DocumentCode :
3669198
Title :
A single-use haptic palpation probe for locating subcutaneous blood vessels in robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery
Author :
Stephen McKinley;Animesh Garg;Siddarth Sen;Rishi Kapadia;Adithyavairavan Murali;Kirk Nichols;Susan Lim;Sachin Patil;Pieter Abbeel;Allison M. Okamura;Ken Goldberg
Author_Institution :
Mechanical Engineering, University of California, Berkeley
fYear :
2015
Firstpage :
1151
Lastpage :
1158
Abstract :
We present the design and evaluation of a novel low-cost palpation probe for Robot assisted Minimally Invasive Surgery (RMIS) for localizing subcutaneous blood vessels. It measures probe tip deflection using a Hall Effect sensor as the spherical tip is moved tangentially across a surface under automated control. The probe is intended to be single-use and disposable, built from 3D printed parts and commercially available electronics. The prototype has a cross-section of less than 15mm×10mm and fits on the end of an 8mm diameter needle driver in the Intuitive Surgical da Vinci® Research Kit (dVRK). We report experiments for quasi-static sliding palpation with silicone based tissue phantoms with embedded cylinders as subcutaneous blood vessel phantoms. We analyzed signal-to-noise ratios with multiple diameters of silicone cylinders (1.58-4.75 mm) at varying subcutaneous depths (1-5 mm) with a range of indentation depths (0-8 mm) and sliding speeds (0.5-21 mm/s). Results suggest that the probe can detect subcutaneous structures in phantoms of diameter 2.25 mm at a depth of up to 5mm below the tissue surface.
Keywords :
"Probes","Robot sensing systems","Phantoms","Surgery","Force"
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Automation Science and Engineering (CASE), 2015 IEEE International Conference on
ISSN :
2161-8070
Electronic_ISBN :
2161-8089
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CoASE.2015.7294253
Filename :
7294253
Link To Document :
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