Beating-heart registration for organ-mounted robots

Citation:

Nathan A Wood, David Schwartzman, Michael J Passineau, Robert J Moraca, Marco A Zenati, and Cameron N Riviere. 2018. “Beating-heart registration for organ-mounted robots.” Int J Med Robot, 14, 4, Pp. e1905.

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Organ-mounted robots address the problem of beating-heart surgery by adhering to the heart, passively providing a platform that approaches zero relative motion. Because of the quasi-periodic deformation of the heart due to heartbeat and respiration, registration must address not only spatial registration but also temporal registration. METHODS: Motion data were collected in the porcine model in vivo (N = 6). Fourier series models of heart motion were developed. By comparing registrations generated using an iterative closest-point approach at different phases of respiration, the phase corresponding to minimum registration distance is identified. RESULTS: The spatiotemporal registration technique presented here reduces registration error by an average of 4.2 mm over the 6 trials, in comparison with a more simplistic static registration that merely averages out the physiological motion. CONCLUSIONS: An empirical metric for spatiotemporal registration of organ-mounted robots is defined and demonstrated using data from animal models in vivo.
Last updated on 02/17/2022