Literature DB >> 33355895

Usability of cooperative surgical telemanipulation for bone milling tasks.

Philipp Schleer1, Manuel Vossel2, Lotte Heckmann2, Sergey Drobinsky2, Lukas Theisgen2, Matías de la Fuente2, Klaus Radermacher2.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Cooperative surgical systems enable humans and machines to combine their individual strengths and collaborate to improve the surgical outcome. Cooperative telemanipulated systems offer the widest spectrum of cooperative functionalities, because motion scaling is possible. Haptic guidance can be used to assist surgeons and haptic feedback makes acting forces at the slave side transparent to the operator, however, overlapping and masking of forces needs to be avoided. This study evaluates the usability of a cooperative surgical telemanipulator in a laboratory setting.
METHODS: Three experiments were designed and conducted for characteristic surgical task scenarios derived from field studies in orthopedics and neurosurgery to address bone tissue differentiation, guided milling and depth sensitive milling. Interaction modes were designed to ensure that no overlapping or masking of haptic guidance and haptic feedback occurs when allocating information to the haptic channel. Twenty participants were recruited to compare teleoperated modes, direct manual execution and an exemplary automated milling with respect to usability.
RESULTS: Participants were able to differentiate compact and cancellous bone, both directly manually and teleoperatively. Both telemanipulated modes increased effectiveness measured by the mean absolute depth and contour error for guided and depth sensitive millings. Efficiency is decreased if solely a boundary constraint is used in hard material, while a trajectory guidance and manual milling perform similarly. With respect to subjective user satisfaction trajectory guidance is rated best for guided millings followed by boundary constraints and the direct manual interaction. Haptic feedback only improved subjective user satisfaction.
CONCLUSION: A cooperative surgical telemanipulator can improve effectiveness and efficiency close to an automated execution and enhance user satisfaction compared to direct manual interaction. At the same time, the surgeon remains part of the control loop and is able to adjust the surgical plan according to the intraoperative situation and his/her expertise at any time.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Haptics; Human machine interaction; Robotic manipulators; Shared control; Surgical robotics; Synergistic systems

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33355895      PMCID: PMC7880914          DOI: 10.1007/s11548-020-02296-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg        ISSN: 1861-6410            Impact factor:   2.924


  2 in total

Review 1.  Haptics in minimally invasive surgery--a review.

Authors:  E P Westebring-van der Putten; R H M Goossens; J J Jakimowicz; J Dankelman
Journal:  Minim Invasive Ther Allied Technol       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 2.442

2.  Augmentation of haptic feedback for teleoperated robotic surgery.

Authors:  Philipp Schleer; Philipp Kaiser; Sergey Drobinsky; Klaus Radermacher
Journal:  Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg       Date:  2020-01-30       Impact factor: 2.924

  2 in total

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