DocumentCode
895370
Title
Modeling, Analysis, and Experimental Study of In Vivo Wheeled Robotic Mobility
Author
Rentschler, Mark E. ; Dumpert, Jason ; Platt, Stephen R. ; Lagnernma, K. ; Oleynikov, Dmitry ; Farritor, Shane M.
Author_Institution
Med. Center, Nebraska Univ., Omaha, NE
Volume
22
Issue
2
fYear
2006
fDate
4/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
308
Lastpage
321
Abstract
Laparoscopy is abdominal surgery performed with long tools inserted through small incisions. The use of small incisions reduces patient trauma, but also eliminates the surgeon´s ability to view and touch the surgical environment directly. These limitations generally restrict the application of laparoscopy to procedures less complex than those performed during open surgery. This paper presents a theoretical and experimental analysis of miniature, wheeled, in vivo robots to support laparoscopy. The objective is to develop a wireless mobile imaging robot that can be placed inside the abdominal cavity during surgery. Such robots will allow the surgeon to view the surgical environment from multiple angles. The motion of these in vivo robots will not be constrained by the insertion incisions. Simulation and experimental analyses have led to a wheel design that can attain good mobility performance in in vivo conditions
Keywords
medical robotics; microrobots; surgery; abdominal cavity; abdominal surgery; in vivo wheeled robotic mobility; laparoscopy; miniature wheeled robots; wireless mobile imaging robot; Abdomen; Cameras; In vivo; Laparoscopes; Minimally invasive surgery; Mobile robots; Performance analysis; Robot vision systems; Surges; Wheels; In vivo; laparoscopy; liver biomechanics; surgical robots; wheeled mobility;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Robotics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1552-3098
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TRO.2005.862490
Filename
1618742
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