A typical operation in otolaryngology takes place under the microscope. The surgeon works with a large set of very delicate tools, which are managed by a scrub nurse∕tech. In practice, the surgeon is intimately familiar with all instruments, which can number into hundreds but the nurse might not be. This situation can lead to miscommunication and longer operations. Any delay is a costly proposition. Typical costs during procedures can be $250 per interval and every minute counts. Scrub nurse responsibilities include organization of instruments and their sterilization. During operation the surgeon requests an instrument, the technician must be able to identify it from a list of hundreds and place it correctly in the surgeon’s hand. The instruments might be microscopically different and look very similar. Each instrument is several hundred dollars and difficult to replace or repair. This study looks at the steps needed to automate the activities of a scrub nurse. First step towards this goal is the study of haptic and spoken language interfaces. The robot must know when to pick up a new instrument and when to release it. Next the robot must be able to plan out a stable and collision free motion and grasping movement. To enable all of this vision based localization of surgeon’s hands, instrument palette and any obstacle movement is necessary.
Design Of Medical Devices Conference Abstracts
Robotic Scrub Nurse for Otolaryngology
Nikolaos Papanikolopoulos,
Nikolaos Papanikolopoulos
University Of Minnesota
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Ahmed Tewfik
Ahmed Tewfik
University Of Minnesota
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Amer Agovic
University Of Minnesota
Samuel Levine
University Of Minnesota
Nikolaos Papanikolopoulos
University Of Minnesota
Ahmed Tewfik
University Of Minnesota
J. Med. Devices. Jun 2008, 2(2): 027545 (1 pages)
Published Online: June 25, 2008
Article history
Published:
June 25, 2008
Citation
Agovic, A., Levine, S., Papanikolopoulos, N., and Tewfik, A. (June 25, 2008). "Robotic Scrub Nurse for Otolaryngology." ASME. J. Med. Devices. June 2008; 2(2): 027545. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2932444
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