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Beating heart tracking in robotic surgery using 500 Hz visual servoing, model predictive control and an adaptive observer

This work presents first in-vivo results of beating heart tracking with a surgical robot arm in off-pump cardiac surgery. The tracking is performed in a 2D visual servoing scheme using a 500 frame per second video camera. Heart motion is measured by means of active optical markers that are put onto...

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Main Authors: Ginhoux, R., Gangloff, J.A., de Mathelin, M.F., Soler, L., Sanchez, M.M.A., Marescaux, J.
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creator Ginhoux, R.
Gangloff, J.A.
de Mathelin, M.F.
Soler, L.
Sanchez, M.M.A.
Marescaux, J.
description This work presents first in-vivo results of beating heart tracking with a surgical robot arm in off-pump cardiac surgery. The tracking is performed in a 2D visual servoing scheme using a 500 frame per second video camera. Heart motion is measured by means of active optical markers that are put onto the heart surface. Amplitude of the motion is evaluated along the two axis of the image reference frame. This is a complex and fast motion that mainly reflects the influence of both the respiratory motion and the electro-mechanical activity of the myocardium. A model predictive controller is setup to track the two degrees of freedom of the observed motion by computing velocities for two of the robot joints. The servoing scheme takes advantage of the ability of predictive control to anticipate over future references provided they are known or they can be predicted. An adaptive observer is defined along with a simple cardiac model to estimate the two components of the heart motion. The predictions are then fed into the controller references and it is shown that the tracking behaviour is greatly improved.
doi_str_mv 10.1109/ROBOT.2004.1307163
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identifier ISSN: 1050-4729
ispartof 2004 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, 2004, Vol.1, p.274-279 Vol.1
issn 1050-4729
2577-087X
language eng
recordid cdi_pascalfrancis_primary_17808763
source IEEE Electronic Library (IEL) Conference Proceedings
subjects Adaptive control
Applied sciences
Cameras
Computer science
control theory
systems
Control theory. Systems
Exact sciences and technology
Heart
Medical robotics
Modelling and identification
Predictive control
Predictive models
Programmable control
Robot vision systems
Robotics
Surgery
Visual servoing
title Beating heart tracking in robotic surgery using 500 Hz visual servoing, model predictive control and an adaptive observer
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