Robotic Surgery Report
Robotic Surgery Report
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
The field of robotics has the potential to equally alter how we live in the 21st century. We have already seen how robots have changed the manufacturing of cars and other consumer goods by streamlining and speeding up the assembly line. We even have robotic lawn mowers and robotic pets now. And robots have enabled us to see places that humans are not yet able to visit, such as other planets and the depths of the ocean. In the coming decades, we will see robots that have artificial intelligence, coming to resemble the humans that create them. They will eventually become self-aware and conscious, and be able to do anything that a human can. When we talk about robots doing the tasks of humans, we often talk about the future, but the future of Robotic surgery is already here. The 1990s have witnessed the so-called laparoscopic revolution in which many operations were adapted from the traditional open surgery to the minimal access technique. Shorter hospital stays, reduced postoperative pain, lower incidence of wound infections, and better cosmetic outcomes have made operations, such as laparoscopic cholecystectomy, the standard of care for cholelethiasis. Favourable results prompted surgeons to attempt to develop minimally invasive techniques for most surgical procedures. However, many complex procedures proved difficult to learn and to perform laparoscopically due to technical limitations inherent in laparoscopic surgery. For example, the video camera held by the assistant was unstable and gave a limited two-dimensional vision of the field, and the primary surgeon was forced to adopt awkward positions to operate with straight laparoscopic instruments, limiting manoeuvring. At some point, the growth of the laparoscopic field reached its ostensible plateau, and it seemed that only a new technologic leap could spur further development. Robotic surgery is expected to continue to comprise a growing part of surgery. It is envisaged that "almost all surgery can and will be performed by robotic surgery in the future." Thus, robotic surgery will not only require special training, it will also change the existing surgical training pattern and reshape the learning curve of residents by offering new solutions, such as robotic surgical simulators and robotic telemonitoring.
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This system enables surgeons to remove gallbladders and perform other general surgical procedures while being seated at a computer console and 3-D video imaging system across the room from the patient. The surgeons operate controls with their hands and fingers to direct a robotically controlled laparoscope. At the end of the laparoscope are advanced articulating surgical instruments and miniature cameras that allow surgeons to peer into the body and perform the procedures. This system and other robotic devices developed or under development have the potential to revolutionize surgery and the operating room. They provide surgeons with the precision and dexterity necessary to perform complex, minimally invasive surgical (MIS) procedures, such as beating-heart single- or double-vessel bypass and neurological, orthopaedic, and plastic surgery, among many other future applications.
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Surgery now uses robotic and image processing systems in order to interactively assist the medical team, both in planning the surgical intervention, and in its execution. This new technique enhances the quality of surgical procedures by minimizing their side effects (smaller incisions, lesser trauma, and more precision...), thus increasing patient benefit while decreasing the surgical cost. These techniques are being successfully introduced in several areas of surgery: neurosurgery, orthopaedics, micro-surgery, cardiovascular and general surgery etc.
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scans, magnetic
resonance
imaging (MRI)
ray scans. For some procedures, surgeons may have to place pins into the bones of the patient to act as markers or navigation points for the computer. Once the surgeon has imaged the patient, he or she must determine the surgical pathway the robot will take.
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ROBOTIC SURGERY The surgeon must tell the robot what the proper surgical pathway is. The robot can't make these decisions on its own. Once the surgeon programs the robot, it can follow instructions exactly.
The next step is registration. In this phase, the surgeon finds the points on the patient's body that correspond to the images created during the planning phase. The surgeon must match the points exactly in order for the robot to complete the surgery without error. The final phase is navigation. This involves the actual surgery. The surgeon must first position the robot and the patient so that every movement the robot makes corresponds with the information in its programmed path. Once everyone is ready, the surgeon activates the robot, which carries out its instructions.
2. Telesurgery Systems: Telesurgery is also known as Remote surgery. It gives ability to a doctor to perform surgery on a patient even though they are not physically in the same location. It is a form of telepresence. Remote surgery combines elements of robotics, cutting edge communication technology such as high-speed data connections and elements of management information systems. With this system, a surgeon actually directs the actions of robotic arms. In effect, the robot becomes an extension of the surgeon. The system consists of surgical arms within a
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ROBOTIC SURGERY surgical suite and a separate viewing and control console. The surgeon will view the surgical field in a three-dimensional viewing screen and will manipulate the robotic arms from hand-held controls within the console. Another surgeon in the surgical suite will change out tools on the robotic arms as needed during the procedure. Small incisions will be made in the body and the tools will then be inserted. Once this step is complete, the surgeon can then operate. These systems are known for providing a means to perform minimally invasive surgical procedures.
3. Shared Control Surgical Systems: In shared-control robotic systems aid surgeons during surgery, but the human does most of the work. Unlike the other robotic systems, the surgeons must operate the surgical instruments themselves. The robotic system monitors the surgeon's performance and provides stability and support through active constraint. Active constraint is a concept that relies on defining regions on a patient as one of four possibilities: safe, close, boundary or forbidden. Surgeons define safe regions as the main focus of a surgery. For example, in orthopaedic surgery, the safe region might be a specific site on the patient's hip. Safe regions don't border soft tissues.
