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Journal ArticleDOI

Force controlled and teleoperated endoscopic grasper for minimally invasive surgery-experimental performance evaluation

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TLDR
The FREG as a tool incorporating the force feedback teleoperation technology may provide the basis for application in telesurgery, clinical endoscopic surgery, surgical training, and research.
Abstract
Minimally invasive surgery generates new user interfaces which create visual and haptic distortion when compared to traditional surgery. In order to regain the tactile and kinesthetic information that is lost, a computerized force feedback endoscopic surgical grasper (FREG) was developed with computer control and a haptic user interface. The system uses standard unmodified grasper shafts and tips. The FREG can control grasping forces either by surgeon teleoperation control, or under software control. The FREG performance was evaluated using an automated palpation function (programmed series of compressions) in which the grasper measures mechanical properties of the grasped materials. The material parameters obtained from measurements showed the ability of the FREG to discriminate between different types of normal soft tissues (small bowel, lung, spleen, liver, colon, and stomach) and different kinds of artificial soft tissue replication materials (latex/silicone) for simulation purposes. In addition, subjective tests of ranking stiffness of silicone materials using the FREG teleoperation mode showed significant improvement in the performance compared to the standard endoscopic grasper. Moreover, the FREG performance was closer to the performance of the human hand than the standard endoscopic grasper. The FREG as a tool incorporating the force feedback teleoperation technology may provide the basis for application in telesurgery, clinical endoscopic surgery, surgical training, and research.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Medical robotics in computer-integrated surgery

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Patent

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Patent

Modular and cooperative medical devices and related systems and methods

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Patent

Tool grip calibration for robotic surgery

TL;DR: In this paper, the end-effector engagement position is calibrated by bringing the jaw elements into engagement with each other, using a second derivative of the torque/position relationship to identify an engagement position.
References
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Book

Biomechanics: Mechanical Properties of Living Tissues

TL;DR: This chapter discusses the mechanics of Erythrocytes, Leukocytes, and Other Cells, and their role in Bone and Cartilage, and the properties of Bioviscoelastic Fluids, which are a by-product of these cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

A design framework for teleoperators with kinesthetic feedback

TL;DR: It is shown that the hybrid model (as opposed to other two-port forms) leads to an intuitive representation of ideal teleoperator performance and applies to several teleoperator architectures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tactual discrimination of softness

TL;DR: The ability of humans to tactually discriminate the softness of objects, using novel elastic objects with deformable and rigid surfaces, is investigated, and all the human subjects showed excellent softness discriminability in ranking the rubber specimens by active touch, and the subjective perception of softness correlated one-to-one with the objectively measured compliance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Computer-Integrated Surgery: Technology and Clinical Applications

TL;DR: In Computer-Integrated Surgery leading researchers and clinical practitioners describe the exciting new partnership that is being forged between surgeons and machines such as computers and robots, enabling them to perform certain skilled tasks better than either can do alone.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A sensor-based minimally invasive surgery tool for detecting tissutal elastic properties(003) 5323219

TL;DR: This paper presents a first attempt to realize a prototype of sensor-based surgical tool using a modified commercial tool that could enhance surgeon's haptic perception of the manipulated tissue.
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