DocumentCode
10522
Title
MRI-Safe Robot for Endorectal Prostate Biopsy
Author
Stoianovici, D. ; Chunwoo Kim ; Srimathveeravalli, Govindarajan ; Sebrecht, Peter ; Petrisor, Daniel ; Coleman, Jonathan ; Solomon, Stephen B. ; Hricak, Hedvig
Author_Institution
Urology Dept., Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, MD, USA
Volume
19
Issue
4
fYear
2014
fDate
Aug. 2014
Firstpage
1289
Lastpage
1299
Abstract
This paper reports the development of an MRI-Safe robot for direct (interventional) MRI-guided endorectal prostate biopsy. The robot is constructed of nonmagnetic and electrically nonconductive materials, and is electricity free, using pneumatic actuation and optical sensors. Targeting biopsy lesions of MRI abnormality presents substantial clinical potential for the management of prostate cancer. This paper describes MRI-Safe requirements and presents the kinematic architecture, design, and construction of the robot, and a comprehensive set of preclinical tests for MRI compatibility and needle targeting accuracy. The robot has a compact and simple three degree-of-freedom (DoF) structure, two for orienting a needle-guide and one to preset the depth of needle insertion. The actual insertion is performed manually through the guide and up to the preset depth. To reduce the complexity and size of the robot next to the patient, the depth setting DoF is remote. Experimental results show that the robot is safe to use in any MRI environment (MRI-Safe). Comprehensive MRI tests show that the presence and motion of the robot in the MRI scanner cause virtually no image deterioration or signal-to-noise ratio change. Robot´s accuracy in bench test, CT-guided in-vitro, MRI-guided in-vitro , and animal tests are 0.37, 1.10, 2.09, and 2.58 mm, respectively. These values are acceptable for clinical use.
Keywords
biomedical MRI; cancer; medical robotics; optical sensors; pneumatic actuators; robot kinematics; DoF structure; MRI compatibility; MRI-Safe robot; electrically nonconductive materials; image deterioration; interventional MRI-guided endorectal prostate biopsy; magnetic resonance imaging; needle insertion depth; needle targeting; nonmagnetic materials; optical sensors; pneumatic actuation; prostate cancer management; robot construction; robot design; robot kinematic architecture; signal-to-noise ratio change; three degree-of-freedom structure; Biopsy; Kinematics; Magnetic resonance imaging; Needles; Pneumatic systems; Robot kinematics; MRI-Safe; MRI-compatible; Motor; pneumatic; prostate biopsy; robot;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Mechatronics, IEEE/ASME Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1083-4435
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMECH.2013.2279775
Filename
6600903
Link To Document