SCH: Versatile and Compact Telerobot with Haptic Feedback and Physics-Informed Simulation for Safety Enhanced Neurovascular Interventions
Project Number1R01NS141171-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderSU, HAO
Awardee OrganizationNORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY RALEIGH
Description
Abstract Text
Stroke is a leading cause of mortality and chronic disability, which predominately occurs due to blood clots
or plaques impeding the blood flow in the brain (ischemic stroke) or a rupture in brain arteries
(hemorrhagic stroke). Minimally invasive endovascular procedures, e.g., thrombectomy (removing clots to
restore blood flow) and neurovascular embolization (deploying coils in aneurysms to obstruct blood flow),
are employed to treat these two strokes but also pose risks for X-ray radiation exposure. Robots were
introduced to safeguard operators from radiation and increase precision via teleoperated control several
meters away from the patient. However, these robots are bulky capital equipment and only mechanically
compatible with a few instruments. To tackle these limitations, we developed a versatile 4-DOF robot with
a significantly smaller size than state-of-the-art robots and is compatible with a wide variety of
instruments. To further improve effectiveness and usability of endovascular robots, we identify three key
limitations to the widespread adoption of robotic systems: 1) prolonged procedure time due to frequent
robotic to manual conversions due to lack of full actuation of instruments; 2) steep learning curve and long
training time for clinicians to implement complex surgical manipulation with robots to perform interventions
due to the lack of coordinated control and pre-operative training of robot-assisted procedure; 3) elevated
risks of vessel or aneurysm ruptures due to lack of haptic feedback for instrument-vessel interaction force.
Our interdisciplinary team, consisting of experts in robotics (Su), mechanics (Jawed), interventional
neuroradiology (Tateshima, M.D.), anatomy (Hartstone-Rose), human-robot interaction (Joo) will: 1)
develop full actuation (avoid manual loading/unloading of instruments), coordinated control paradigms,
and patient-side haptic module for our robot; 2) establish a machine learning-assisted physics-based
simulation framework for pre-operative training and intra-operative situational awareness; 3) study
human-robot interaction to evaluate multiple metrics about manual, partial actuation, and full actuation
procedures.
Our goal is to design intelligent robots in concert with pre-operative virtual training and intra-operative
virtual fixtures (safety zone) to improve effectiveness and usability, thus ultimately enhancing safety and
clinical outcome of neurovascular interventions.
RELEVANCE (See instructions):
Our project entails transformative methods that span design, simulation, and medicine for an in-depth
understanding of human-robot interaction for a surgery that saves the lives of millions of humans. Our
work will advance two fundamental science disciplines: Robotics and Mechanics, and will make scientific
contributions to computer sciences and engineering to improve fundamental understanding of medicine.
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
CFDA Code
853
DUNS Number
042092122
UEI
U3NVH931QJJ3
XRPPWZ3TK937
Project Start Date
17-September-2024
Project End Date
30-June-2028
Budget Start Date
17-September-2024
Budget End Date
30-June-2025
Project Funding Information for 2024
Total Funding
$294,729
Direct Costs
$231,708
Indirect Costs
$63,021
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2024
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
$294,729
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 1R01NS141171-01
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