Micro-force guided cooperative control for surgical manipulation of delicate tissue
09662174 ยท 2017-05-30
Assignee
Inventors
- Russell H. Taylor (Severna Park, MD, US)
- Marcin Arkadiusz Balicki (Baltimore, MD, US)
- James Tahara Handa (Baltimore, MD, US)
- Peter Louis Gehlbach (Hunt Valley, MD, US)
- Iulian Iordachita (Towson, MD, US)
- Ali Uneri (Baltimore, MD)
Cpc classification
A61B2090/064
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G05B19/423
PHYSICS
G05B2219/36432
PHYSICS
G05B2219/45123
PHYSICS
International classification
A61B34/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A method and system for micro-force guided cooperative control that assists the operator in manipulating tissue in the direction of least resistance. A tool holder receives a surgical tool adapted to be held by a robot and a surgeon. A first sensor measures interaction forces between a tip of the surgical tool and tissue of a region of interest. A second sensor measures interaction forces between the surgeon and a handle to the surgical tool. A data processor is configured to perform an algorithm to actively guide the surgical tool by creating a bias towards a path of least resistance and limit directional tool forces of the surgical tool as a function of handle input forces and tip forces. This function offers assistance to challenging retinal membrane peeling procedures that require a surgeon to delicately delaminate fragile tissue that is susceptible to hemorrhage and tearing due to undesirable forces.
Claims
1. A method of cooperative control of a surgical tool, comprising: providing a surgical tool to be manipulated during an operation; measuring interaction forces between the surgical tool and tissue of a region of interest; measuring interaction forces between a surgeon and a handle of the surgical tool; and actively guiding, by a cooperatively controlled robot, the surgical tool by creating a direction-dependent bias in the response of the cooperatively controlled robot to said measured interaction forces between said surgeon and said handle of said surgical tool based on said measured interaction forces between said surgical tool and tissue of said region of interest, wherein actively guiding the surgical tool comprises applying a limit on directional tool forces according to
2. The method of cooperative control of a surgical tool according to claim 1, wherein directional tool force limits are redistributed when the surgeon changes a direction of the surgical tool.
3. The method of cooperative control of a surgical tool according to claim 1, wherein the limit of the interaction forces between the tip of the surgical tool and the tissue of the region of interest is based on biological data.
4. The method of cooperative control of a surgical tool according to claim 1, wherein the limit of the interaction forces between the tip of the surgical tool and the tissue of the region of interest is based on sensor data gathered during tissue manipulation.
5. The method of cooperative control of a surgical tool according to claim 4, wherein the tissue is eye tissue.
6. The method of cooperative control of a surgical tool according to claim 1, further comprising using the method to perform a blunt tissue dissection.
7. The method of cooperative control of a surgical tool according to claim 1, further comprising dynamically updating virtual fixtures in robot assisted manipulation.
8. A method of cooperative control of a surgical tool, comprising: providing a surgical tool to be manipulated during an operation; measuring interaction forces between the surgical tool and tissue of a region of interest; measuring interaction forces between a surgeon and a handle of the surgical tool; and actively guiding, by a cooperatively controlled robot, the surgical tool by creating a direction-dependent bias in the response of the cooperatively controlled robot to said measured interaction forces between said surgeon and said handle of said surgical tool based on said measured interaction forces between said surgical tool and tissue of said region of interest, wherein creating a direction-dependent bias comprises enforcing a minimum velocity according to
{dot over (x)}.sub.min=k.sub.p(1r.sub.ts.sub.min)f.sub.h, where k.sub.p is a gain of the measured interaction forces between the tip of the surgical tool and the tissue of a region of interest; r.sub.t=|f.sub.t|/f.sub.t, where f.sub.t is the measured interaction forces between a tip of the surgical tool and the tissue of a region of interest; s.sub.min is a sensitivity of minimization that sets a ratio of the handle force to be locally minimized; and f.sub.h is the measured interaction forces between the surgeon and the handle to the surgical tool.
9. A cooperative control robotic system, comprising: a tool holder for receiving a surgical tool; a first sensor for measuring interaction forces between the surgical tool and tissue of a region of interest; a second sensor for measuring interaction forces between a surgeon and a handle of the surgical tool; and a cooperatively controlled robot configured to actively guide the surgical tool by creating a direction-dependent bias in a response of said cooperatively controlled robot to said measured interaction forces between said surgeon and said handle of said surgical tool based on said measured interaction forces between said surgical tool and tissue of said region of interest, wherein the cooperatively controlled robot is configured to actively guide the surgical tool by applying a limit on directional tool forces according to
10. The cooperative control robotic system according to claim 9, wherein directional tool force limits are redistributed when the surgeon changes a direction of the surgical tool.
11. The cooperative control robotic system according to claim 9, wherein the limit of the interaction forces between the tip of the surgical tool and the tissue of the region of interest is based on biological data.
