• DocumentCode
    29467
  • Title

    A Visual-Aided Wireless Monitoring System Design for Total Hip Replacement Surgery

  • Author

    Hong Chen ; Jiyang Gao ; Shaojie Su ; Xu Zhang ; Zhihua Wang

  • Author_Institution
    Tsinghua Nat. Lab. for Inf. Sci. & Technol., Tsinghua Univ., Beijing, China
  • Volume
    9
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    Apr-15
  • Firstpage
    227
  • Lastpage
    236
  • Abstract
    To improve the positioning accuracy of implants in Total Hip Replacement (THR) surgeries, a visual-aided wireless monitoring system for THR surgery is proposed in this paper. This system aims to measure and display the contact distribution and relative pose between femoral head and acetabulum prosthesis during the surgery to help surgeons obtain accurate position of implants. The system consists of two parts: the Sensors Array Measuring System (SAMS) and the display part. The SAMS is composed of a sensors array (including contact sensors and an image sensor), signal conditioning circuits, a low power microcontroller (MCU), and a low-power transceiver. The SAMS is designed to estimate the relative pose of femoral head component to acetabular component. The display part processes the data from sensors and demonstrates the contact distribution and the pose of the prothesis during the surgery in 3-D graphics. The two parts of the system communicate with each other on an RF link at the band of 400 MHz. The signal conditioning circuits have been designed and fabricated in 0.18 μm CMOS process. Testing results show that the resolution of the signal conditioning circuits is 60.1 μ Vpp (1.35g) with ±100 mVpp input. The chip can operate under 1.2-to-3.6 V supply voltage for single battery applications with 116-160 μ A current consumption. The system has been verified by the simulation with rotation quaternion and translation vector. The experimental results show that the contact distribution and relative pose of the two components could be measured and demonstrated in real time. The relative error of rotation is less than 8% and the actual relative error of translation is less than 10%.
  • Keywords
    CMOS integrated circuits; biomedical electronics; biomedical optical imaging; biomedical telemetry; bone; computer graphics; display instrumentation; image sensors; low-power electronics; mechanical contact; medical image processing; microcontrollers; patient monitoring; pose estimation; prosthetics; real-time systems; rotation; sensor arrays; signal conditioning circuits; surgery; telemedicine; transceivers; vectors; wireless sensor networks; 3D graphics; CMOS process; MCU; RF link; SAMS composition; SAMS design; THR surgery; acetabular component; acetabulum prosthesis; actual relative translation error; chip operation; contact distribution display; contact distribution measure; contact sensor; current 116 muA to 160 muA; current consumption; display part; femoral head component; frequency 400 MHz; image sensor; implant positioning accuracy; low-power microcontroller; low-power transceiver; prothesis pose; real-time measurement; relative pose display; relative pose estimation; relative pose measure; relative rotation error; resolution; rotation quaternion; sensor data processing; sensors array measuring system; signal conditioning circuit design; signal conditioning circuit fabrication; simulation; single battery application; size 0.18 mum; supply voltage; total hip replacement surgery; translation vector; visual-aided wireless monitoring system design; voltage 1.2 V to 3.6 V; Biomedical measurement; Cameras; Head; Hip; Prosthetics; Sensors; Surgery; Pose estimation; reference pattern; signal conditioning circuits; total hip replacement (THR);
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1932-4545
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TBCAS.2015.2416253
  • Filename
    7086359