4.6 Article

Adapting Neural-Based Models for Position Error Compensation in Robotic Catheter Systems

期刊

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
卷 12, 期 21, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app122110936

关键词

robot-assisted catheterization; position error control; teleoperation; learning-based systems; deep learning

资金

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2019YFB1311700]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [U1713219, 61950410618]
  3. Shenzhen Natural Science Foundation [JCYJ20190812173205538]
  4. CAS PIFI Fellowship

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Robot-assisted surgery plays a crucial role in minimally invasive treatments. This study aims to achieve autonomous navigation in robot-assisted cardiac interventions and enhance motion accuracy using recurrent neural networks for control. The results show that neural-based controllers can ensure uniform motion mapping between the master-slave devices and positively contribute to patient safety concerns.
Featured Application Robot-assisted surgery has simplified minimally invasive treatments by providing surgeons with more enhanced skill, precision, and control of surgical instruments for microscale operations than is possible with conventional methods. A use case is robot-assisted percutaneous coronary intervention, which utilizes a robotic catheter system to remove lesions in the coronary arteries. Typically, the RCS provides discrete, repetitive, and steady motion to endovascular tools for tooltip translation from an insertion site to the blocked coronary arteries while ensuring vessel damage avoidance. Therefore, this study aims to enhance master-slave motion accuracy toward the realization of autonomous navigation during robot-assisted cardiac interventions. Robotic catheter systems with master-slave designs are employed for teleoperated navigation of flexible endovascular tools for treating calcified lesions. Despite improved tool manipulation techniques, patient safety and lowering operative risks remain top priorities. Therefore, minimizing undesirable drifts and imprecise navigation of flexible tools during intravascular catheterization is essential. In the current master-slave designs, finite displacement lag between position command and actual navigation action at the slave device affects smooth catheterization. In this study, we designed and developed a compact 2-DOF robotic catheter system and characterized the influence of displacement step values, velocity, and motion gap on the position error at the slave device. For uniform and varying motion commands from the master platform, the results indicate that the overall position error increases with the distance traveled and the displacement step values, respectively. Hence, we proposed using recurrent neural networks-long short-term memory and gated recurrent unit controllers to predict the slave robot's position and appropriate compensation value per translation step. An analysis of in-silico studies with CoppeliaSim showed that the neural-based controllers can ensure uniform motion mapping between the master-slave devices. Furthermore, we implemented the models within the RCS for a catheterization length of 120 mm. The result demonstrates that the controllers suitably aid the slave robot's stepwise displacement. Thus, the neural-based controllers help match the translational motion and precise tool navigation by the slave robotic device. Therefore, the neural-based controllers could contribute to alleviating patients' safety concerns during robotic interventions.

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