• DocumentCode
    87986
  • Title

    A Wireless Robot for Networked Laparoscopy

  • Author

    Castro, Carlos A. ; Alqassis, A. ; Smith, Samuel ; Ketterl, T. ; Yu Sun ; Ross, Susan ; Rosemurgy, A. ; Savage, P.P. ; Gitlin, Richard D.

  • Author_Institution
    Electr. Eng. Dept., Univ. of South Florida, Tampa, FL, USA
  • Volume
    60
  • Issue
    4
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    Apr-13
  • Firstpage
    930
  • Lastpage
    936
  • Abstract
    State-of-the-art laparoscopes for minimally invasive abdominal surgery are encumbered by cabling for power, video, and light sources. Although these laparoscopes provide good image quality, they interfere with surgical instruments, occupy a trocar port, require an assistant in the operating room to control the scope, have a very limited field of view, and are expensive. MARVEL is a wireless Miniature Anchored Robotic Videoscope for Expedited Laparoscopy that addresses these limitations by providing an inexpensive in vivo wireless camera module (CM) that eliminates the surgical-tool bottleneck experienced by surgeons in current laparoscopic endoscopic single-site (LESS) procedures. The MARVEL system includes1) multiple CMs that feature awirelessly controlled pan/tilt camera platform, which enable a full hemisphere field of view inside the abdominal cavity, wirelessly adjustable focus, and a multiwavelength illumination control system; 2) a master control module that provides a near-zero latency video wireless communications link, independent wireless control for multiple MARVEL CMs, digital zoom; and 3) a wireless human-machine interface that gives the surgeon full control over CM functionality. The research reported in this paper is the first step in developing a suite of semiautonomous wirelessly controlled and networked robotic cyberphysical devices to enable a paradigm shift in minimally invasive surgery and other domains such as wireless body area networks.
  • Keywords
    biomedical communication; biomedical imaging; image sensors; man-machine systems; medical computing; medical robotics; surgery; user interfaces; video cameras; wireless channels; LESS procedures; Miniature Anchored Robotic Videoscope for Expedited Laparoscopy; abdominal cavity view; digital zoom; full hemisphere field of view; independent wireless control; inexpensive in vivo wireless camera module; laparoscope image quality; laparoscope operation; laparoscopic endoscopic single-site method; light source cabling; master control module; minimal invasive abdominal surgery; multiple CM system; multiple MARVEL CM; multiwavelength illumination control system; near zero latency video wireless communications link; networked laparoscopy; power cabling; semiautonomous wireless control; semiautonomous wireless networked robotic cyberphysical devices; state-of-the-art laparoscopes; surgical instruments interference; surgical-tool bottleneck experiences; trocar port occupation; video cabling; wireless MARVEL; wireless adjustable camera focus; wireless body area networks; wireless control pan camera platform; wireless control tilt camera platform; wireless human-machine interface; wireless robots; Cameras; In vivo; Lenses; Light emitting diodes; Solid modeling; Wireless communication; Wireless sensor networks; In vivo wireless networking; minimally invasive surgery (MIS); robotic videoscope; Abdomen; Animals; Equipment Design; Humans; Laparoscopy; Models, Theoretical; Phantoms, Imaging; Robotics; Surgery, Computer-Assisted; Swine; Video Recording; Wireless Technology;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9294
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TBME.2012.2232926
  • Filename
    6376141