Trocar Localisation for Robot-assisted Vitreoretinal Surgery
Overview
Radiology
Affiliations
Purpose: Robot-assisted vitreoretinal surgery provides precise and consistent operations on the back of the eye. To perform this safely, knowledge of the surgical instrument's remote centre of motion (RCM) and the location of the insertion point into the eye (trocar) is required. This enables the robot to align both positions to pivot the instrument about the trocar, thus preventing any damaging lateral forces from being exerted.
Methods: Building on a system developed in previous work, this study presents a trocar localisation method that uses a micro-camera mounted on a vitreoretinal surgical forceps, to track two ArUco markers attached on either side of a trocar. The trocar position is the estimated midpoint between the markers.
Results: Experimental evaluation of the trocar localisation was conducted. Results showed an RMSE of 1.82 mm for the localisation of the markers and an RMSE of 1.24 mm for the trocar localisation.
Conclusions: The proposed camera-based trocar localisation presents reasonable consistency and accuracy and shows improved results compared to other current methods. Optimum accuracy for this application would necessitate a 1.4 mm absolute error margin, which corresponds to the trocar's radius. The trocar localisation results are successfully found within this margin, yet the marker localisation would require further refinement to ensure consistency of localisation within the error margin. Further work will refine these position estimates and ensure the error stays consistently within this boundary.
Extra-abdominal trocar and instrument detection for enhanced surgical workflow understanding.
Jurosch F, Wagner L, Jell A, Islertas E, Wilhelm D, Berlet M Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg. 2024; 19(10):1939-1945.
PMID: 39008232 PMC: 11442558. DOI: 10.1007/s11548-024-03220-0.
Artificial Intelligence in Ophthalmic Surgery: Current Applications and Expectations.
Nuliqiman M, Xu M, Sun Y, Cao J, Chen P, Gao Q Clin Ophthalmol. 2023; 17:3499-3511.
PMID: 38026589 PMC: 10674717. DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S438127.