| Literature DB >> 29926303 |
Marek Wartenberg1, Joseph Schornak2, Katie Gandomi2, Paulo Carvalho2, Chris Nycz2, Niravkumar Patel3, Iulian Iordachita3, Clare Tempany4, Nobuhiko Hata4, Junichi Tokuda4, Gregory S Fischer2.
Abstract
Intra-operative imaging is sometimes available to assist needle biopsy, but typical open-loop insertion does not account for unmodeled needle deflection or target shift. Closed-loop image-guided compensation for deviation from an initial straight-line trajectory through rotational control of an asymmetric tip can reduce targeting error. Incorporating robotic closed-loop control often reduces physician interaction with the patient, but by pairing closed-loop trajectory compensation with hands-on cooperatively controlled insertion, a physician's control of the procedure can be maintained while incorporating benefits of robotic accuracy. A series of needle insertions were performed with a typical 18G needle using closed-loop active compensation under both fully autonomous and user-directed cooperative control. We demonstrated equivalent improvement in accuracy while maintaining physician-in-the-loop control with no statistically significant difference (p > 0.05) in the targeting accuracy between any pair of autonomous or individual cooperative sets, with average targeting accuracy of 3.56 mmrms. With cooperatively controlled insertions and target shift between 1 and 10 mm introduced upon needle contact, the system was able to effectively compensate up to the point where error approached a maximum curvature governed by bending mechanics. These results show closed-loop active compensation can enhance targeting accuracy, and that the improvement can be maintained under user directed cooperative insertion.Entities:
Keywords: Image-guided therapy; Medical robotics; Needle steering; Teleoperation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29926303 PMCID: PMC6319385 DOI: 10.1007/s10439-018-2070-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Biomed Eng ISSN: 0090-6964 Impact factor: 3.934