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In orthopaedic surgery, a close region is one that borders soft tissue. Since orthopaedic surgical tools can do a lot of damage to soft tissue, the robot constrains the area the surgeon can operate within. It does this by providing haptic responses, also known as force feedback. As the surgeon approaches the soft tissue, the robot pushes back against the surgeon's hand. As the surgeon gets closer to soft tissue, the instrument enters the boundary region. At this point, the robot will offer more resistance, indicating the surgeon should move away from that area. If the surgeon continues cutting toward the soft tissue, the robot locks into place. Anything from that point on is the forbidden region. Like the other robots we've looked at, shared-control system robots don't automatically know the difference between safe regions versus a forbidden region. The surgeons must first go through the planning, registration and navigation phases with a patient. Only after inputting that information into the robot's system can the robot offer guidance.
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Robotics also decreases the fatigue that doctors experience during surgeries that can last several hours. Surgeons can become exhausted during those long surgeries, and can experience hand tremors as a result. Even the steadiest of human hands cannot match those of a surgical robot. For example, the da Vinci system has been programmed to compensate for tremors, so that if the doctor's handshakes, the computer ignores it and keeps the mechanical arm steady.
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2. Intra-operative assistance:
The results obtained in the planning phase are then calibrated and put in correspondence with patient in intra-operative situation. As a consequence, the robotic system is able to provide interactive assistance/guidance, and to constrain the movements of the surgeon in order to perform, with the desired precision, the possibly pre-defined procedure, e.g. neurosurgical biopsy. In some cases, the robot may have an autonomous behaviour in order to realize a dedicated and fixed part of the procedure, e.g. thighbone drilling for artificial hip installation.
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This is an illustration of a local robotic surgery unit. Surgeon console: A high definition 3-dimensional image of the area to be operated upon is projected on to a screen. A mechanical control for operating the robotic arm is handled by the surgeon in the console. Image processing equipment: This consists of optical sensors and a Digital signal processor for getting enhanced images. Surgical arm cart: This acts as a platform for the entire Robotic arm and is used for controlling the linear movements of the arm. Hi-resolution 3-D Endoscope: This consists of an optical fibre and a reflector arrangement, it is an optical instrument used for visual inspection or photography of internal parts of the human body. The insertion of the endoscope into the body is done either through the natural openings or through a small incision in the skin. Computer: Enhanced Surgical System which uses sensitive remote-controlled surgical instruments guided by a surgeon at a computer keyboard. The system involves using a tiny camera with multiple lenses inserted into the patient's chest, providing a three-dimensional image of the heart. The surgeon, at a nearby computer workstation, watches through a Dept. of ME, SIT, Mangalore Page 13
ROBITIC SURGERY viewport to see inside the chest as a pair of joysticks is manipulated to control two preciselyengineered robotic arms.
The arms hold specially designed surgical instruments that mimic the actual movement of the surgeon's hands on the joysticks. Using the robotic technology, only three holes - each about the diameter of a pencil - are needed to complete the surgery. Sitting at the control console, a few feet from the operating table, the surgeon looks into a viewfinder to examine the 3-D images being sent by the camera inside the patient. The images show the surgical site and the two surgical instruments mounted on the tips of two of the rods. Joystick-like controls, located just underneath the screen, are used by the surgeon to manipulate the surgical instruments. Each time one of the joysticks is moved, a computer sends an electronic signal to one of the instruments, which moves in sync with the movements of the surgeon's hands. So far, these machines have been used to position an endoscope, perform gallbladder surgery and correct gastroesophogeal reflux and heartburn. The ultimate goal of the robotic surgery field is to design a robot that can be used to perform closed-chest, beating-heart surgery.
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ROBITIC SURGERY surgery requires a 12 to 15 inch incision in the chest, and patients are hospitalized for 5 to 6 days. This procedure may lead to the elimination of the large incision and too much faster recovery time. If robotic surgery continues to be safe and successful, it could mean that doctors many need to cut across the chest and crack the rib cage to perform open-heart surgery only in rare cases. Because robotic instruments and controls are linked electronically via cable or satellite link, a surgeon can operate on patients located in remote areas. In order to perform a remote surgery operation, the system requires two functioning worksites: one for the surgeon and one for the robotic devices actually operating on the patient. Remote surgery is based on a master-slave robotics model, in which a controller manipulates the robot from a distance by using two joysticks that control the tracking of the robotic devices. The worksite on the patient's end contains the robotic devices, which perform the surgical procedures. Despite certain difficulties, many experts believe remote surgery will be a reality in a few years. By providing the use of a variety of technologies to enhance the capabilities of human surgeons, robotics will become an increasingly vital component in the medical world. Doctors of the next century must learn to use this information to complement their capabilities in order to provide better patient care.
