4.4 Article

Design and kinematic characterization of a surgical manipulator with a focus on treating osteolysis

Journal

ROBOTICA
Volume 32, Issue 6, Pages 835-850

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0263574713001082

Keywords

Dexterous manipulation; Medical robots; Underactuated robots; Kinematics; Pose estimation; Registration

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Funding

  1. Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

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This paper presents a cable-driven dexterous manipulator with a large, open lumen. One specific application for the manipulator is the treatment of the degeneration of bone tissue (osteolysis) during a less-invasive hip revision surgery. Rigid tools used in traditional approaches limit the surgeons' ability to comprehensively treat the osteolysis due to the complex geometries of the lesion. The surgical scenario, testing, kinematic modeling, and image-based inverse kinematics are described. Testing shows 94% coverage of a lesion wall; the kinematic model describes manipulator notch positions within 0.15 mm, while the image-based inverse kinematics has 0.36 mm error. This manipulator is potentially useful in treating osteolytic lesions through (1) effective lesion exploration compared to conventional techniques, and (2) rapidly performing inverse kinematics from visual feedback.

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