| Literature DB >> 27570361 |
Richard J Hendrick1, Christopher R Mitchell2, S Duke Herrell2, Robert J Webster1.
Abstract
Natural orifice endoscopic surgery can enable incisionless approaches, but a major challenge is the lack of small and dexterous instrumentation. Surgical robots have the potential to meet this need yet often disrupt the clinical workflow. Hand-held robots that combine thin manipulators and endoscopes have the potential to address this by integrating seamlessly into the clinical workflow and enhancing dexterity. As a case study illustrating the potential of this approach, we describe a hand-held robotic system that passes two concentric tube manipulators through a 5 mm port in a rigid endoscope for transurethral laser prostate surgery. This system is intended to catalyze the use of a clinically superior, yet rarely attempted, procedure for benign prostatic hyperplasia. This paper describes system design and experiments to evaluate the surgeon's functional workspace and accuracy using the robot. Phantom and cadaver experiments demonstrate successful completion of the target procedure via prostate lobe resection.Entities:
Keywords: HoLEP; Surgical robotics; benign prostatic hyperplasia; concentric tube robots; medical robotics; prostate surgery
Year: 2015 PMID: 27570361 PMCID: PMC5001675 DOI: 10.1177/0278364915585397
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Rob Res ISSN: 0278-3649 Impact factor: 4.703