Abstract

Robotic-assisted surgical procedures have recently increased in popularity in clinical environments. Applications of clinically approved surgical robots range from minimally invasive surgery to open joint replacements. In hip and knee orthopaedic procedures, access to leg joint cavities require constant manipulation of the patient's leg to a high degree of accuracy to reduce surgical injuries. This study develops a nine degree of freedom serial kinematic model of the human leg, using the well known Denavit Hartenberg Parameters, for robotic-assisted leg manipulation during orthopaedic leg surgery. The proposed model is validated through human cadaver experiments with an optical tracking system used as ground-truth to measure the leg pose. The knee and foot workspace for the model determines the pose of the leg and in comparing it to cadaver leg position. The positional error relative to the cadaver leg was found to be 0.43mm and 0.4mm respectively, with a maximum uncertainty of 3.51mm in the foot position. It demonstrates that the proposed model provides an accurate representation of the human leg motion for automated leg manipulation during orthopaedic surgery.

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