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A Method to Reduce Tension Differences in Pull/Push Manipulation for a Robot in Fluorescence Emission-Guided Surgical Microscopy

Authors
Lee, SangyunYoon, KicheolLee, Won-SukKim, Kwang Gi
Issue Date
Aug-2024
Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
Keywords
biomedical engineering; gastric surgery; general surgery; neurosurgery; robotic surgery; surgical oncology; vascular surgery
Citation
SURGICAL INNOVATION, v.31, no.4, pp 443 - 446
Pages
4
Journal Title
SURGICAL INNOVATION
Volume
31
Number
4
Start Page
443
End Page
446
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gachon/handle/2020.sw.gachon/91391
DOI
10.1177/15533506241240863
ISSN
1553-3506
1553-3514
Abstract
Motivation A fluorescence emission-guided microscope used to monitor the outcome of cancer removal surgery is highly effective when employing a manipulator to motorize and switch the observation direction. It is necessary to minimize the alignment of looper tension between the stands for pull/push to change the direction of the manipulator and reduce the error rate caused by tension differences. This paper presents a method to minimize the error rate of looper tension between the stands.Methods \The looper is inserted between the stands of the manipulator to minimize the difference in tension and make the stress on the pull and push of the looper constant. The constant stress allows the manipulator to move stably in left/right, up/down, and left/right movements, which will be effective for full-camera observation and close-up shots of the end effector.Results Reducing the tolerance for differences in the manipulator's looper tension (angle and tension) is crucial. When the input value of the looper tension angle is 50 degrees, the output should closely match 50 degrees. Consequently, the measured response has a tolerance of +/- 49.98%, resulting in an error rate of .02% (1/50th level).Conclusion A method is proposed to minimize the error rate of the manipulator's looper tension in a robot-based fluorescence emission-guided microscope used to observe the status of cancer surgery. As a result, a stable manipulator with a minimal error rate can achieve a 3.986x magnification for close-up observation by switching between high and low orientations.
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