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Friday, 05 July 2019 01:07

Mini surgical robot brainchild of young Australian researcher

By
Robotic Vision researchers Jonathon Roberts (left), Ross Crawford and Andrew Razjigaev Robotic Vision researchers Jonathon Roberts (left), Ross Crawford and Andrew Razjigaev

A claimed “world first” cutting-edge robotics research project at the Australian Centre for Robotic Vision to create bespoke, miniaturised surgical robots, is the brainchild of a young researcher, Andrew Razjigaev.

The 23-year old Razjigaev, backed by the centre’s Medical and Healthcare Robotics Group, is taking what the centre describes as “nothing short of a quantum leap in the surgical SnakeBot’s design”.

In place of a single robot, the new plan envisages multiple snake-like robots attached to a RAVEN II surgical robotic research platform, all working together to improve patient outcomes.

Due to complete his PhD research project by early 2021, Razjigaev graduated as a mechatronics engineer at QUT in 2017 and has been a part of the Centre’s Medical and Healthcare Robotics Group since 2016.

“Robotics is all about helping people in some way and what I’m most excited about is that this project may lead to improved health outcomes, fewer complications and faster patient recovery,” Razjigaev said.

“That’s what really drives my research – being able to help people and make a positive difference. Knee arthroscopy is one of most common orthopaedic procedures in the world, with around four million procedures a year, so this project could have a huge impact.”

Razjigaev said he hoped his work would lead to real-world development of new surgical tools.

“Surgeons want to do the best they can and face a lot of challenges,” he said.

“Our objective is to provide surgeons with new tools to be able to perform existing surgery, like knee arthroscopy, more efficiently and safely and to perhaps perform surgery that is simply too difficult to attempt with today’s tools.

“It’s also incredibly cool to use evolution in my work! There’s no question we’re witnessing the age-old process – the only difference being it’s happening inside a computer instead of nature.”

Leading the Queensland University of Technology-based Medical and Healthcare Robotics Group, Centre chief investigator Jonathan Roberts and associate investigator Ross Crawford (who is also an orthopaedic surgeon) said the semi-autonomous surgical system could revolutionise keyhole surgery in ways not before imagined.

Professor Crawford stressed the aim of the robotic system — expected to incorporate surgical dual-arm telemanipulation and autonomous vision-based control — was to assist, not replace surgeons, ultimately improving patient outcomes.

“At the moment surgeons use what are best described as rigid ‘one-size-fits-all’ tools for knee arthroscopy procedures, even though patients and their anatomy can vary significantly,” he said.

The surgical system being explored had the potential to vastly surpass capabilities of current state-of-the-art surgical tools, Professor Crawford said.

“The research project aims to design snake-like robots as miniaturised and highly dexterous surgical tools, fitted with computer vision capabilities and the ability to navigate around obstacles in confined spaces such as the anatomy of the human body.

“Dexterity is incredibly important as the robots are not only required to reach surgical sites but perform complicated surgical procedures via telemanipulation.”

Professor Roberts said the research project was a world-first for surgical robotics targeting knee arthroscopy and would not be possible without the multi-disciplinary expertise of researchers at the Australian Centre for Robotic Vision.

“One of the most exciting things about this project is that it is bringing many ideas from the robotics community together to form a practical solution to a real-world problem.

“The project has been proceeding at a rapid pace, mainly due to the hard work and brilliance of Andrew, supported by a team of advisors with backgrounds in mechanical engineering, mechatronics, aerospace, medicine, biology, physics and chemistry.”

Here's how the researchers explain what they call "SnakeBot Evolution 101":

  • The process starts with a scan of a patient’s knee. With the supervision of a doctor, the computer classifies the regions for the SnakeBots to reach in the knee (green area) and regions to avoid (red area).
  • The resulting geometry makes a 3D environment for the SnakeBots to compete in the simulated evolution. It enables a number of standard SnakeBot designs to be tested and scored on how well they perform – namely how well they manoeuvre to sites inside a patient’s knee. The black lines in the test show some of the trajectories a SnakeBot took to manoeuvre to those sites.
  • The evolutionary computational design algorithm kicks in, continually creating newgenerations of SnakeBots, re-testing and killing off weaker variants until one survives, uniquely matched to an individual patient’s anatomy. The SnakeBot that can safely reach those targets with more dexterity wins the battle of evolution and claims the optimal design.
  • The optimal SnakeBots are generated into 3D models to be 3D-printed as low-cost, disposable surgical tools unique to each patient.
  • They are now ready to be deployed for surgery! The micro SnakeBots are attached to a larger, table-top robotic platform (like the RAVEN II) that positions them for entry into surgical incision sites.
  • It is expected that two SnakeBots are fitted with surgical instruments at their tips to enable a surgeon to perform dual-arm teleoperated surgical procedures.
  • A third SnakeBot in the multi-bot system will have a camera installed at its tip. This camera system will be used by a robotic vision system to map a patient’s body cavity so that the robot can be steered towards the areas of interest and away from delicate areas that should be avoided. It will track the two arms and surgical area simultaneously, working as the eyes of the surgeon.
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Peter Dinham

Peter Dinham - retired in 2020. He is a veteran journalist and corporate communications consultant. He has worked as a journalist in all forms of media – newspapers/magazines, radio, television, press agency and now, online – including with the Canberra Times, The Examiner (Tasmania), the ABC and AAP-Reuters. As a freelance journalist he also had articles published in Australian and overseas magazines. He worked in the corporate communications/public relations sector, in-house with an airline, and as a senior executive in Australia of the world’s largest communications consultancy, Burson-Marsteller. He also ran his own communications consultancy and was a co-founder in Australia of the global photographic agency, the Image Bank (now Getty Images).

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