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Clinical efficacy and performance evaluation of a bendable remote robot system for a bone tumour surgery: A pilot animal study
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Title
Clinical efficacy and performance evaluation of a bendable remote robot system for a bone tumour surgery: A pilot animal study
Issued Date
2024-08
Citation
Kim, Seungmin. (2024-08). Clinical efficacy and performance evaluation of a bendable remote robot system for a bone tumour surgery: A pilot animal study. International Journal of Medical Robotics and Computer Assisted Surgery, 20(4). doi: 10.1002/rcs.2653
Type
Article
Author Keywords
bendable end-effectorbone tumour surgeryminimally invasivepilot animal study
Keywords
CHONDROSARCOMA
ISSN
1478-5951
Abstract
BackgroundTraditional open surgery for bone tumours sometimes has as a consequence an excessive removal of healthy bone tissue because of the limitations of rigid surgical instruments, increasing infection risk and recovery time.MethodsWe propose a remote robot with a 4.5-mm diameter bendable end-effector, offering four degrees of freedom for accessing the inside of the bone and performing tumour debridement. The preclinical studies evaluated the effectiveness, clinical scenario, and usability across 12 total surgeries-six phantom surgeries and six bovine bone surgeries. Evaluation criteria included skin incision size, bone window size, surgical time, removal rate, and conversion to open surgery.ResultsPreclinical studies demonstrated that the robotic approach requires significantly smaller incision size and procedure times than traditional open curettage.ConclusionThis study validated the performance of the proposed system by assessing its preclinical effectiveness and optimising surgical methods using human phantom and bovine bone tumour models.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/57166
DOI
10.1002/rcs.2653
Publisher
Wiley
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