DocumentCode
2396765
Title
Patient motion tracking in the presence of measurement errors
Author
Haidegger, Tamás ; Benyó, Zoltán ; Kazanzides, Peter
Author_Institution
Dept. of Control Eng. & Inf. Tech., Budapest Univ. of Technol. & Econ., Budapest, Hungary
fYear
2009
fDate
3-6 Sept. 2009
Firstpage
5563
Lastpage
5566
Abstract
The primary aim of computer-integrated surgical systems is to provide physicians with superior surgical tools for better patient outcome. Robotic technology is capable of both minimally invasive surgery and microsurgery, offering remarkable advantages for the surgeon and the patient. Current systems allow for sub-millimeter intraoperative spatial positioning, however certain limitations still remain. Measurement noise and unintended changes in the operating room environment can result in major errors. Positioning errors are a significant danger to patients in procedures involving robots and other automated devices. We have developed a new robotic system at the Johns Hopkins University to support cranial drilling in neurosurgery procedures. The robot provides advanced visualization and safety features. The generic algorithm described in this paper allows for automated compensation of patient motion through optical tracking and Kalman filtering. When applied to the neurosurgery setup, preliminary results show that it is possible to identify patient motion within 700 ms, and apply the appropriate compensation with an average of 1.24 mm positioning error after 2 s of setup time.
Keywords
Kalman filters; biomedical optical imaging; measurement errors; medical robotics; motion compensation; neurophysiology; patient monitoring; position control; surgery; Johns Hopkins University; Kalman filtering; computer-integrated surgical systems; cranial drilling; measurement errors; microsurgery; minimally invasive surgery; neurosurgery; optical tracking; patient motion tracking; positioning errors; robot visualization; robotic technology; surgical tools; Algorithms; Artifacts; Artificial Intelligence; Humans; Movement; Neurosurgical Procedures; Reproducibility of Results; Robotics; Sensitivity and Specificity; Surgery, Computer-Assisted;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2009. EMBC 2009. Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location
Minneapolis, MN
ISSN
1557-170X
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-3296-7
Electronic_ISBN
1557-170X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IEMBS.2009.5333737
Filename
5333737
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