| Literature DB >> 27520552 |
Sotiris Avgousti1, Eftychios G Christoforou2, Andreas S Panayides3,4, Sotos Voskarides5, Cyril Novales6, Laurence Nouaille6, Constantinos S Pattichis4, Pierre Vieyres6.
Abstract
Teleoperated medical robotic systems allow procedures such as surgeries, treatments, and diagnoses to be conducted across short or long distances while utilizing wired and/or wireless communication networks. This study presents a systematic review of the relevant literature between the years 2004 and 2015, focusing on medical teleoperated robotic systems which have witnessed tremendous growth over the examined period. A thorough insight of telerobotics systems discussing design concepts, enabling technologies (namely robotic manipulation, telecommunications, and vision systems), and potential applications in clinical practice is provided, while existing limitations and future trends are also highlighted. A representative paradigm of the short-distance case is the da Vinci Surgical System which is described in order to highlight relevant issues. The long-distance telerobotics concept is exemplified through a case study on diagnostic ultrasound scanning. Moreover, the present review provides a classification into short- and long-distance telerobotic systems, depending on the distance from which they are operated. Telerobotic systems are further categorized with respect to their application field. For the reviewed systems are also examined their engineering characteristics and the employed robotics technology. The current status of the field, its significance, the potential, as well as the challenges that lie ahead are thoroughly discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Medical robotics; Surgical robotics; Telemanipulation; Telemedicine; Teleoperation; Telepresence; Telerobotics; mHealth
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27520552 PMCID: PMC4983067 DOI: 10.1186/s12938-016-0217-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Eng Online ISSN: 1475-925X Impact factor: 2.819
Fig. 2Robotized tele-ultrasound using the MELODY system [54]
Wireless network technologies and user perceived data transfer rates
| Technology | Network theoretical data transfer rates | User typical data transfer rates |
|---|---|---|
| 2G-GSM (early 1990s) | 9.6 to 115 kbps | About 10 kbps |
| 2.5G-GPRS (2001) | 9.6 to 171.2 kbps | Between 30 and 50 kbps |
| 2.5G-EDGE (2003) | 9.6 to 384 kbps | Between 75 and 135 kbps |
| 3G-UMTS (Release 99, 2001) | 144 kbps to 2 Mbps | Between 200 and 300 kbps |
| 3.5G-HSPA (Rel. 7, 2007) | DL: 14.4 Mbps | DL: 1 to 4 Mbps |
| (HSDPA, Rel. 5, 2005) | UL: 5.76 Mbps | UL: 500 kbps to 2 Mbps |
| (HSUPA, Rel. 6, 2008) | ||
| HSPA + (Rel. 7, 2007) | DL: 21.6 Mbps | DL: ~2 to ~9 Mbps |
| UL: 11.5 Mbps | UL: 1 to 4 Mbps | |
| HSPA + (DL: 64 QAM, UL: 16 QAM, dual carrier, 10 + 5 MHz) | DL: 42 Mbps | DL: 3.8 to 17.6 Mbps |
| UL: 11.5 Mbps | UL: 1 to 4 Mbps | |
| 3.5G-Mobile WiMAX (IEEE 802.16e, 2005) | DL: 46 Mbps | DL: UL: 1 to 5 Mbps |
| UL: 4 Mbps | ||
| 3.9G LTE (Rel. 8, 2008) | DL: 300 Mbps (20 MHz) | DL: 6.5 to 26 Mbps (10 MHz) |
| UL: 71 (20 MHz) | UL: 6.0 to 13.0 (10 MHz) | |
| 4G-LTE-advanced (Rel. 10, 2010) | DL: 1.2 Gbps | TBD |
| UL: 568 Mbps | ||
| 4G-WirelessMAN-advanced (IEEE 802.16 m, 2010) | DL: > 1 Gbps | TBD |
| UL: > 100 Mbps | ||
| 5G by 2020? | TBD | TBD |
Table based on [28]
UL uplink, DL downlink TBD to be defined
Ultrasound video bitrate savings of different video coding standards in time
| Encoding | Bit rate savings relative to | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| H.264/MPEG-4 AVC HP (%) | H.263 CHC (%) | MPEG-4 ASP (%) | MPEG-2/H.262 MP (1995) (%) | |
| HEVC MP (2013) | 33.2 | 54.6 | 58.3 | 71 |
| H.264/MPEG-4 AVC HP (2003) | 33.2 | 37.7 | 56.8 | |
| H.263 CHC (2000) | 7.5 | 32.4 | ||
| MPEG-4 ASP (2000) | 27.4 | |||
Table originally published in [143]
Fig. 1The da Vinci® surgical system [141]
Fig. 3WORTEX 2012 [54] experiment demonstrated the intercontinental feasibility of remote robotized tele-echography in a range of cultural, technical and clinical contexts
Summary of short-distance telerobotic systems
| Name | Mechanical design | Application area | Status | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Teleoperated needle insertion robot | Serial | General surgery/intervention | EXP | [ |
