DocumentCode
61751
Title
Vision-Based Control of a Handheld Surgical Micromanipulator With Virtual Fixtures
Author
Becker, Brian C. ; MacLachlan, Robert A. ; Lobes, L.A. ; Hager, Gregory D. ; Riviere, Cameron N.
Author_Institution
Robot. Inst., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Volume
29
Issue
3
fYear
2013
fDate
Jun-13
Firstpage
674
Lastpage
683
Abstract
Performing micromanipulation and delicate operations in submillimeter workspaces is difficult because of destabilizing tremor and imprecise targeting. Accurate micromanipulation is especially important for microsurgical procedures, such as vitreoretinal surgery, to maximize successful outcomes and minimize collateral damage. Robotic aid combined with filtering techniques that suppress tremor frequency bands increases performance; however, if knowledge of the operator´s goals is available, virtual fixtures have been shown to further improve performance. In this paper, we derive a virtual fixture framework for active handheld micromanipulators that is based on high-bandwidth position measurements rather than forces applied to a robot handle. For applicability in surgical environments, the fixtures are generated in real time from microscope video during the procedure. Additionally, we develop motion scaling behavior around virtual fixtures as a simple and direct extension to the proposed framework. We demonstrate that virtual fixtures significantly outperform tremor cancellation algorithms on a set of synthetic tracing tasks (p <; 0.05). In more medically relevant experiments of vein tracing and membrane peeling in eye phantoms, virtual fixtures can significantly reduce both positioning error and forces applied to tissue (p <; 0.05).
Keywords
biological tissues; blood vessels; dexterous manipulators; fixtures; medical robotics; micromanipulators; position measurement; robot vision; surgery; video signal processing; active handheld micromanipulators; collateral damage minimization; destabilizing tremor; dexterous manipulation; eye phantoms; filtering techniques; force reduction; handheld surgical micromanipulator; high-bandwidth position measurements; medical robots; membrane peeling; micromanipulation; microscope video; microsurgical procedures; motion scaling behavior; performance improvement; positioning error reduction; successful outcome maximization; tissue; tremor frequency band suppression; vein tracing; virtual fixture framework; vision-based control; Fixtures; Instruments; Micromanipulators; Retina; Splines (mathematics); Surgery; Dexterous manipulation; medical robots and systems; micro/nanorobots; motion control; vision-based control;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Robotics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1552-3098
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TRO.2013.2239552
Filename
6464625
Link To Document