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Laser-Assisted Intraocular Surgical Alignment

技術優勢
No physical contact with patient requiredFast alignment procedure of less than 2 minutes per surgeryPositional accuracy within 0.6 mmOne-time calibration for setup of the laser mount
技術應用
Minimally invasive microsurgeryApplications that require calibration of a remote center of motion
詳細技術說明
UCLA researchers have developed an automated method to align a remote center of motion (RCM) to a surgically relevant point for robot-assisted surgeries. To assign the RCM, two lasers are mounted on the desired surgical instrument carriage with the RCM as their point of intersection. This intersection point can then be aligned to the desired incision site by combining control of the stage with computerized visual feedback. This automated alignment procedure takes less than two minutes per surgery and requires no physical contact with the patient. Positional accuracy of the alignment technique was within 0.6 mm.
*Abstract
UCLA researchers in the department of Mechanical Engineering have developed an automated procedure for aligning a remote center of motion to a surgical incision point for robot-assisted surgeries.
*Principal Investigation

Name: Cheng-Wei Chen

Department:


Name: Matthew Gerber

Department:


Name: Jean-Pierre Hubschman

Department:


Name: Yu-Hsiu Lee

Department:


Name: Tsu-Chin Tsao

Department:

其他

State Of Development

Prototype developed and demonstrated in surgery on porcine eyes on multiple surgical procedures, including cataract removal.


Background

Robotic surgery offers a precise and often less-invasive method of performing surgical procedures, with the market for surgical robots expected to grow to $5.4 billion by 2021. In particularly sensitive procedures such as intraocular surgeries, robotic instruments must be constrained at a remote center of motion (RCM) to minimize stress at the entry point. However, this requires alignment of the RCM to the surgeon-assigned incision point. Conventional approaches for alignment require positioning the desired tool at the RCM, and subsequent re-alignment of the tooltip to the incision point, necessitating physical contact between the tool and the patient during the alignment. Methods for automated tool alignment have been developed, but many still require lengthy or computationally-extensive calibration procedures.


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Tech ID/UC Case

28986/2017-500-0


Related Cases

2017-500-0

國家/地區
美國

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