Abstract

Purpose An endoscopic system is needed that presents informative images irrespective of the surgical situation and the number of degrees of freedom in endoscopic manipulation. This goal may be achieved with a virtual reality view for a region of interest from an arbitrary viewpoint. An endoscopic pseudo-viewpoint alternation system for this purpose was developed and tested.Method Surgical experts and trainees from an endoscopic surgery training course at the minimally invasive surgery training center of Kyushu University were enrolled in a trial of a virtual reality system. The initial viewpoint was positioned to approximate the horizontal view often seen in laparoscopic surgery, with 20^{circ } between the optical axis of the endoscope and the task surface. A right-to-left suturing task with right hand, based on a task from the endoscopic surgery training course, was selected for testing. We compared task outcomes with and without use of a new virtual reality-viewing system.Result There was a 0.37 mm reduction in total error (p = 0.02) with use of the proposed system. Error reduction was composed of 0.1 mm reduction on the y-axis and 0.27 mm reduction on the x-axis. Experts benefited more than novices from use of the proposed system. Most subjects worked at a pseudo-viewpoint of around 34^circ .Discussion Suturing performance improved with the new virtual reality endoscopic display system. Viewpoint alternation resulted in an overview that improved depth perception and allowed subjects to better aim the marker. This suggests the proposed method offers users better visualization and control in endoscopic surgery.

Highlights

  • BackgroundMinimally invasive surgery is attracting attention today

  • Surgeons carry out a range of medical treatments under an endoscopic view displayed on a monitor

  • Laparoscopic surgery is more demanding of surgeon skill because of counter-intuitive control of forceps and limited tactile information

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most utilized forms of minimally invasive surgery is laparoscopy, which is carried out by placing multiple trocars through incisions on the abdominal wall and by inserting forceps and an endoscope on the inflated abdominal cavity through the trocars. Int J CARS (2015) 10:619–628 blood loss, better cosmetics and a shorter stay at hospital [1]. These advantages make laparoscopic surgery an attractive alternative for patients. Laparoscopic surgery is more demanding of surgeon skill because of counter-intuitive control of forceps and limited tactile information. Problems associated with vision, which include narrow field of view, loss of depth perception and limited positioning of the viewpoint, challenge surgeon skill [2]

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