Abstract

BackgroundRobot-assisted laparoscopic surgery offers several advantages compared with open surgery and conventional minimally invasive surgery. However, one issue that needs to be resolved is a collision between the robot arm and the assistant instrument. This is mostly caused by miscommunication between the surgeon and the assistant. To resolve this limitation, an assistant surgical robot system that can be simultaneously manipulated via a wireless controller is proposed to allow the surgeon to control the assistant instrument.MethodsThe system comprises two novel master interfaces (NMIs), a surgical instrument with a gripper actuated by a micromotor, and 6-axis robot arm. Two NMIs are attached to master tool manipulators of da Vinci research kit (dVRK) to control the proposed system simultaneously with patient side manipulators of dVRK. The developments of the surgical instrument and NMI are based on surgical-operation-by-wire concept and hands-on-throttle-and-stick concept from the earlier research, respectively. Tests for checking the accuracy, latency, and power consumption of the NMI are performed. The gripping force, reaction time, and durability are assessed to validate the surgical instrument. The workspace is calculated for estimating the clinical applicability. A simple peg task using the fundamentals of laparoscopic surgery board and an in vitro test are executed with three novice volunteers.ResultsThe NMI was operated for 185 min and reflected the surgeon’s decision successfully with a mean latency of 132 ms. The gripping force of the surgical instrument was comparable to that of conventional systems and was consistent even after 1000 times of gripping motion. The reaction time was 0.4 s. The workspace was calculated to be 8397.4 cm3. Recruited volunteers were able to execute the simple peg task within the cut-off time and successfully performed the in vitro test without any collision.ConclusionsVarious experiments were conducted and it is verified that the proposed assistant surgical robot system enables collision-free and simultaneous operation of the dVRK’s robot arm and the proposed assistant robot arm. The workspace is appropriate for the performance of various kinds of surgeries. Therefore, the proposed system is expected to provide higher safety and effectiveness for the current surgical robot system.

Highlights

  • Robot-assisted laparoscopic surgery offers several advantages compared with open surgery and conventional minimally invasive surgery

  • The data transferred in both directions, along with the center push of the Novel master interface (NMI) were measured for 50 separate trials

  • Robot-assisted laparoscopic surgery is a very desirable surgical operation because it provides several benefits compared with open surgery and conventional minimally invasive surgery (MIS)

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Summary

Introduction

Robot-assisted laparoscopic surgery offers several advantages compared with open surgery and conventional minimally invasive surgery. These systems have been proposed partially based on the issue of collision between the operating robot arm and the assistant’s instrument, they have several deficiencies: (i) they are limited to simulation and cannot be directly applied to the surgical robot system [16], (ii) they can only minimize or reduce, not prevent, collisions [12, 17], and (iii) the surgeon cannot simultaneously manipulate both the assistant robot arm and the operation robot arm, resulting in discontinuous surgical operation [18] This assistant robot arm cannot perform surgical operations such as removal of resected tissue because it cannot move outside the incision

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