback rendering system was in fair compliance with the clinical requirements and had superior robustness compared to the classical direct force reflection method

    Teleoperation of MRI-Compatible Robots with Hybrid Actuation and Haptic Feedback

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    Image guided surgery (IGS), which has been developing fast recently, benefits significantly from the superior accuracy of robots and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) which is a great soft tissue imaging modality. Teleoperation is especially desired in the MRI because of the highly constrained space inside the closed-bore MRI and the lack of haptic feedback with the fully autonomous robotic systems. It also very well maintains the human in the loop that significantly enhances safety. This dissertation describes the development of teleoperation approaches and implementation on an example system for MRI with details of different key components. The dissertation firstly describes the general teleoperation architecture with modular software and hardware components. The MRI-compatible robot controller, driving technology as well as the robot navigation and control software are introduced. As a crucial step to determine the robot location inside the MRI, two methods of registration and tracking are discussed. The first method utilizes the existing Z shaped fiducial frame design but with a newly developed multi-image registration method which has higher accuracy with a smaller fiducial frame. The second method is a new fiducial design with a cylindrical shaped frame which is especially suitable for registration and tracking for needles. Alongside, a single-image based algorithm is developed to not only reach higher accuracy but also run faster. In addition, performance enhanced fiducial frame is also studied by integrating self-resonant coils. A surgical master-slave teleoperation system for the application of percutaneous interventional procedures under continuous MRI guidance is presented. The slave robot is a piezoelectric-actuated needle insertion robot with fiber optic force sensor integrated. The master robot is a pneumatic-driven haptic device which not only controls the position of the slave robot, but also renders the force associated with needle placement interventions to the surgeon. Both of master and slave robots mechanical design, kinematics, force sensing and feedback technologies are discussed. Force and position tracking results of the master-slave robot are demonstrated to validate the tracking performance of the integrated system. MRI compatibility is evaluated extensively. Teleoperated needle steering is also demonstrated under live MR imaging. A control system of a clinical grade MRI-compatible parallel 4-DOF surgical manipulator for minimally invasive in-bore prostate percutaneous interventions through the patient’s perineum is discussed in the end. The proposed manipulator takes advantage of four sliders actuated by piezoelectric motors and incremental rotary encoders, which are compatible with the MRI environment. Two generations of optical limit switches are designed to provide better safety features for real clinical use. The performance of both generations of the limit switch is tested. MRI guided accuracy and MRI-compatibility of whole robotic system is also evaluated. Two clinical prostate biopsy cases have been conducted with this assistive robot

    Modeling and Control of Steerable Ablation Catheters

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    Catheters are long, flexible tubes that are extensively used in vascular and cardiac interventions, e.g., cardiac ablation, coronary angiography and mitral valve annuloplasty. Catheter-based cardiac ablation is a well-accepted treatment for atrial fibrillation, a common type of cardiac arrhythmia. During this procedure, a steerable ablation catheter is guided through the vasculature to the left atrium to correct the signal pathways inside the heart and restore normal heart rhythm. The outcome of the ablation procedure depends mainly on the correct positioning of the catheter tip at the target location inside the heart and also on maintaining a consistent contact between the catheter tip and cardiac tissue. In the presence of cardiac and respiratory motions, achieving these goals during the ablation procedure is very challenging without proper 3D visualization, dexterous control of the flexible catheter and an estimate of the catheter tip/tissue contact force. This research project provides the required basis for developing a robotics-assisted catheter manipulation system with contact force control for use in cardiac ablation procedures. The behavior of the catheter is studied in free space as well in contact with the environment to develop mathematical models of the catheter tip that are well suited for developing control systems. The validity of the proposed modeling approaches and the performance of the suggested control techniques are evaluated experimentally. As the first step, the static force-deflection relationship for ablation catheters is described with a large-deflection beam model and an optimized pseudo-rigid-body 3R model. The proposed static model is then used in developing a control system for controlling the contact force when the catheter tip is interacting with a static environment. Our studies also showed that it is possible to estimate the tip/tissue contact force by analyzing the shape of the catheter without installing a force sensor on the catheter. During cardiac ablation, the catheter tip is in contact with a relatively fast moving environment (cardiac tissue). Robotic manipulation of the catheter has the potential to improve the quality of contact between the catheter tip and cardiac tissue. To this end, the frequency response of the catheter is investigated and a control technique is proposed to compensate for the cardiac motion and to maintain a constant tip/tissue contact force. Our study on developing a motion compensated robotics-assisted catheter manipulation system suggests that redesigning the actuation mechanism of current ablation catheters would provide a major improvement in using these catheters in robotics-assisted cardiac ablation procedures
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