Augmented Haptic Guidance for Needle Insertion with a 2-DoF Wrist-Worn Haptic Device

Author(s):  
Mine Sarac ◽  
Duke Loke ◽  
Max Evans ◽  
Olivia Chong ◽  
James Saunders ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Mario Covarrubias ◽  
Monica Bordegoni ◽  
Umberto Cugini ◽  
Elia Gatti ◽  
Alessandro Mansutti

The paper presents the design, construction, validation and testing of a Haptic Guidance Device whose aim is to provide dynamic assistance while performing manual activities such as drawing, hatching and cutting. A commercial phantom haptic device was modified by adding a pantograph mechanism in order to increase the haptic working area. The force feedback workspace provided by the phantom device is quite limited, 160 W × 120 H mm. This workspace sometimes is not enough to reproduce manual tasks in a large-scale area as is often required in several educational activities (e.g. sketching, hatching and cutting tasks). In this paper is evaluated a low cost solution for increasing the haptic working area provided by the phantom device. The pantograph mechanism has been linked with the haptic device in order to increase the working area in a 2:1 scale. The users hand moves a pen linked to the device through 2D predefined shapes in which the pens position have been tracked in 2D coordinates at 25 kHz in order to record all the data for the posterior analysis. The haptic guidance device is also equipped with a cutting system using hot wire for physically producing the drawn shape as a piece of polystyrene foam. The haptic guidance device has been tested by people with specific disorders affecting coordination such as Down syndrome and mental retardation under the supervision of their teachers and care assistants. The results of the study prove that higher performance levels can be achieved while performing manual tasks as sketching, hatching and cutting operation using the haptic guidance device.


2019 ◽  
Vol 04 (01) ◽  
pp. 1842003
Author(s):  
Pedro Moreira ◽  
Leanne Kuil ◽  
Pedro Dias ◽  
Ronald Borra ◽  
Sarthak Misra

Prostate cancer is one of the leading causes of death in men. Prostate interventions using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) benefits from high tissue contrast if compared to other imaging modalities. The Minimally Invasive Robotics In An MRI environment (MIRIAM) robot is an MRI-compatible system able to steer different types of needles towards a point of interest using MRI guidance. However, clinicians can be reluctant to give the robot total control of the intervention. This work integrates a haptic device in the MIRIAM system to allow input from the clinician during the insertion. A shared control architecture is achieved by letting the clinician control the insertion depth via the haptic device, while the robotic system controls the needle orientation. The clinician receives haptic feedback based on the insertion depth and tissue characteristics. Four control laws relating the motion of the master robot (haptic device) to the motion of the slave robot (MIRIAM robot) are presented and evaluated. Quantitative and qualitative results from 20 human subjects demonstrate that the squared-velocity control law is the most suitable option for our application. Additionally, a pre-operative target localization algorithm is presented in order to provide the robot with the target location. The target localization and reconstruction algorithm are validated in phantom and patient images with an average dice similarity coefficient (DSC) of 0.78. The complete system is validated through experiments by inserting a needle towards a target within the MRI scanner. Four human subjects perform the experiment achieving an average targeting error of 3.4[Formula: see text]mm.


Author(s):  
Ben Horan ◽  
Ali Ghanbari ◽  
Saeid Nahavandi ◽  
XiaoQi Chen ◽  
Wenhui Wang

This paper proposes a system providing the operator with an intuitive method for controlling a micromanipulator during intracellular injection. A low-cost haptic device is utilised and 3D position-to-position kinematic mapping allows the operator to control the micropipette using a similar method to handheld needle insertion. The workspaces of the haptic device and micromanipulator are analysed and the importance of appropriate scaling to positioning resolution and tracking performance is investigated. The control issues integral to achieving adequate control of the micromanipulator using the Phantom Omni haptic device are addressed. Aside from offering an intuitive method for controlling the micropipette, this work lays the foundation for real-time haptic assistance in the cell injection task.


2015 ◽  
Vol 762 ◽  
pp. 155-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florin Gîrbacia ◽  
Bogdan Gherman ◽  
Silviu Butnariu ◽  
Nicolae Plitea ◽  
Doru Talabă ◽  
...  

Brachytherapy (BT) is a modality to treat cancer by inserting needles into a patient to deliver radioactive sources direct to the diseased tissue. The efficiency of the treatment is determined by the positions of the needles. A robot can be used in order to increase the precision of the needles locations. This paper presents an approach for needle trajectory planning based on isomorphic mapping from a haptic device. A virtual reality environment has been modelled containing a 3D reconstructed abdominal model of the patient. Needle insertion using the BT robot is controlled using a Force Dimension Omega haptic device. The developed software application allows the users to practice robotic needle insertion and to determine the most appropriate locations for the BT needles.


Author(s):  
Neil Vaughan ◽  
Venketesh N. Dubey ◽  
Michael Y. K. Wee ◽  
Richard Isaacs

This paper presents a haptic device with 3D computer graphics as part of a high fidelity medical epidural simulator development program. The haptic device is used as an input to move the needle in 3D, and also to generate force feedback to the user during insertion. A needle insertion trial was conducted on a porcine cadaver to obtain force data. The data generated from this trial was used to recreate the feeling of epidural insertion in the simulator. The interaction forces have been approximated to the resultant force obtained during the trial representing the force generated by the haptic device. The haptic device is interfaced with the 3D graphics for visualization. As the haptic stylus is moved, the needle moves on the screen and the depth of the needle tip indicates which tissue layer is being penetrated. Different forces are generated by the haptic device for each tissue layer as the epidural needle is inserted. As the needle enters the epidural space, the force drops to indicate loss of resistance.


2012 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 470-489 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amine Chellali ◽  
Cedric Dumas ◽  
Isabelle Milleville-Pennel

In interventional radiology, physicians require high haptic sensitivity and fine motor skills development because of the limited real-time visual feedback of the surgical site. The transfer of this type of surgical skill to novices is a challenging issue. This paper presents a study on the design of a biopsy procedure learning system. Our methodology, based on a task-centered design approach, aims to bring out new design rules for virtual learning environments. A new collaborative haptic training paradigm is introduced to support human-haptic interaction in a virtual environment. The interaction paradigm supports haptic communication between two distant users to teach a surgical skill. In order to evaluate this paradigm, a user experiment was conducted. Sixty volunteer medical students participated in the study to assess the influence of the teaching method on their performance in a biopsy procedure task. The results show that to transfer the skills, the combination of haptic communication with verbal and visual communications improves the novices’ performance compared to conventional teaching methods. Furthermore, the results show that, depending on the teaching method, participants developed different needle insertion profiles. We conclude that our interaction paradigm facilitates expert-novice haptic communication and improves skills transfer; and new skills acquisition depends on the availability of different communication channels between experts and novices. Our findings indicate that the traditional fellowship methods in surgery should evolve to an off-patient collaborative environment that will continue to support visual and verbal communication, but also haptic communication, in order to achieve a better and more complete skills training.


2014 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 413-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gorm Erlend Oesterlie ◽  
Klaus Kjaer Petersen ◽  
Lars Knudsen ◽  
Tine Brink Henriksen

Author(s):  
Sarah Latus ◽  
Johanna Sprenger ◽  
Maximilian Neidhardt ◽  
Julia Schadler ◽  
Alexandra Ron ◽  
...  
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