12. The cooperative control robotic system according to claim 9, wherein the limit of the interaction forces between the tip of the surgical tool and the tissue of the region of interest is based on sensor data gathered during tissue manipulation.
13. The cooperative control robotic system according to claim 12, wherein the tissue is eye tissue.
14. The cooperative control robotic system according to claim 9, wherein the system is used to perform a blunt tissue dissection.
15. The cooperative control robotic system according to claim 9, wherein the cooperatively controlled robot is configured to dynamically update virtual fixtures in robot assisted manipulation.
16. A cooperative control robotic system, comprising: a tool holder for receiving a surgical tool; a first sensor for measuring interaction forces between the surgical tool and tissue of a region of interest; a second sensor for measuring interaction forces between a surgeon and a handle of the surgical tool; and a cooperatively controlled robot configured to actively guide the surgical tool by creating a direction-dependent bias in a response of said cooperatively controlled robot to said measured interaction forces between said surgeon and said handle of said surgical tool based on said measured interaction forces between said surgical tool and tissue of said region of interest, wherein the cooperatively controlled robot is configured to create a direction-dependent bias by enforcing a minimum velocity according to
{dot over (x)}.sub.min=k.sub.p(1r.sub.ts.sub.min)f.sub.h, where k.sub.p is a gain of the measured interaction forces between the tip of the surgical tool and the tissue of a region of interest; r.sub.t=|f.sub.t|/f.sub.t, where f.sub.t is the measured interaction forces between a tip of the surgical tool and the tissue of a region of interest; s.sub.min is a sensitivity of minimization that sets a ratio of the handle force to be locally minimized; and f.sub.h is the measured interaction forces between the surgeon and the handle to the surgical tool.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The accompanying drawings provide visual representations which will be used to more fully describe the representative embodiments disclosed herein and can be used by those skilled in the art to better understand them and their inherent advantages. In these drawings, like reference numerals identify corresponding elements and:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(10) The presently disclosed subject matter now will be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying Drawings, in which some, but not all embodiments of the inventions are shown. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout. The presently disclosed subject matter may be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will satisfy applicable legal requirements. Indeed, many modifications and other embodiments of the presently disclosed subject matter set forth herein will come to mind to one skilled in the art to which the presently disclosed subject matter pertains having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated Drawings. Therefore, it is to be understood that the presently disclosed subject matter is not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed and that modifications and other embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.
(11) The present invention pertains to a novel method and system for micro-force guided cooperative control that assists the operator in manipulating tissue in the direction of least resistance. This function has the potential to aid in challenging retinal membrane peeling procedures that require a surgeon to delicately delaminate fragile tissue that is susceptible to hemorrhage and tearing due to undesirable forces. It can also be useful in other microsurgical tasks such as controlled tearing of tissue in capsularhexis, blunt tissue dissection, or other delicate surgical tasks.
(12) An exemplary embodiment of the invention provides for use of the system and method in cooperatively controlled hand-over-hand systems, such as the robotic assisted surgical system described in Development and Application of a New Steady-Hand Manipulator for Retinal Surgery, Mitchell et al., IEEE ICRA, pp. 623-629 (2007), and in New Steady-Hand Eye Robot with Microforce Sensing for Vitreoretinal Surgery Research, A. Uneri, M. Balicki, James Handa, Peter Gehlbach, R. Taylor, and I. Iordachita, International Conference on Biomedical Robotics and Biomechatronics (BIOROB), Tokyo, Sep. 26-29, 2010, pp. 814-819, the entire contents of which are incorporated by reference herein. In steady-hand control, the surgeon and robot both hold the surgical tool. The robot senses forces exerted by the surgeon on the tool handle, and moves to comply, filtering out any tremor. While a specific cooperative control system is described in connection with the above publication, it should be understood that the system and method of the present invention may also be applicable to other cooperatively controlled systems.
(13) With reference to
(14) As shown in
(15) Preferably, a custom mechanical RCM is provided, which improves the stiffness and precision of the robot stages. The RCM mechanism improves the general stability of the system by reducing range of motion and velocities in the Cartesian stages when operating in virtual RCM mode, which constrains the tool axis to always intersect the sclerotomy opening on the eye.
(16) With reference to
(17) With continued reference to
(18) For vitreoretinal microsurgical applications, a three sensor should be chosen that allows for sub-mN accuracy, requiring the sensing of forces that are routinely below 7.5 mN. As such, a very small instrument size is necessary to be inserted through a 25 Ga sclerotomy opening and the force sensor should be designed to be capable of measurements at the instrument's tip, below the sclera.
(19) With reference back to
(20) As discussed above, complications in vitreoretinal surgery may result from excess and/or incorrect application of forces to ocular tissue. As shown in
(21) According to the features of the present invention, the cooperative control method and system of the present invention uses real-time information to gently guide the operator towards lower forces in a peeling task. The method can be analyzed in two main components, as will be described below.
