5 research outputs found

    Intraoperative Extraction of Airways Anatomy in VideoBronchoscopy

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    A main bottleneck in bronchoscopic biopsy sampling is to efficiently reach the lesion navigating across bronchial levels. Any guidance system should be able to localize the scope position during the intervention with minimal costs and alteration of clinical protocols. With the final goal of an affordable image-based guidance, this work presents a novel strategy to extract and codify the anatomical structure of bronchi, as well as, the scope navigation path from videobronchoscopy. Experiments using interventional data show that our method accurately identifies the bronchial structure. Meanwhile, experiments using simulated data verify that the extracted navigation path matches the 3D route

    Towards Robot Autonomy in Medical Procedures Via Visual Localization and Motion Planning

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    Robots performing medical procedures with autonomous capabilities have the potential to positively effect patient care and healthcare system efficiency. These benefits can be realized by autonomous robots facilitating novel procedures, increasing operative efficiency, standardizing intra- and inter-physician performance, democratizing specialized care, and focusing the physician’s time on subtasks that best leverage their expertise. However, enabling medical robots to act autonomously in a procedural environment is extremely challenging. The deforming and unstructured nature of the environment, the lack of features in the anatomy, and sensor size constraints coupled with the millimeter level accuracy required for safe medical procedures introduce a host of challenges not faced by robots operating in structured environments such as factories or warehouses. Robot motion planning and localization are two fundamental abilities for enabling robot autonomy. Motion planning methods compute a sequence of safe and feasible motions for a robot to accomplish a specified task, where safe and feasible are defined by constraints with respect to the robot and its environment. Localization methods estimate the position and orientation of a robot in its environment. Developing such methods for medical robots that overcome the unique challenges in procedural environments is critical for enabling medical robot autonomy. In this dissertation, I developed and evaluated motion planning and localization algorithms towards robot autonomy in medical procedures. A majority of my work was done in the context of an autonomous medical robot built for enhanced lung nodule biopsy. First, I developed a dataset of medical environments spanning various organs and procedures to foster future research into medical robots and automation. I used this data in my own work described throughout this dissertation. Next, I used motion planning to characterize the capabilities of the lung nodule biopsy robot compared to existing clinical tools and I highlighted trade-offs in robot design considerations. Then, I conducted a study to experimentally demonstrate the benefits of the autonomous lung robot in accessing otherwise hard-to-reach lung nodules. I showed that the robot enables access to lung regions beyond the reach of existing clinical tools with millimeter-level accuracy sufficient for accessing the smallest clinically operable nodules. Next, I developed a localization method to estimate the bronchoscope’s position and orientation in the airways with respect to a preoperatively planned needle insertion pose. The method can be used by robotic bronchoscopy systems and by traditional manually navigated bronchoscopes. The method is designed to overcome challenges with tissue motion and visual homogeneity in the airways. I demonstrated the success of this method in simulated lungs undergoing respiratory motion and showed the method’s ability to generalize across patients.Doctor of Philosoph

    Appearance Modelling and Reconstruction for Navigation in Minimally Invasive Surgery

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    Minimally invasive surgery is playing an increasingly important role for patient care. Whilst its direct patient benefit in terms of reduced trauma, improved recovery and shortened hospitalisation has been well established, there is a sustained need for improved training of the existing procedures and the development of new smart instruments to tackle the issue of visualisation, ergonomic control, haptic and tactile feedback. For endoscopic intervention, the small field of view in the presence of a complex anatomy can easily introduce disorientation to the operator as the tortuous access pathway is not always easy to predict and control with standard endoscopes. Effective training through simulation devices, based on either virtual reality or mixed-reality simulators, can help to improve the spatial awareness, consistency and safety of these procedures. This thesis examines the use of endoscopic videos for both simulation and navigation purposes. More specifically, it addresses the challenging problem of how to build high-fidelity subject-specific simulation environments for improved training and skills assessment. Issues related to mesh parameterisation and texture blending are investigated. With the maturity of computer vision in terms of both 3D shape reconstruction and localisation and mapping, vision-based techniques have enjoyed significant interest in recent years for surgical navigation. The thesis also tackles the problem of how to use vision-based techniques for providing a detailed 3D map and dynamically expanded field of view to improve spatial awareness and avoid operator disorientation. The key advantage of this approach is that it does not require additional hardware, and thus introduces minimal interference to the existing surgical workflow. The derived 3D map can be effectively integrated with pre-operative data, allowing both global and local 3D navigation by taking into account tissue structural and appearance changes. Both simulation and laboratory-based experiments are conducted throughout this research to assess the practical value of the method proposed

