INPUT HANDLES FOR A SURGEON CONSOLE OF A ROBOTIC SURGICAL SYSTEM
20230064250 · 2023-03-02
Assignee
Inventors
- Paul Wilhelm Schnur (Pipersville, PA, US)
- Zachary S. Leonard (Raleigh, NC, US)
- Nicholas J. Jardine (Holly Springs, NC, US)
Cpc classification
A61B2017/0046
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B34/76
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B34/70
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B2017/00216
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A user interface for a surgical robotic system includes a plurality of handles, each removably attachable to a user interface assembly by a quick release connector. The selection of handles can include handles of varying size, degree of complexity, handles adapted for laparoscopic motion, handles adapted for true cartesian motion or handles customized to surgeon anthropometric data, etc.
Claims
1. A method of operating a user interface for a surgical robotic system, comprising: providing a user interface configured to generate signals for use by a surgical robotic system to control motion of a surgical instrument, the user interface comprising a base, a handle including a handle body moveable relative to the base, and a joystick on the handle body; positioning a surgical instrument on a robotic manipulator, the surgical instrument having an elongate shaft with an articulating distal portion; positioning the surgical instrument through an incision such that the articulating distal portion is disposed in a body cavity; moving the handle body relative to the base to cause the robotic manipulator to move the instrument shaft relative to the incision; and moving the joystick relative to the handle body to cause articulation of the articulating distal portion relative to the elongate shaft.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein: the handle is provided to include at least one paddle member pivotable relative to the handle body; the surgical instrument includes a jaw member on the elongate shaft; and the method further includes pivoting the paddle member relative to the handle to move the jaw member between first and second positions.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein: the handle is provided to include a pair of paddle members pivotable relative to the handle body; the surgical instrument includes a pair of jaw members on the elongate shaft; and the method further includes pivoting the paddle members towards one another relative to the handle to move the jaw members to a closed position, and causing the paddle members to pivot away from one another to move the jaw members to an opened position.
4. The method of claim 1, further including activating an input on the handle to initiate delivery of energy to tissue in the body cavity by the surgical instrument
5. The method of claim 1, wherein providing the user interface includes providing an interface assembly connected to the base and moveable relative to the base, and providing the handle includes providing a handle releasably mountable to the interface assembly, and wherein the method further comprises: removing the handle from the interface assembly, and releasably attaching a second handle to the interface assembly;
6. The method of claim 5, wherein the step of removing the handle from the interface assembly comprises releasing a quick release connector attaching the handle to the interface assembly.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the quick release assembly is a twist lock.
8. The method of claim 6, wherein the quick release connector is a straight insertion lock.
9. The method of claim 6, wherein the quick release connector is a latch lock.
10. The method of claim 6, wherein the step of removing the handle from the interface assembly comprises releasing the quick release connector without use of a separate tool.
11. The method of claim 5, wherein at least one of the handle and the second handle is customized to surgeon anthropometric data.
12. The method of claim 1, further including: positioning a second surgical instrument on one of the robotic manipulator or a second robotic manipulator, and positioning the second surgical instrument through a second incision such that a distal end of the second surgical instrument is disposed in the body cavity; moving the handle body relative to the base to cause the robotic manipulator to cause movement of a first one of the first surgical instrument and the second surgical instrument shaft relative to the corresponding incision; and moving the joystick relative to the handle body to cause movement of a second one of the first surgical instrument and the second surgical instrument shaft relative to the corresponding incision.
