Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 6 de 6
Filtrar
Más filtros













Base de datos
Intervalo de año de publicación
1.
Sci Robot ; 8(82): eadf7614, 2023 09 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37729421

RESUMEN

The use of needles to access sites within organs is fundamental to many interventional medical procedures both for diagnosis and treatment. Safely and accurately navigating a needle through living tissue to a target is currently often challenging or infeasible because of the presence of anatomical obstacles, high levels of uncertainty, and natural tissue motion. Medical robots capable of automating needle-based procedures have the potential to overcome these challenges and enable enhanced patient care and safety. However, autonomous navigation of a needle around obstacles to a predefined target in vivo has not been shown. Here, we introduce a medical robot that autonomously navigates a needle through living tissue around anatomical obstacles to a target in vivo. Our system leverages a laser-patterned highly flexible steerable needle capable of maneuvering along curvilinear trajectories. The autonomous robot accounts for anatomical obstacles, uncertainty in tissue/needle interaction, and respiratory motion using replanning, control, and safe insertion time windows. We applied the system to lung biopsy, which is critical for diagnosing lung cancer, the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the United States. We demonstrated successful performance of our system in multiple in vivo porcine studies achieving targeting errors less than the radius of clinically relevant lung nodules. We also demonstrated that our approach offers greater accuracy compared with a standard manual bronchoscopy technique. Our results show the feasibility and advantage of deploying autonomous steerable needle robots in living tissue and how these systems can extend the current capabilities of physicians to further improve patient care.


Asunto(s)
Agujas , Robótica , Humanos , Animales , Porcinos , Movimiento (Física) , Extremidad Superior
2.
Rep U S ; 2022: 9526-9533, 2022 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37153690

RESUMEN

Steerable needles are medical devices with the ability to follow curvilinear paths to reach targets while circumventing obstacles. In the deployment process, a human operator typically places the steerable needle at its start position on a tissue surface and then hands off control to the automation that steers the needle to the target. Due to uncertainty in the placement of the needle by the human operator, choosing a start position that is robust to deviations is crucial since some start positions may make it impossible for the steerable needle to safely reach the target. We introduce a method to efficiently evaluate steerable needle motion plans such that they are safe to variation in the start position. This method can be applied to many steerable needle planners and requires that the needle's orientation angle at insertion can be robotically controlled. Specifically, we introduce a method that builds a funnel around a given plan to determine a safe insertion surface corresponding to insertion points from which it is guaranteed that a collision-free motion plan to the goal can be computed. We use this technique to evaluate multiple feasible plans and select the one that maximizes the size of the safe insertion surface. We evaluate our method through simulation in a lung biopsy scenario and show that the method is able to quickly find needle plans with a large safe insertion surface.

3.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34721939

RESUMEN

Steerable needles that are able to follow curvilinear trajectories and steer around anatomical obstacles are a promising solution for many interventional procedures. In the lung, these needles can be deployed from the tip of a conventional bronchoscope to reach lung lesions for diagnosis. The reach of such a device depends on several design parameters including the bronchoscope diameter, the angle of the piercing device relative to the medial axis of the airway, and the needle's minimum radius of curvature while steering. Assessing the effect of these parameters on the overall system's clinical utility is important in informing future design choices and understanding the capabilities and limitations of the system. In this paper, we analyze the effect of various settings for these three robot parameters on the percentage of the lung that the robot can reach. We combine Monte Carlo random sampling of piercing configurations with a Rapidly-exploring Random Trees based steerable needle motion planner in simulated human lung environments to asymptotically accurately estimate the volume of sites in the lung reachable by the robot. We highlight the importance of each parameter on the overall system's reachable workspace in an effort to motivate future device innovation and highlight design trade-offs.

4.
IEEE Robot Autom Lett ; 6(2): 3987-3994, 2021 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33937523

RESUMEN

Lung cancer is one of the deadliest types of cancer, and early diagnosis is crucial for successful treatment. Definitively diagnosing lung cancer typically requires biopsy, but current approaches either carry a high procedural risk for the patient or are incapable of reaching many sites of clinical interest in the lung. We present a new sampling-based planning method for a steerable needle lung robot that has the potential to accurately reach targets in most regions of the lung. The robot comprises three stages: a transorally deployed bronchoscope, a sharpened piercing tube (to pierce into the lung parenchyma from the airways), and a steerable needle able to navigate to the target. Planning for the sequential deployment of all three stages under health safety concerns is a challenging task, as each stage depends on the previous one. We introduce a new backward planning approach that starts at the target and advances backwards toward the airways with the goal of finding a piercing site reachable by the bronchoscope. This new strategy enables faster performance by iteratively building a single search tree during the entire computation period, whereas previous forward approaches have relied on repeating this expensive tree construction process many times. Additionally, our method further reduces runtime by employing biased sampling and sample rejection based on geometric constraints. We evaluate this approach using simulation-based studies in anatomical lung models. We demonstrate in comparison with existing techniques that the new approach (i) is more likely to find a path to a target, (ii) is more efficient by reaching targets more than 5 times faster on average, and (iii) arrives at lower-risk paths in shorter time.

5.
IEEE Access ; 8: 181411-181419, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35198341

RESUMEN

The maximum curvature of a steerable needle in soft tissue is highly sensitive to needle shaft stiffness, which has motivated use of small diameter needles in the past. However, desired needle payloads constrain minimum shaft diameters, and shearing along the needle shaft can occur at small diameters and high curvatures. We provide a new way to adjust needle shaft stiffness (thereby enhancing maximum curvature, i.e. "steerability") at diameters selected based on needle payload requirements. We propose helical dovetail laser patterning to increase needle steerability without reducing shaft diameter. Experiments in phantoms and ex vivo animal muscle, brain, liver, and inflated lung tissues demonstrate high steerability in soft tissues. These experiments use needle diameters suitable for various clinical scenarios, and which have been previously limited by steering challenges without helical dovetail patterning. We show that steerable needle targeting remains accurate with established controllers and demonstrate interventional payload delivery (brachytherapy seeds and radiofrequency ablation) through the needle. Helical dovetail patterning decouples steerability from diameter in needle design. It enables diameter to be selected based on clinical requirements rather than being carefully tuned to tissue properties. These results pave the way for new sensors and interventional tools to be integrated into high-curvature steerable needles.

6.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35284151

RESUMEN

Bronchoscopic diagnosis and intervention in the lung is a new frontier for steerable needles, where they have the potential to enable minimally invasive, accurate access to small nodules that cannot be reliably accessed today. However, the curved, flexible bronchoscope requires a much longer needle than prior work has considered, with complex interactions between the needle and bronchoscope channel, introducing new challenges in steerable needle control. In particular, friction between the working channel and needle causes torsional windup along the bronchoscope, the effects of which cannot be directly measured at the tip of thin needles embedded with 5 degree-of-freedom magnetic tracking coils. To compensate for these effects, we propose a new torsional deadband-aware Extended Kalman Filter to estimate the full needle tip pose including the axial angle, which defines its steering direction. We use the Kalman Filter estimates with an established sliding mode controller to steer along desired trajectories in lung tissue. We demonstrate that this simple torsional deadband model is sufficient to account for the complex interactions between the needle and endoscope channel for control purposes. We measure mean final targeting error of 1.36 mm in phantom tissue and 1.84 mm in ex-vivo porcine lung, with mean trajectory following error of 1.28 mm and 1.10 mm, respectively.

SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA