Automatic planning of needle placement for robot-assisted percutaneous procedures

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TitreAutomatic planning of needle placement for robot-assisted percutaneous procedures
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuteursBelbachir E, Golkar E, Bayle B, Essert C
JournalINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPUTER ASSISTED RADIOLOGY AND SURGERY
Volume13
Pagination1429-1438
Date PublishedSEP
Type of ArticleArticle; Proceedings Paper
ISSN1861-6410
Mots-clésdecision-making process, interventional radiology, Preoperative planning, Robot-assisted interventions
Résumé

PurposePercutaneous procedures allow interventional radiologists to perform diagnoses or treatments guided by an imaging device, typically a computed tomography (CT) scanner with a high spatial resolution. To reduce exposure to radiations and improve accuracy, robotic assistance to needle insertion is considered in the case of X-ray guided procedures. We introduce a planning algorithm that computes a needle placement compatible with both the patient's anatomy and the accessibility of the robot within the scanner gantry.MethodsOur preoperative planning approach is based on inverse kinematics, fast collision detection, and bidirectional rapidly exploring random trees coupled with an efficient strategy of node addition. The algorithm computes the allowed needle entry zones over the patient's skin (accessibility map) from 3D models of the patient's anatomy, the environment (CT, bed), and the robot. The result includes the admissible robot joint path to target the prescribed internal point, through the entry point. A retrospective study was performed on 16 patients datasets in different conditions: without robot (WR) and with the robot on the left or the right side of the bed (RL/RR).ResultsWe provide an accessibility map ensuring a collision-free path of the robot and allowing for a needle placement compatible with the patient's anatomy. The result is obtained in an average time of about 1min, even in difficult cases. The accessibility maps of RL and RR covered about a half of the surface of WR map in average, which offers a variety of options to insert the needle with the robot. We also measured the average distance between the needle and major obstacles such as the vessels and found that RL and RR produced needle placements almost as safe as WR.ConclusionThe introduced planning method helped us prove that it is possible to use such a general purpose redundant manipulator equipped with a dedicated tool to perform percutaneous interventions in cluttered spaces like a CT gantry.

DOI10.1007/s11548-018-1754-2