“Active and Passive Compensation of Physiological Motion for Accuracy Enhancement in Surgery”

Speaker:
Cameron Riviere 

Session 4 

Time: 1.00 PM Feb 1st, CSL B02 

Abstract:

Much of the research in the Surgical Mechatronics Laboratory of the Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon involves active and passive robotic compensation of physiological motion for surgical accuracy enhancement.

The goal of enhancing accuracy in microsurgery while also minimizing cost and maximizing ease of use has motivated the development of a fully handheld instrument, known as Micron, which senses its own motion, estimates the undesired component of its movement, and active compensates by deflecting its tip to oppose the undesired component. Feedback sensing for control is provided by a purpose-built frequency-multiplexed optical tracker that provides six-degree-of-freedom tracking with noise of several microns at 2 kHz sampling. Actuation in the latest 6-DOF prototype involves ultrasonic linear motors. To enable vision-based control modes, the system is augmented with a stereo pair of cameras that view the workspace through the operating microscope. The talk will describe the design and operation of Micron, and will present experimental results from a variety of control modes including visual servoing and semi-automated scanning pattern generation.

Passive compensation is the approach followed by HeartLander, an intrapericardial crawling robot that performs passive compensation of heartbeat and respiratory motion during minimally invasive surgery. The crawler adheres to the epicardium using suction, and moves via inchworm-like crawling, driven by flexible push-wires connected to motors outside the patient. Recent results with the system will be presented, including improving locomotion efficiency via synchronization with heartbeat and respiration, particle filtering for accurate localization on the beating heart, and technologies for treatment by myocardial injection.

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