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ROBOTIC SURGERY complex, minimally invasive surgical (MIS) procedures, such as beating-heart single- or double-vessel bypass and neurological, orthopaedic, and plastic surgery, among many other future applications. Manufacturers believe that their products will broaden the scope and increase the effectiveness of MIS; improve patient outcomes; and create a safer, more efficient, and more cost-effective operating room. It is the vision of these companies that robotic systems will one day be applicable to all surgical specialties, although it is too early to tell the full extent to which they'll be used. Surgical robotics manufacturers working toward FDA approval of their devices are encouraged by Intuitive Surgical's recent FDA approval. "The future looks bright," says Yulun Wang, MD, founder and chief technical officer of Computer Motion. "This approval sends a positive signal to industry, and there are tremendous opportunities." According to Wang, "The goal of robotic surgery is to offer superior quality and reduced trauma to the patient. Today, the sceptical surgeon would say that's not proven yet, but the progressive surgeon would say that these goals are achievable. Thus far, the results have been phenomenal." And many researchers and industry participants in the field say that the capabilities of first-generation systems are just the beginning. According to Richard E. Wood, MD, chief of cardiothoracic surgery at Baylor University Medical Centre (Dallas), robotic surgery systems "will certainly make it easier to perform major surgeries, but these systems still need to evolve. They're not for every patient, but with time we will gain more experience and do more procedures, and the instruments will evolve from this first generation." Currently, the three principal device manufacturers in this area are Intuitive Surgical, Computer Motion, and Integrated Surgical Systems. Their systems are described below. Future Outlook Surgeons and device executives agree that first-generation robotics systems have already displayed many advantages over traditional laparoscopic surgery and open surgery, especially in terms of speedier patient recovery and reduced pain. But they also insist that the technology is still evolving and will become more capable with time. "We're on the cusp of redirecting and improving surgical capability, but we are in the first generation of this process," says San Ramon's Gardiner [6]. "The technology will be applied selectively early on, but as patients begin to insist on the new technology, it will become state-of-the-art
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ROBOTIC SURGERY and the standard of care for selected procedures." In Gardiner's opinion, as a general surgeon, "basically, the most promising applications for these systems will be in any surgery in which suturing is an important feature." Continued evolution of robotic surgical systems is inevitable, says Gardiner. "Down the road, as with PCs, the systems will become smaller, lighter, faster, and easier to set up, and this will increase their applications. As with CT scans, you will find uses and needs for the technology in excess of what the projections were, and surgeons will want and need these devices. The surgeon actually does a better, more precise, elegant, dexterous, controlled procedure with robotics, with less tissue damage, which leads to a better outcome." "In the next five to seven years, almost all ORs worldwide will have robotic assistance of some kind for major surgeries," says ISS's Trivedi. "We will never, ever, replace the surgeon, but robotics will take over a lot of the things they do by hand, with more precision and accuracy." UCLA's Schulam, who has been using robotic surgical systems since 1995, when the first products were being developed, says that the elaboration of such systems may change the relationships between surgeons and industry. "Robotics is here to stay. However, it will take time for these devices to revolutionize the way surgery is done, and educational programs are the key to their success. "We need to change how industry and surgeons interact," he continues. "In the past, surgeons have had a consumer like relationship with the device industry, where the consumer buys the product and is off. But now, what will be required is a much more collaborative relationship, in order to get surgeons to change the way they're used to doing things." Baylor's Wood is even interested in forming a robotic surgery institute, perhaps within the next year, where surgeons from many specialties can meet and discuss how to bring robotics technology to the next level [6].
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CONCLUSION
The field of surgery has grown in amazing leaps and bounds since anaesthesia was first developed and the first surgeries were performed, more than 100 years ago. Now, surgeons, through Robots are finding new ways to get inside the patient, rather than the standard large incision. The robotics revolution requires a different skill set and advanced instrumentation that can perform the functions of the human hand, but at a microsurgical scale. With the emergence of the first completely robotic surgery system, we are crossing the threshold into an amazing new future. Surgical robotics systems mark the beginning of a potentially huge wave of surgical applications for robotic technology. With the assistance of surgical robots, surgeons can't extend their healing skills to places within the body that are currently out of reach. Robotic surgery will soon replace conventional surgical procedures. It brings surgery to the digital age. Further research must evaluate cost effectiveness or a true benefit over conventional therapy for robotic surgery to take full root. The continuing evolution of this technology holds the promise of immense benefits in healing that cannot yet be imagined.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
BOOKS REFERRED:
[1] Riccardo Muradore, Davide Bresolin, Luca Geretti, Paolo Fiorini, and Tiziano Villa Robotic Surgery- formal verification of plans IEEE- Sep- 2011. [2] Y.V.K.D. Bhavani, Y. Vijaya Background of Surgical Robos and Robotics in Different Surgeries IJCST Vol. 3, Issue 1, Jan. - March 2012 [3] J. Desai and N. Ayache, Editorial special issue on medical robotics, Int. J. Robot. Res., vol. 28, no. 9, pp. 10991100, 2009. [4] J. Craig, Introduction to Robotics Mechanics and Control. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2005. [5] A. Rovetta, A. Bejczy, et al., A New Telerobotic Application: Remote Laparoscopic Surgery Using Satellites and Optical Fibre Networks for Data Exchange, The International Journal of Robotics Research, Vol.15, N.3, June 1996. [6] Damiano R. Next up: surgery by remote control. New York Times. April 4, 2000.
WEBSITES REFERRED:
www.ieee.org
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