Impact of optical navigation variables on the accuracy of robot-assisted surgery: a study of the TIANJI Robot system

This study aims to explore factors related to optical navigation that interfere with the accuracy of robot-assisted surgery, specifically focusing on the TIANJI Robot system. A measurement model was created to assess the accuracy of the TIANJI Robot system in simulated screw placement. Deviation between actual and planned positions was measured using a three-coordinate machine. Various experiments were conducted to investigate the impact of different optical navigation factors on screw placement accuracy. Deviations were measured at different distances (ranging from 1.2 to 2.2  m) between the optical navigation stereo camera and the tracker, with each distance being tested 50 times. The distance between the optical camera and patient tracker was set at 1.4 m. Deviations were also measured at different angles between the camera and robot tracker, repeated over 25 times f or each angle. Data were analyzed using mean and standard deviation, with line charts illustrating deviation changes based on distance and angle details. Within the range of the TIANJI Robot system’s optical navigation (1.2–2.2 m), deviation increased as distance increased (χ2 = 479.107,P <  0.001). The robotic system demonstrated high and consistent accuracy (mean deviation: 0.332 mm ± 0.067 mm) when the relative angle between the optical camera and tracker was below 40°. The accuracy of the TIANJI Robot system was found to be influenced by relative distance and angle betwee n the o...
Source: Journal of Robotic Surgery - Category: Surgery Source Type: research
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