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SURGICAL

3D ultrasound in robotic surgery: performance evaluation with stereo displays

Paul M. Novotny, Stephen Jacobsen, Nikolay V. Vasilyev, Daniel T. Kettler, Ivan S. Salgo, Pierre E. Dupont, Pedro J. del Nido, Robert D. Howe

Year
2006
Citations
11

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The recent advent of real-time 3D ultrasound (3DUS) imaging enables a variety of new surgical procedures. These procedures are hampered by the difficulty of manipulating tissue guided by the distorted, low-resolution 3DUS images. To lessen the effects of these limitations, we investigated stereo displays and surgical robots for 3DUS-guided procedures. METHODS: By integrating real-time stereo rendering of 3DUS with the binocular display of a surgical robot, we compared stereo-displayed 3DUS with normally displayed 3DUS. To test the efficacy of stereo-displayed 3DUS, eight surgeons and eight non-surgeons performed in vitro tasks with the surgical robot. RESULTS: Error rates dropped by 50% with a stereo display. In addition, subjects completed tasks faster with the stereo-displayed 3DUS as compared to normal-displayed 3DUS. A 28% decrease in task time was seen across all subjects. CONCLUSIONS: The results highlight the importance of using a stereo display. By reducing errors and increasing speed, it is an important enhancement to 3DUS-guided robotics procedures.

Keywords

Artificial intelligenceComputer scienceComputer vision3D ultrasoundRoboticsRobotic surgeryRendering (computer graphics)Stereo imagingUltrasoundRobot

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