Loading…

Objective evaluation of laparoscopic surgical skills using Waseda bioinstrumentation system WB-3

Performing laparoscopic surgery requires several skills which have never been required for conventional open surgery, surgeons experience difficulties in learning and mastering these techniques. Various training methods and metrics have been developed in order to assess and improve surgeon's op...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhuohua Lin, Uemura, Munenori, Zecca, Massimiliano, Sessa, Salvatore, Ishii, Hiroyuki, Bartolomeo, Luca, Itoh, Kazuko, Tomikawa, Morimasa, Odaira, Takeshi, Tanoue, Kazuo, Ieiri, Satoshi, Konishi, Kozo, Hashizume, Makoto, Takanishi, Atsuo
Format: Conference Proceeding
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:Request full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Performing laparoscopic surgery requires several skills which have never been required for conventional open surgery, surgeons experience difficulties in learning and mastering these techniques. Various training methods and metrics have been developed in order to assess and improve surgeon's operative abilities. While these training metrics are currently widely being used, skill evaluation methods are still far from being objective in the regular laparoscopic skill education. This study proposes a methodology of defining a processing model to objectively evaluate surgical performance and skill expertise in the routine laparoscopic training course. Our approach is based on the analysis of kinematic data describing the movements of surgeon's upper limbs. An ultra-miniaturized wearable motion capture system (Waseda Bioinstrumentation system WB-3), therefore, has been developed to measure and analyze these movements. The skill evaluation model was trained by using the subjects' motion features acquired from WB-3 system and further validated to classify the expertise levels of the subject with different laparoscopic experience. Experimental results show that, the proposed methodology can be efficiently used both for quantitative assessment of surgical performance, and for the discrimination between expert surgeons and novices.
DOI:10.1109/ROBIO.2010.5723335