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Trackerless ultrasound-integrated bone cement detection using a modular minirobot in revision total hip replacement.

Authors :
Heger S
Niggemeyer M
de la Fuente M
Mumme T
Radermacher K
Source :
Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. Part H, Journal of engineering in medicine [Proc Inst Mech Eng H] 2010; Vol. 224 (5), pp. 681-90.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Medical robots are superior to freehand manipulation if an accurate, precise, and time-efficient implementation of a preplanned intervention is required. In the first part of this contribution a new modular minirobot for automatic ultrasound-based bone cement detection followed by subsequent cement milling in revision total hip replacement is presented. A minirobot integrated ultrasound module eliminates the need for external position tracking (e.g. by an optical system) as well as patient registration since the scanned contours can be directly provided within the robot's coordinate system. Further, the modular minirobot concept allows kinematics, workspace, and mechanical parameters to be easily adapted to the requirements of related or even new surgical applications. In the experimental part, the impact of ultrasound module integration on the implementation of optimized scanning strategies is investigated and evaluated in a laboratory set-up. As wave mode conversion and refraction artefacts due to angular sound incidence influence the detection accuracy, the transducer alignment can be optimized with respect to the number of degrees of freedom (DOFs) provided by the minirobot. A model-based scanning approach using two degrees of freedom (2DOFs), three degrees of freedom (3DOFs), and four degrees of freedom (4DOFs) respectively is presented. For automated scanning path calculation, a 2DOF distal-proximal prescan has been performed to estimate the principal components of the cement cavity's geometry using either a model-based or a statistical approach. In a cadaver study, the model-based approach consistently outperformed the statistical approach. The 3DOFs and 4DOFs scanning strategies yielded a significantly higher scanning accuracy if compared with the 2DOFs approach whereas the 3DOFs approach represents a trade-off between system complexity and detection accuracy.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0954-4119
Volume :
224
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers. Part H, Journal of engineering in medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
20718270
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1243/09544119JEIM630