13. A method of operating a user interface for a surgical robotic system, comprising: providing a user interface configured to generate signals for use by a surgical robotic system to control motion of a surgical instrument, the user interface comprising a base, a handle including a handle body moveable relative to the base, and a joystick on the handle body; positioning a first surgical instrument through a first incision such that a distal part of the first surgical instrument is disposed in a body cavity; positioning a second surgical instrument through a second incision such that a distal part of the second surgical instrument is disposed in the body cavity; moving the handle body relative to the base to cause robotic movement of the first instrument shaft relative to the first incision; and moving the joystick relative to the handle body to robotic movement of the second instrument shaft relative to the second incision.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein the method includes positioning the first surgical instrument on a first robotic manipulator and positioning the second surgical instrument on a second robotic manipulator, and wherein: moving the handle body relative to the base causes the first robotic manipulator to move the first instrument shaft relative to the first incision; and moving the joystick relative to the handle body causes the second robotic manipulator to move second instrument shaft relative to the second incision.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0027] The purpose of the disclosed invention is to provide a user interface device 60 configured to allow surgical staff to customize a user interface or a surgical robotic system to the specific instrument and/or user preference. The user interface device 60 is preferably part of a surgeon console for a robotic surgical system (see, for example, surgeon console 12 of
[0028]
[0029]
[0030] In use, the quick release connector is released and the handle that is on the interface assembly is withdrawn from the interface assembly as indicated in
[0031] The selection of handles 62a-f can include handles of varying degree of complexity, handles of different sizes and/or shapes, handles adapted for laparoscopic motion, handles adapted for true cartesian motion 62f, handles having different grip configurations (e.g. scissor grip, pistol grip, etc.) or jaw actuation mechanisms (e.g. scissor handle type arrangements, two- or one-lever mechanisms, triggers, finger loops, paddle arrangements (described in connection with
[0032] Some handles may incorporate tactile (e.g. vibratory) motors and/or brushed/brushless DC motors for haptic feedback. Some, as with the embodiment shown in
[0033] The
[0034] Handles might also include additional buttons, switches and/or toggles to provide additional forms of input to the surgical system used to control various other features, including clutching (suspension of the control relationship between handle motion and instrument), application of energy by the surgical instrument, and/or enabling/disabling certain features of the surgical robotic system. For example, a switch may be used to instruct the system to turn on eye-tracking camera control of the type described in commonly owned U.S. patent Ser. No. 10/251,713).
[0035] In some cases, the interchangeable handles may be provided as sterile, sterilizable, or disposable, options which would allow the surgeon to operate the interface while scrubbed in in the surgical field. In sterile embodiments, the handle may be placed under a sterile drape. In a sterilizable embodiment, the handle is designed to withstand cleaning and sterilization processes. Disposable embodiments are designed as single-use, disposable components.
[0036] In some configurations, mechanical and/or electrical/electronic controls 74 (
[0037] It may also be advantageous to transmit data and power between the handle and the surgeon console without contacts. Methods of contactless power and data transmission are described in U.S. application Ser. No. 16/051,466 (“Contactless Power and Data Transmission for Surgical Robotic System”) and U.S. application Ser. No. 16/732,935, filed on the same day as the present application (“Optical Data Transmission in a Wireless Power Transmitter for a Surgical Robotic System”)(Attorney Ref: TRX-14700R).
[0038] In a handle configuration with a brushless DC motor, hall sensor, encoders, or other IO, there can be upwards of 20 signals transmitted between the handle and the interface assembly. Directly transmitting large numbers of signals such as these would require a large connector that may be unrealistic for a user mechanism of the desired size. The connector and associated wire harness would add weight to the mechanism and decrease its reliability. An embodiment therefore includes a PCBA that serializes the various signals communicated through the handle to reduce the number of signals transmitted between the handles and the console. In this embodiment, there would be an associated PCBA to deserialize the handle signal to extract the individual signals. One embodiment for a serialized communication scheme with a representative handle configuration could implement power and data transmission through the connector 68 in 8 pins: 3 pins for the motor winding, and pins for each of serializer power, serializer ground, serializer signal A, serializer signal B, and an earth ground.
[0039] Another embodiment for power transfer to the handle includes incorporating battery power into the handle. The battery could be designed for a single-use, disposable handle, could be designed with capacity for a finite use life, or it could be rechargeable between procedures using either contacts or wireless charging (e.g. Qi, PMA or proprietary standard). Incorporating a battery into the handle is another method to reduce the number of contacts at the handle interface and to enable improved design for sterility/sterilization.
[0040] All patents and patent applications referenced herein, including for purposes of priority, are incorporated herein by reference.