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Tschabrunn, Cory

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Tschabrunn

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Cory

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Tschabrunn, Cory

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Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Publication

    Instrument Tracking and Visualization for Ultrasound Catheter Guided Procedures

    (Springer Science + Business Media, 2014) Brattain, Laura; Loschak, Paul; Tschabrunn, Cory; Anter, Elad; Howe, Robert

    We present an instrument tracking and visualization system for intra-cardiac ultrasound catheter guided procedures, enabled through the robotic control of ultrasound catheters. Our system allows for rapid acquisition of 2D ultrasound images and accurate reconstruction and visualization of a 3D volume. The reconstructed volume addresses the limited field of view, an inherent problem of ultrasound imaging, and serves as a navigation map for procedure guidance. Our robotic system can track a moving instrument by continuously adjusting the imaging plane and visualizing the instrument tip. The overall instrument tracking accuracy is 2.2mm RMS in position and 0.8◦ in angle

  • Publication

    Compensation for unconstrained catheter shaft motion in cardiac catheters

    (IEEE, 2016) Degirmenci, Alperen; Loschak, Paul; Tschabrunn, Cory; Anter, Elad; Howe, Robert

    Abstract— Cardiac catheterization with ultrasound (US) imaging catheters provides real time US imaging from within the heart, but manually navigating a four degree of freedom (DOF) imaging catheter is difficult and requires extensive training. Existing work has demonstrated robotic catheter steering in constrained bench top environments. Closed-loop control in an unconstrained setting, such as patient vasculature, remains a significant challenge due to friction, backlash, and physiological disturbances. In this paper we present a new method for closed-loop control of the catheter tip that can accurately and robustly steer 4-DOF cardiac catheters and other flexible manipulators despite these effects. The performance of the system is demonstrated in a vasculature phantom and an in vivo porcine animal model. During bench top studies the robotic system converged to the desired US imager pose with submillimeter and sub-degree-level accuracy. During animal trials the system achieved 2.0 mm and 0.65° accuracy. Accurate and robust robotic navigation of flexible manipulators will enable enhanced visualization and treatment during procedures.