| 2 | MR-guided thermotherapy | Parallel | Thermotherapy | EXP | [ |
| 3 | Surgical system for breast biopsy | Parallel | Breast biopsy | EXP | [ |
| 4 | CT-guided needle-placement robot | Serial | Diagnostic and therapeutic needle placement | EXP | [ |
| 5 | Medical robot for MIS | Serial | Surgery (minimally invasive) | EXP | [ |
| 6 | SOFIE | Serial | Surgery (laparoscopic and thoracoscopic) | EXP | [ |
| 7 | Telelap ALF-X | Serial | General surgery | EXP | [ |
| 8 | Al-Zahrawi surgical system | Serial | General surgery | EXP | [ |
| 9 | Telerobotic system for minimally invasive surgery | Snake-like | General surgery (throat and upper airway) | EXP | [ |
| 10 | IREP robot | Snake-like | Surgery (Single Port Access) | EXP | [ |
| 11 | SPS manipulator | Serial | Surgery (Single Port Endoscopic) | EXP | [ |
| 12 | SPRINT | Serial | Surgery (Single-Port Laparoscopic) | EXP | [ |
| 13 | Endoscopic prototype telerobotic system | Serial | Surgery (transluminal endoscopic surgery) | EXP | [ |
| 14 | Robotic (NOTES) device | Serial | Gastrointestinal (NOTES) | CLIN | [ |
| 15 | RVIR robot (vascular interventional robot) | Supporting manipulator/catheter navigator | MIS | EXP | [ |
| 16 | Telerobotic-assisted bone-drilling system | Linear/rotational stage | Surgery (orthopaedics) | EXP | [ |
| 17 | Trauma pod | Serial | General surgery | EXP | [ |
| 18 | Slave manipulator with roll-pitch-roll wrist | Serial | General surgery | EXP | [ |
| 19 | Robotic system for corneal keratoplasty | Cartesian | Eye surgery | CLIN | [ |
| 20 | Snake-like robot for upper airway surgery | Snake-like | Surgery (throat and upper airways—ENT) | EXP | [ |
| 21 | Robotic system for transnasal surgery | Snake-like | Transnasal surgery—larynx and airways | EXP | [ |
| 22 | LANS | Cartesian | Neurosurgery | EXP | [ |
| 23 | NeuroArm | Serial | Micro-neurosurgery and stereotaxy | CLIN | [ |
| 24 | MRI guided neurosurgery | Serial | Neurosurgery | EXP | [ |
| 25 | Master–slave robotic platform for micro-neurosurgery | Spherical | Neurosurgery | EXP | [ |
| 26 | Heart surgery robot | Spherical | Cardiac and thoracic | EXP | [ |
| 27 | MIRS (MIRoSurge) | Spherical | Cardiac and thoracic | EXP | [ |
| 28 | HIFU for kidney ablation | Cartesian | Cardiac and thoracic | CLIN | [ |
| 29 | MIS laparoscopic robot | Spherical | Cardiac and thoracic | EXP | [ |
| 30 | Robotic forceps manipulator | Serial | Cardiac & thoracic | EXP | [ |
| 31 | ZEUS MI robotic lung brachytherapy | Serial | Cardiac and thoracic | COM | [ |
| 32 | da Vinci | Serial | Cardiac and thoracic | COM | [ |
| 33 | Heartlander robot | Cable-Driven | Cardiac and thoracic | CLIN | [ |
| 34 | Sensei and artisan | Snake-like | Cardiac and thoracic | COM | [ |
| 35 | MARVEL | Cardiac and thoracic | EXP | [ | |
| 36 | Creeping colonoscopy robot | Worm-like locomotion | Gastrointestinal | EXP | [ |
| 37 | Robotic magnetic steering and locomotion of capsule | Serial | Gastrointestinal | EXP | [ |
| 38 | GI robot with active motion | Legged locomotion | Gastrointestinal | EXP | [ |
| 39 | Wireless GI robot | Worm-like locomotion | Gastrointestinal | CLIN | [ |
| 40 | Prostate brachytherapy robot | Serial | Urologic | EXP | [ |
| 41 | MRI guided prostate robot | Cartesian | Urologic | COM | [ |
| 42 | Pneumatic robot for prostate | Spherical | Urologic | EXP | [ |
| 43 | SpineNAv | Serial | Spinal intervention | EXP | [ |
| 44 | CoRA | Closed-loop | Spinal intervention | EXP | [ |
| 45 | MINOSC | Cable-driven | Spinal intervention | EXP | [ |
EXP experimental, COM commercial, CLIN clinical
Fig. 4Block diagram of the master–slave experimental set-up for needle insertion. Needle targeting can be carried out using images and preoperative planning tools (e.g., stereotactic approaches) or under real-time guidance using a suitable imaging modality (e.g., US).
Reprinted with permission from [55]
Fig. 5System for CT-guided robotically‐assisted interventions.
Reprinted with permission from [58]
Fig. 6Medical robot for MIS: a surgery console; b robotic arm cart.
Reprinted with permission from [59]
Fig. 7Surgical robot “Sofie”.
Reprinted with permission from [60]
Fig. 8The Telelap ALF-X system consists of a console and three/four independent arms each one of which with six degrees-of-freedom.
