HomeTechnologyAutomation and RoboticsRobot Performs First Laparoscopic Surgery without Human Help

    Robot Performs First Laparoscopic Surgery without Human Help

    A robot has performed laparoscopic surgery on the soft tissue of a pig without the guiding hand of a human—a significant step in robotics toward fully automated surgery on humans. Designed by a team of Johns Hopkins University researchers, the Smart Tissue Autonomous Robot (STAR)

    “Our findings show that we can automate one of the most intricate and delicate tasks in surgery: the reconnection of two ends of an intestine. The STAR performed the procedure in four animals and it produced significantly better results than humans performing the same procedure,” said senior author Axel Krieger, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Johns Hopkins’ Whiting School of Engineering.

    The robot excelled at intestinal anastomosis, a procedure that requires a high level of repetitive motion and precision. Connecting two ends of an intestine is arguably the most challenging step in gastrointestinal surgery, requiring a surgeon to suture with high accuracy and consistency. Even the slightest hand tremor or misplaced stitch can result in a leak that could have catastrophic complications for the patient.

    Working with collaborators at the Children’s National Hospital in Washington, D.C. and Jin Kang, a Johns Hopkins professor of electrical and computer engineering, Krieger helped create the robot, a vision-guided system designed specifically to suture soft tissue. Their current iteration advances a 2016 model that repaired a pig’s intestines accurately but required a large incision to access the intestine and more guidance from humans.

    The team equipped the STAR with new features for enhanced autonomy and improved surgical precision, including specialized suturing tools and state-of-the-art imaging systems that provide more accurate visualizations of the surgical field.

    Soft-tissue surgery is especially hard for robots because of its unpredictability, forcing them to be able to adapt quickly to handle unexpected obstacles, Krieger said. The STAR has a novel control system that can adjust the surgical plan in real time, just as a human surgeon would.

    “What makes the STAR special is that it is the first robotic system to plan, adapt, and execute a surgical plan in soft tissue with minimal human intervention,” Krieger said.

    A structural-light-based three-dimensional endoscope and machine learning-based tracking algorithm developed by Kang and his students guides STAR. “We believe an advanced three-dimensional machine vision system is essential in making intelligent surgical robots smarter and safer,” Kang said.

    As the medical field moves towards more laparoscopic approaches for surgeries, it will be important to have an automated robotic system designed for such procedures to assist, Krieger said.

    “Robotic anastomosis is one way to ensure that surgical tasks that require high precision and repeatability can be performed with more accuracy and precision in every patient independent of surgeon skill,” Krieger said. “We hypothesize that this will result in a democratized surgical approach to patient care with more predictable and consistent patient outcomes.”

    The team from Johns Hopkins also included Hamed Saeidi, Justin D. Opfermann, Michael Kam, Shuwen Wei, and Simon Leonard. Michael H. Hsieh, director of Transitional Urology at Children’s National Hospital, also contributed to the research.

    ELE Times Research Desk
    ELE Times Research Deskhttps://www.eletimes.ai
    ELE Times provides extensive global coverage of Electronics, Technology and the Market. In addition to providing in-depth articles, ELE Times attracts the industry’s largest, qualified and highly engaged audiences, who appreciate our timely, relevant content and popular formats. ELE Times helps you build experience, drive traffic, communicate your contributions to the right audience, generate leads and market your products favourably.

    Related News

    Must Read

    Building Reliable 5G and 6G Networks Through Mobile Network Testing

    The development of communication networks has entered a revolutionary...

    Beyond the Screen: envisioning a giant leap forward for smartphones from physical objects to immersive experiences

    Author: STMicroelectronics Smartphones have become some of the most ubiquitous...

    Microchip’s SkyWire Tech Enables Nanosecond-Level Clock Sync Across Locations

    To protect critical infrastructure systems, SkyWire technology enables highly...

    Next Generation Hybrid Systems Transforming Vehicles

    The global automotive industry is undergoing a fundamental transformation...

    Tobii and STMicroelectronics enter mass production of breakthrough interior sensing technology

    Tobii and STMicroelectronics announced the beginning of mass production...

    Rohde & Schwarz unveils compact MXO 3 oscilloscopes with 4 and 8 channels

    Rohde & Schwarz expands its next-generation MXO oscilloscope portfolio...

    TI’s new power-management solutions enable scalable AI infrastructures

    Texas Instruments (TI) debuted new design resources and power-management...

    ESA awards Rohde & Schwarz for contributions to 30 years European Satellite Navigation

    The event brought together institutional and industrial partners, ESA...