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Haptic Noise Cancellation: Restoring Force Perception in Robotically-Assisted Beating Heart Surgery

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2010

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Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
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Yuen, Shelten G., Karl-Alexander Dubec, Robert D. Howe. 2010. Haptic noise cancellation: Restoring force perception in robotically-assisted beating heart surgery. Paper presented at the IEEE Haptics Symposium, Waltham, MA, March 25-26, 2010.

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Abstract

Beating heart surgical methods have the potential to remove the need for the heart-lung machine and its attendant side effects, but must contend with the motion of the heart. Recent research in robotically-assisted surgery has produced a handheld, actuated in- strument that can track and compensate for heart motion; however, the reaction forces caused by the actuation mechanism make it dif- ficult for the surgeon to feel the heart during the operation, which can lead to unsafe tissue manipulation. This paper investigates an instrument design that negates reaction forces to the user by moving a counterweight out of phase with the moving mass of the actuator. The resulting instrument retains the tracking and motion compensa- tion abilities of the current instrument, but reduces reaction forces felt by the user by over 80%. Subjects used the new instrument in an in vitro beating heart surgical contact task and performance was compared to the previously existing instrument. The new in- strument provided a 28% increase in user force sensitivity and im- proved user reaction times by 51%, indicating that the new instru- ment greatly enhances force perception in beating heart tasks.

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Keywords

beating heart surgery, motion compensation, surgical robotics, force perception

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