Tracked “Pick-Up” Ultrasound for Robot-Assisted Minimally Invasive Surgery
Caitlin Schneider, Christopher Nguan, Robert Rohling, Septimiu E. Salcudean
- Year
- 2015
- Citations
- 30
Abstract
GOAL: We present a novel "pick-up" ultrasound transducer for intraabdominal robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery. Such a "pick-up" ultrasound transducer is inserted through an abdominal incision at the beginning of the procedure and remains in the abdominal cavity throughout, eliminating the need for a dedicated port or a patient bedside surgical assistant. The transducer has a handle that can be grasped in a repeatable manner using a da Vinci Prograsp tool, allowing the transducer to be accurately manipulated by the surgeon using the da Vinci Robot. This is one way to enable 3-D tracking of the transducer, and, thus, mapping of the vasculature. The 3-D vascular images can be used to register preoperative CT to intraoperative camera images. METHODS: To demonstrate the feasibility of the approach, we use an ultrasound vessel phantom to register a CT surface model to extracted ultrasound vessel models. The 3-D vascular phantom images are generated by segmenting B-mode images and tracking the pick-up ultrasound transducer with the da Vinci kinematics, internal electromagnetic sensor, or visible fiducials suitable for camera tracking. RESULTS: Reconstruction results using da Vinci kinematics for tracking give a target registration error of 5.4 ± 1.7 mm.
Keywords
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