MiroSurge

MiroSurge[1] is a presently prototypic robotic system (as of 05/2012) designed mainly for research [2] [3] [4] in minimally invasive telesurgery. In the described configuration, the system is designed according to the master slave principle and enables the operator to remotely control minimally invasive surgical instruments including force/torque feedback. The scenario is developed at the Institute of Robotics and Mechatronics (RMC) within the German Aerospace Center (DLR).

The system consists of

Besides the semi-autonomous motion compensation,[5] the system exclusively is a telemanipulator at any time and the surgeon at the workstation has full control of the surgical instruments. To change instruments or to introduce the robot setup, and for safety reasons a surgical assistant is present in the operating room (OR).

MIRO robot arm

MIRO [6] is a lightweight robot (mass: approx. 10 kg, i.e. 353 US oz) with an optimized design for surgical applications.

In the minimally invasive setup MiroSurge, the MIRO arms are mounted directly to the side-rails of the operation table. As the robot has full 6 DoF motion capabilities, the trocar can be located almost arbitrary within the robot’s workspace. Due to the additional DoF (joint) of the robot, a nullspace (elbow) motion is possible during operation of the robot, which is utilized for collision avoidance.

MICA minimally invasive instrument

MICA [7] (mass approx. 0,9 kg, i.e. 31.8 US oz) is a robotic instrument for minimally invasive surgery.

The instrument MICA is mounted directly to the hollow wrist of the robot MIRO, thus the lost 2DoF of motion due to the trocar in case of the minimally invasive setup MiroSurge are re-established, giving the surgeon full dexterity inside patient's body.

Surgical workstation

For manipulation, the surgeon sits in front of a user console, remotely located from the operation table. The console comprises

Thereby, the surgeon is able to guide e.g. two robotic instruments MICA (slave) by moving the hand-held input devices according to the desired motion. Visual and haptic feedback is provided to the surgeon by the HD-display in front of him and the force/torque reflecting input devices respectively.

Planning and registration

Concerning an optimized positioning of robotic components and patient in relation to workspace accessibility, research is done within the MiroSurge system concerning pre-operative planning as well as intra-operative registration. [11] [12] [13]

Intended applications

MiroSurge as a system for minimally invasive surgery is intended to operate in the abdominal and thoracic region with two MIRO-robots carrying MICA-instruments and one robot for the stereo-endoscope.

References

  1. Hagn, Ulrich; Konietschke, R. and Tobergte, A. and Nickl, M. and Jörg, S. and Kuebler, B. and Passig, G. and Gröger, M. and Fröhlich, F. and Seibold, U. and Le-Tien, L. and Albu-Schäffer, A. and Nothelfer, A. and Hacker, F. and Grebenstein, M. and Hirzinger, G. (2010). "The DLR MiroSurge: a versatile system for research in endoscopic telesurgery". International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery. 5 (2): 183–193. doi:10.1007/s11548-009-0372-4. Cite uses deprecated parameter |coauthors= (help)
  2. "MiroSurge". TUM Miti. Retrieved 04.05.2012. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  3. "Medical Robotics Research". COMPAMED. Retrieved 04.05.2012. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  4. "SAFROS- SAFety in RObotic Surgery". LSRO / SAFROS. Retrieved 04.05.2012. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  5. Groeger, Martin; Arbter, K.; Hirzinger, G. (2008). "Motion Tracking for Minimally Invasive Robotic Surgery". Medical Robotics: 117–148.
  6. Hagn, Ulrich; Nickl, Matthias and Jörg, Stephan and Passig, Georg and Bahls, Thomas and Nothhelfer, Alexander and Hacker, Franz and Le-Tien, Luc and Albu-Schäffer, Alin and Konietschke, Rainer and Grebenstein, Markus and Warpup, Rebecca and Haslinger, Robert and Frommberger, Mirko and Hirzinger, Gerd (2008). "The DLR MIRO: A versatile lightweight robot for surgical applications". Industrial Robot: An International Journal. 35 (4): 324–336. doi:10.1108/01439910810876427. Cite uses deprecated parameter |coauthors= (help)
  7. Thielmann, Sophie; Seibold, U.; Haslinger, R.; Passig, G.; Bahls, T.; Jörg, S.; Nickl, M.; Nothhelfer, A.; Hagn, U.; Hirzinger, G. (2010). "MICA - A new generation of versatile instruments in robotic surgery".
  8. Seibold, Ulrich; Kuebler, B.; Thielmann, S.; Hirzinger, G. (2009). "Endoscopic 3 DoF-Instrument with 7 DoF Force/Torque Feedback". Workshop contribution, presented at ICRA2009, Kobe, Japan.
  9. Tobergte, Andreas; Helmer, Patrick and Hagn, Ulrich and Rouiller, Patrice and Thielmann, Sophie and Grange, Sebastien and Albu-Sch\"affer, Alin and Conti, Francois and Hirzinger, Gerd (2011). "The sigma.7 haptic interface for MiroSurge: A new bi-manual surgical console". In: Proceedings of the IEEE (CFP11IRO-DVD) IROS2011: 3023–3030. Cite uses deprecated parameter |coauthors= (help)
  10. "sigma.7". Force Dimension.
  11. Konietschke, Rainer; Weiss, H.; Ortmaier, T.; Hirzinger, G. (2004). "A Preoperative Planning Procedure for Robotically Assisted Minimally Invasive Interventions".
  12. Konietschke, Rainer; Bodenmüller, T.; Rink, C.; Schwier, A.; Bäuml, B.; Hirzinger, G. (2011). "Optimal Setup of the DLR MiroSurge Telerobotic System for Minimally Invasive Surgery". Proceedings of the 2011 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA).
  13. Tobergte, Andreas; Konietschke, R.; Hirzinger, G. (2009). "Planning and Control of a Teleoperation System for Research in Minimally Invasive Robotic Surgery". In Proceedings of the 2009 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA).
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.