| Literature DB >> 34557261 |
Yuqiao Han1, Arpita Routray2, Jennifer O Adeghate3, Robert A MacLachlan2, Joseph N Martel3, Cameron N Riviere2.
Abstract
Retinal membrane peeling requires delicate manipulation. The presence of the surgeon's physiological tremor, the high variability and often low quality of the ophthalmic image, and excessive forces make the tasks more challenging. Preventing unintended movement caused by tremor and unintentional forces can reduce membrane injury. With the use of an actively stabilized handheld robot, we employ a monocular camera-based surface reconstruction method to estimate the retinal plane and we propose the use of a virtual fixture with the application of a hard stop and motion scaling to improve control of the tool tip during delaminating in a laboratory simulation of retinal membrane peeling. A hard stop helps to limit downward force exerted on the surface. Motion scaling also improves the user's control of contact force when delaminating. We demonstrate a reduction of maximum force and maximum surface-penetration distance from the estimated retinal plane using the proposed technique.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34557261 PMCID: PMC8420790 DOI: 10.1115/1.4051686
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Device ISSN: 1932-6181 Impact factor: 0.743