Title :
Modeling and control of tissue compression and temperature for automation in robot-assisted surgery
Author :
Sinha, Utkarsh ; Baichun Li ; Sankaranarayanan, Ganesh
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electical & Comput. Eng., Rensselaer Polytech. Inst., Troy, NY, USA
Abstract :
Robotic surgery is being used widely due to its various benefits that includes reduced patient trauma and increased dexterity and ergonomics for the operating surgeon. Making the whole or part of the surgical procedure autonomous increases patient safety and will enable the robotic surgery platform to be used in telesurgery. In this work, an Electrosurgery procedure that involves tissue compression and application of heat such as the coaptic vessel closure has been automated. A MIMO nonlinear model characterizing the tissue stiffness and conductance under compression was feedback linearized and tuned PID controllers were used to control the system to achieve both the displacement and temperature constraints. A reference input for both the constraints were chosen as a ramp and hold trajectory which reflect the real constraints that exist in an actual surgical procedure. Our simulations showed that the controllers successfully tracked the reference trajectories with minimal deviation and in finite time horizon. The MIMO system with controllers developed in this work can be used to drive a surgical robot autonomously and perform electrosurgical procedures such as coaptic vessel closures.
Keywords :
MIMO systems; biomechanics; biothermics; blood vessels; displacement control; elasticity; ergonomics; feedback; injuries; linearisation techniques; medical robotics; nonlinear control systems; physiological models; safety; surgery; telemedicine; telerobotics; temperature control; three-term control; tracking; trajectory control; MIMO nonlinear model; MIMO system controllers; PID controller tuning; automated coaptic vessel closure; automated heat application; automated tissue compression; autonomous surgical procedure; constraint reference input selection; displacement constraints; electrosurgery procedure; ergonomics; feedback linearization; minimal reference trajectory deviation; operating surgeon dexterity; patient safety; patient trauma reduction; reference trajectory tracking; robot-assisted surgery automation; robotic surgery platform; simulation; telesurgery; temperature constraints; tissue compression control; tissue compression modeling; tissue conductance characterization; tissue stiffness characterization; tissue temperature control; tissue temperature modeling; Equations; Heating; Mathematical model; Robots; Surgery; Trajectory;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2014 36th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2014.6943605