    Re-localisation of microscopic lesions in their macroscopic context for surgical instrument guidance

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    Optical biopsies interrogate microscopic structure in vivo with a 2mm diameter miniprobe placed in contact with the tissue for detection of lesions and assessment of disease progression. After detection, instruments are guided to the lesion location for a new optical interrogation, or for treatment, or for tissue excision during the same or a future examination. As the optical measurement can be considered as a point source of information at the surface of the tissue of interest, accurate guidance can be difficult. A method for re-localisation of the sampling point is, therefore, needed. The method presented in this thesis has been developed for biopsy site re-localisation during a surveillance examination of Barrett’s Oesophagus. The biopsy site, invisible macroscopically during conventional endoscopy, is re-localised in the target endoscopic image using epipolar lines derived from its locations given by the tip of the miniprobe visible in a series of reference endoscopic images. A confidence region can be drawn around the relocalised biopsy site from its uncertainty that is derived analytically. This thesis also presents a method to improve the accuracy of the epipolar lines derived for the biopsy site relocalisation using an electromagnetic tracking system. Simulations and tests on patient data identified the cases when the analytical uncertainty is a good approximation of the confidence region and showed that biopsy sites can be re-localised with accuracies better than 1mm. Studies on phantom and on porcine excised tissue demonstrated that an electromagnetic tracking system contributes to more accurate epipolar lines and re-localised biopsy sites for an endoscope displacement greater than 5mm. The re-localisation method can be applied to images acquired during different endoscopic examinations. It may also be useful for pulmonary applications. Finally, it can be combined with a Magnetic Resonance scanner which can steer cells to the biopsy site for tissue treatment

    Surgical Subtask Automation for Intraluminal Procedures using Deep Reinforcement Learning

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    Intraluminal procedures have opened up a new sub-field of minimally invasive surgery that use flexible instruments to navigate through complex luminal structures of the body, resulting in reduced invasiveness and improved patient benefits. One of the major challenges in this field is the accurate and precise control of the instrument inside the human body. Robotics has emerged as a promising solution to this problem. However, to achieve successful robotic intraluminal interventions, the control of the instrument needs to be automated to a large extent. The thesis first examines the state-of-the-art in intraluminal surgical robotics and identifies the key challenges in this field, which include the need for safe and effective tool manipulation, and the ability to adapt to unexpected changes in the luminal environment. To address these challenges, the thesis proposes several levels of autonomy that enable the robotic system to perform individual subtasks autonomously, while still allowing the surgeon to retain overall control of the procedure. The approach facilitates the development of specialized algorithms such as Deep Reinforcement Learning (DRL) for subtasks like navigation and tissue manipulation to produce robust surgical gestures. Additionally, the thesis proposes a safety framework that provides formal guarantees to prevent risky actions. The presented approaches are evaluated through a series of experiments using simulation and robotic platforms. The experiments demonstrate that subtask automation can improve the accuracy and efficiency of tool positioning and tissue manipulation, while also reducing the cognitive load on the surgeon. The results of this research have the potential to improve the reliability and safety of intraluminal surgical interventions, ultimately leading to better outcomes for patients and surgeons
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