Lecture1 Intro
Lecture1 Intro
Autumn 2016
Lecture 1:
Introduction to medical robotics
Allison Okamura
Stanford University
About this class
• Teaching staff
Instructor: Allison Okamura
Co-instructor for ME/CS 571: Federico Barbagli
CAs: Robert Carrera, Margaret Koehler
http://www.when2meet.com/?5587086-8EXrd
Robots are...
• Accurate and precise; Untiring
~10 cm
WITH ROBOTICS:
More clinicians can perform
more difficult (and even
new) procedures; more
patients can be
rehabilitated
CAD CAM
patient-specific real-time
modeling computer
assistance
Postoperative
atlas
patient
TQM
database
computer-
assisted
assessment
Surgical robotics:
AESOP
JHU
JHU
Teleoperation Autonomous
Dario et al.
Sensei
da Vinci
CyberKnife
Open Surgery
Surgeon
Patient
Image source: www.physicianphotos.com
Minimally Invasive Surgery
Surgeon
Instrument/Camera
Patient
Image source: www.womenssurgerygroup.com
Teleoperated Robot-Assisted
Minimally Invasive Surgery
Information-Enhanced
Surgeon RMIS
Instrument/Camera
Patient
In collaboration with D. D.Yuh of JHMI Cardiac Surgery and Li-Ming Su of JHMI Urology
The Sensing Challenge
stiffness differences
are difficult to feel
through a rigid
contact
stiffness
In collaboration with D.Yuh graphical
(JHMI Cardiac Surgery) and
Li-Ming Su (JHMI Urology) overlay
Preoperative Intraoperative
computer-assisted update model update plan
planning
... also
for
training
patient-specific
modeling
real-time
computer
assistance
Postoperative
atlas computer-
assisted
patient database assessment
Modeling:
Immersion Corp.
Modeling Factors
data simplifying Force/
recorded algorithm Rendering Position
haptic/visual
real tissue tool-tissue model display human
complex
tool-tissue model
insertionB
Bicycle
icycle
symmetric bevel pre-bent
Steering Performance
deformation
1 cm
tele-
operation
Replacing, training, or
assisting to improve
quality of life
Growing Healthcare Challenges
• Monitoring
• Coaching/training
• Motivation
• Companionship/socialization
Robots can be a “force multiplier” for caregivers, reducing
health care costs and improving quality of life Maja Mataric (USC)
Movement Therapy and Assistance
• Over 25% of U.S. population has some functional
physical limitation that affects normal living
• 6.5M people in the US have had a stroke (by 2050,
cost projected to be $2.2 Trillion)
Optimizing Movement Therapy
K. J. Kuchenbecker
Approaches include:
- Low force and speed
- Risk analysis (eliminate single points of failure)
- Fault tolerance (hardware and software)
- Fail safe design (system fails to a safe state)
- Redundant sensing PUMA Industrial Robot
In an ideal world, medical
robotics includes:
• Quantitive descriptions of patient state
• Use of models to plan intervention
• Design of devices, systems, and processes to
connect information to action ( = robotics )
• Incorporating human input in a natural way
• Goal: improve health and quality of life