A Master-Follower Teleoperation System for Robotic Catheterization: Design, Characterization, and Tracking Control
Nazari, Ali A., Catania, Jeremy, Sadeghian, Soroush, Jalali, Amir, Masnavi, Houman, Janabi-Sharifi, Farrokh, Zareinia, Kourosh
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Minimally invasive robotic surgery has gained significant attention over the past two decades. Telerobotic systems, combined with robot-mediated minimally invasive techniques, have enabled surgeons and clinicians to mitigate radiation exposure for medical staff and extend medical services to remote and hard-to-reach areas. To enhance these services, teleoperated robotic surgery systems incorporating master and follower devices should offer transparency, enabling surgeons and clinicians to remotely experience a force interaction similar to the one the follower device experiences with patients' bodies. This paper presents the design and development of a three-degree-of-freedom master-follower teleoperated system for robotic catheterization. To resemble manual intervention by clinicians, the follower device features a grip-insert-release mechanism to eliminate catheter buckling and torsion during operation. The bidirectionally navigable ablation catheter is statically characterized for force-interactive medical interventions. The system's performance is evaluated through approaching and open-loop path tracking over typical circular, infinity-like, and spiral paths. Path tracking errors are presented as mean Euclidean error (MEE) and mean absolute error (MAE). The MEE ranges from 0.64 cm (infinity-like path) to 1.53 cm (spiral path). The MAE also ranges from 0.81 cm (infinity-like path) to 1.92 cm (spiral path). The results indicate that while the system's precision and accuracy with an open-loop controller meet the design targets, closed-loop controllers are necessary to address the catheter's hysteresis and dead zone, and system nonlinearities.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Jul-18-2024
- Country:
- Asia
- Europe
- Italy (0.04)
- Latvia > Riga Municipality
- Riga (0.04)
- Sweden > Skåne County (0.04)
- Switzerland (0.04)
- North America
- Canada > Ontario
- Toronto (0.04)
- United States (0.04)
- Canada > Ontario
- Genre:
- Research Report > Experimental Study (0.48)
- Industry:
- Health & Medicine
- Health Care Technology (1.00)
- Surgery (1.00)
- Therapeutic Area > Cardiology/Vascular Diseases (0.47)
- Health & Medicine
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots (1.00)