ROJan 21, 2022
Automated Catheter Tip Repositioning for Intra-cardiac EchocardiographyYoung-Ho Kim, Jarrod Collins, Zhongyu Li et al.
Purpose: Intra-Cardiac Echocardiography (ICE) is a powerful imaging modality for guiding cardiac electrophysiology and structural heart interventions. ICE provides real-time observation of anatomy and devices, while enabling direct monitoring of potential complications. In single operator settings, the physician needs to switch back-and-forth between the ICE catheter and therapy device, making continuous ICE support impossible. Two operators setup are therefore sometimes implemented, with the challenge of increase room occupation and cost. Two operator setups are sometimes implemented, but increase procedural costs and room occupation. Methods: ICE catheter robotic control system is developed with automated catheter tip repositioning (i.e. view recovery) method, which can reproduce important views previously navigated to and saved by the user. The performance of the proposed method is demonstrated and evaluated in a combination of heart phantom and animal experiments. Results: Automated ICE view recovery achieved catheter tip position accuracy of 2.09 +/-0.90 mm and catheter image orientation accuracy of 3.93 +/- 2.07 degree in animal studies, and 0.67 +/- 0.79 mm and 0.37 +/- 0.19 degree in heart phantom studies, respectively. Our proposed method is also successfully used during transeptal puncture in animals without complications, showing the possibility for fluoro-less transeptal puncture with ICE catheter robot. Conclusion: Robotic ICE imaging has the potential to provide precise and reproducible anatomical views, which can reduce overall execution time, labor burden of procedures, and x-ray usage for a range of cardiac procedures. Keywords: Automated View Recovery, Path Planning, Intra-cardiac echocardiography (ICE), Catheter, Tendon-driven manipulator, Cardiac Imaging
RONov 3, 2020
Non-linear Hysteresis Compensation of a Tendon-sheath-driven Robotic Manipulator using Motor CurrentDong-Ho Lee, Young-Ho Kim, Jarrod Collins et al.
Tendon-sheath-driven manipulators (TSM) are widely used in minimally invasive surgical systems due to their long, thin shape, flexibility, and compliance making them easily steerable in narrow or tortuous environments. Many commercial TSM-based medical devices have non-linear phenomena resulting from their composition such as backlash hysteresis and dead zone, which lead to a considerable challenge for achieving precise control of the end effector pose. However, many recent works in the literature do not consider the combined effects and compensation of these phenomena, and less focus on practical ways to identify model parameters in realistic conditions. This paper proposes a simplified piecewise linear model to construct both backlash hysteresis and dead zone compensators together. Further, a practical method is introduced to identify model parameters using motor current from a robotic controller for the TSM. Our proposed methods are validated with multiple Intra-cardiac Echocardiography (ICE) catheters, which are typical commercial example of TSM, by periodic and non-periodic motions. Our results show that the errors from backlash hysteresis and dead zone are considerably reduced and therefore the accuracy of robotic control is improved when applying the presented methods.
ROSep 12, 2020
Towards Automatic Manipulation of Intra-cardiac Echocardiography CatheterYoung-Ho Kim, Jarrod Collins, Zhongyu Li et al.
Intra-cardiac Echocardiography (ICE) is a powerful imaging modality for guiding electrophysiology and structural heart interventions. ICE provides real-time observation of anatomy, catheters, and emergent complications. However, this increased reliance on intraprocedural imaging creates a high cognitive demand on physicians who can often serve as interventionalist and imager. We present a robotic manipulator for ICE catheters to assist physicians with imaging and serve as a platform for developing processes for procedural automation. Herein, we introduce two application modules towards these goals: (1) a view recovery process that allows physicians to save views during intervention and automatically return with the push of a button and (2) a data-driven approach to compensate kinematic model errors that result from non-linear behaviors in catheter bending, providing more precise control of the catheter tip. View recovery is validated by repeated catheter positioning in cardiac phantom and animal experiments with position- and image-based analysis. We present a simplified calibration approach for error compensation and verify with complex rotation of the catheter in benchtop and phantom experiments under varying realistic curvature conditions. Results support that a robotic manipulator for ICE can provide an efficient and reproducible tool, potentially reducing execution time and promoting greater utilization of ICE imaging.