(22) Safety Limits: The first layer of control enforces a global limit on the forces applied to the tissue at the robot tool tip. Setting a maximum force f.sub.max, the limiting force f.sub.min on each axis would conventionally be defined as
f.sub.lim=f.sub.maxr.sub.i, r.sub.t=|f.sub.t|/f.sub.t
(23) However, this approach has the disadvantage of halting all motion when the tip force reaches the force limit, i.e., the operator has to back up the robot in order to apply a force in other directions. Distributing the limit with respect to the handle input forces
f.sub.lim=f.sub.maxr.sub.h, r.sub.h=|f.sub.h|/f.sub.h
gives more freedom to the operator, allowing him/her to explore alternative directions (i.e., search for maneuvers that would generate lower tip forces) even when f.sub.t is at its limit.
(24) Considering the governing law,
{dot over (x)}=k.sub.pf.sub.h
where {dot over (x)}=velocity.
We apply the limit as follows:
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Thus, Cartesian velocity is proportionally scaled with respect to current tip force, where a virtual spring of length l.sub.lim is used to ensure stability at the limit boundary.
(26) Active Guidance: The second layer is to guide the operator in order to prevent reaching the limit in the first place. This is achieved by actively biasing, the tool tip motion towards the direction of lower resistance. The ratio r.sub.t is used to update the operator input in the following fashion:
{dot over (x)}.sub.min=k.sub.p(1r.sub.ts.sub.min)f.sub.h
where s.sub.min is the sensitivity of minimization that sets the ratio of the handle force to be locally minimized. Note that s.sub.min=0% implies that the operator is not able to override the guided behavior.
(27) Finally, for extra safety, if either sensor is detected as being engaged, e.g., the operator is not applying, any force at the handle (<0.1 N), the robot minimizes f.sub.t by backing up.
{dot over (x)}=k.sub.pf.sub.t
(28) With reference to
(29) At this point, the user can engage in one of two tasks. First, the user can change direction, which redistributes the direction tip force limits (114). This will then direct the program back, to actively guiding the robot by creating a bias towards the path of least resistance. Second, the user can disengage the handle (116). The robot may then back up to reduce resistance, at 118. At 120, the robot disengages the tissue.
(30) With reference to
EXAMPLE
(31) The following Example has been included to provide guidance to one of ordinary skill in the art for practicing representative embodiments of the presently disclosed subject matter. In light of the present disclosure and the general level of skill in the art, those of skill can appreciate that the following Example is intended to be exemplary only and that numerous changes, modifications, and alterations can be employed without departing from the scope of the presently disclosed subject matter. The following Example is offered by way of illustration and not by way of limitation.
(32) A series of experiments were performed on the inner shell membrane of raw chicken eggs with the aim of identifying and controlling the forces associated with peeling operations. The first set of experiments was carried out to assess the capability of the system in tissue resistance forces through controlled motion and high resolution sensing. Attaching the surgical hook to the sample tissue, a desired constant force was set and the translation was measured with the corrected displacement of the tool tip. The applied force was increased by 1 mN with a 10 s delay between each increment. The system was first tested against a spring, or known stiffness, see
(33) The characteristic curve obtained reveals a similar pattern to those seen in fibrous tissue tearing. The toe region of the curve, the shape of which is due to recruitment of collagen fibers, is a safe region from a surgical point of view and is followed by a predictable linear response. Yielding occurs as bonds begin to break, resulting in a sudden drop on resistive forces due to complete failure. In the surgical setting, this marks the beginning of a membrane being peeled.
(34) In a second set of experiments, the control algorithm was tested. A global limit of 7 mN was set, with a in sensitivity of 90%. An audio cue was also used to inform the operator when the limit was reached. The algorithm was first tested by stripping a piece of tape from a surface. This work revealed the direction of minimum resistance for this phantom. The operator was naturally guided away from the centerline of the tape, following a gradient of force towards a local minimum resistance. Due to mechanical advantage, this corresponded to peeling at 45 (
(35) Repeating the experiments on the egg membrane, the egg tended to peel in circular trajectories (see
(36) Upon reaching the force limit, the operator explored around the boundary in search of points of lower resistance that would enable continuation of peel. This was achieved smoothly without requiring the operator to back up, as the limits of axes were redistributed based on operator's application of handle force.
(37) Accordingly, the present invention advantageously provides for a novel method and system for micro-force guided cooperative control that assists the operator in manipulating tissue in the direction of least resistance, particularly useful in helping surgeons during retinal membrane peeling procedures that require a surgeon to delicately delaminate fragile tissue that is susceptible to hemorrhage and tearing due to undesirable forces. The system and method directs the surgeon to a path of least resistance, instead of requiring the surgeon to back up.
(38) Although the present invention has been described in connection with preferred embodiments thereof, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that additions, deletions, modifications, and substitutions not specifically described may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.