Reprinted with permission from [63]
Fig. 9Layout of Trauma Pod system main components.
Reprinted with permission from [74]
Fig. 10a Outline of the telerobotic system for MIS of the throat and upper airways. b The system prototype.
Reprinted with permission from [66]
Fig. 11The Hansen robotic system includes the physician workstation and the remote catheter manipulator.
Reprinted with permission from [98]
Long-distance telerobotic systems
| Name | Mechanical design | Application area | Status | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Raven robot | Spherical | General surgery | EXP | [ |
| 2 | Lapabot | Serial | General surgery—MIS | EXP | [ |
| 3 | Internet based cather manipulating system | Cartesian | General surgery | EXP | [ |
| 4 | RIME | Serial | Spinal intervention | EXP | [ |
| 5 | Robotized tele-echography MELODY | Serial | Tele-echography | COM | [ |
| 6 | Free hand controller for remote ultrasound imaging | Parallel | Tele-echography | EXP | [ |
| 7 | Wearable tele-echograpgy robot for FAST | Pitching, rolling positioning | Tele-echography | EXP | [ |
| 8 | Servo actuated robotic arm for tele-echography | Serial | Tele-echography | EXP | [ |
| 9 | Parallel robot for ultrasound imaging | Parallel | Tele-echography | EXP | [ |
EXP experimental, COM commercial
Fig. 12a Four Raven‐II robotic arms and two cameras arranged for collaborative telesurgery; b CAD rendering of the system; c Surgical console.
Copyright © IEEE. All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission from [116]
Fig. 13The RIME surgical robotic system developed by Wright State University.
Copyright © IEEE. All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission from [142]
Fig. 14Wearable teleechography robot. The robot provides 4 DOF and control of the US probe for FAST.
Reprinted with permission from [121]
Fig. 15Robotic arm for slave station of telerobotic ultrasonography platform.
Reprinted with permission from [122]
Challenges and areas for future developments in medical telerobotics
| 1 | Regulatory approvals | Approvals take a significant amount of the development time and cost. Lack of worldwide acceptable regulatory standards makes the clearance process inefficient and costly |
| 2 | Clinical acceptance | Acceptance by clinicians and patients is required but also by third-party payers in the health-care system including insurance companies |
| 3 | Cost of acquisition and maintenance of telerobotic systems | These are mainly attributed to the high development costs related to the strict safety and reliability requirements |
| 4 | Interdisciplinary development approach | The development of telerobotic systems requires an interdisciplinary approach to deal effectively with both clinical and engineering aspects |
| 5 | Human factors | Human factors considerations need to be an integral part of the design to yield safer, more usable and effective devices. Decreased interaction among the healthcare professionals and patients during application needs attention |
| 6 | Telepresence enhancement | Available means include the development of effective user interfaces and use of force feedback haptic systems |
| 7 | Software tools | Emphasis required on preoperative planning tools. They may analyze imaging information, present the operator with optimal courses of action, and facilitate decision making |
| 8 | Radiological imaging methods | Apart from camera systems other imaging methods can be further exploited for visualization and guidance (e.g., US, CT, MRI) |
| 9 | Information fusing | Fusing intra-operative images with 3D patient-specific models constructed from pre-operative information enhances perception. Also, merging intra-operative information acquired from different imaging modalities (e.g., MRI and ultrasound) may improve visualization |
| 10 | Telecommunication networks | Long-distance telerobotics demand reliable transmission of huge amounts of data with acceptable delay. Latest technologies need to be embraced |
| 11 | Video compression technologies | Compression technologies will facilitate the transfer of large quantities of information |
| 12 | Network security enhancements | Wireless networks’ security vulnerability remains a major concern for the exploitation of (long-distance) telerobotics in telemedicine |
| 13 | Moral and legal issues | Transmission of information over communication networks raises issues regarding the protection of patient’s privacy and needs to be regulated. Legal regulation regarding application of medical telerobotics is also needed to prevent unauthorized service providers |
| 14 | Liability issues | Liability and responsibility for complications during a telerobotic procedure is among delicate issues to be formally addressed |
| 15 | Development of robotic comanipulation systems | Robotic comanipulation systems with required dexterity are needed while satisfying safety requirements |
| 16 | Robot control | The establishment of stable/robust control systems despite the long-distance data transmission involved presents engineering challenges |
| 17 | Auxiliary control functions | Implementation of auxiliary control functions will provide enhancements to long-distance telerobotics and reduce burden on the operating physician. Particularly important will be the biomotion compensation |
| 18 | Physicians training | The availability of trained physicians will require medical schools to acquire telerobotic technologies and introduce them in their educational programs. Development of training simulators will also play an important role in that respect |
| 19 | Telementoring and collaborative surgery | The telementoring capabilities of telerobotics can be further exploited to train and support physicians. Experienced physicians can play the preceptor’s role to other physicians without having to relocate |
| 20 | Collaborative research approach | Shared efforts between universities and companies will foster the development of new commercializable technologies |
Fig. 16Medical discipline classification of the reviewed tele-robotic systems
Fig. 17Mechanical design of the reviewed robotic systems
Fig. 18Status of the reviewed robotic systems