• DocumentCode
    2014756
  • Title

    Autonomous High Precision Positioning of Surgical Instruments in Robot-Assisted Minimally Invasive Surgery under Visual Guidance

  • Author

    Staub, Christoph ; Knoll, Alois ; Osa, Takayuki ; Bauernschmitt, Robert

  • Author_Institution
    Robot. & Embedded Syst., Tech. Univ. Munchen, Munich, Germany
  • fYear
    2010
  • fDate
    7-13 March 2010
  • Firstpage
    64
  • Lastpage
    69
  • Abstract
    Despite the fact that minimally invasive robotic surgery provides many advantages for patients, complex tasks are still time-consuming, error-prone and lead to quicker fatigue of the surgeon. Automating recurrent tasks could greatly reduce total surgery time for patients. While surgeons gain most of the information which is necessary to perform the operation from the visual feedback of cameras, there is only little work on autonomous systems utilizing visual information to generate movement commands. A major step towards automated tasks is the autonomous positioning of surgical instruments with high precision inside the situs. In this paper, we tackle the challenges arising from automated positioning by employing visual servoing techniques in two ways: On one hand, a calibration of all system components has to be performed to enable position-based servoing in Cartesian space. On the other hand, lever effects which appear due to the nature of laparoscopic surgery and intrinsic system imprecisions may not be overcome with calibrations. Therefore, the instruments can also be servoed image-based. Combining both approaches to a switching scheme allows for autonomous high precision positing of surgical instruments in a complex setup with four robots.
  • Keywords
    medical robotics; position control; robot vision; surgery; visual servoing; Cartesian space; autonomous high precision positioning; cameras; laparoscopic surgery; movement commands; patient treatment; position-based servoing; robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery; surgical instruments; visual guidance; visual servoing; Calibration; Cameras; Fatigue; Feedback; Minimally invasive surgery; Performance gain; Robotics and automation; Robots; Surges; Surgical instruments; autonomous positioning; robotic surgery; visual servoing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Autonomic and Autonomous Systems (ICAS), 2010 Sixth International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Cancun
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-5915-5
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICAS.2010.18
  • Filename
    5442620