International Journal of Biomedical Engineering and Technology (IJBET), Volume 5, Number 4, page 303--316 - 2011
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abstract
| In the recent decades robotics and computer science have been
gaining more and more relevance in all aspects of our lives. In surgery, for
example, they gave birth to procedures, impossible to perform otherwise, like
the tele-surgery or the nano-surgery. On this regard, these applied sciences
already play an important role in assisting the surgeon both in the operative
room and, as a support, in the education of young surgeons, but much work has
still to be done.
In fact in these last years we have seen an extreme change in the traditional
training in surgery and the computer-based simulation is one of the main reason
of this shift. The spread of Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS) has brought
major improvements in the quality of healthcare, but it has also increased the
complexity of the surgical procedures requiring advanced and highly
specialized training systems. Moreover these training procedures need to be
reiterated during the operational life of surgeons. Therefore, considering the
limited availability of cadavers and the public concern with the non-ethical
treatment of animals, the traditional approaches to surgical training are
drastically limited encouraging the use of surgical simulators based on virtual
environments.
Healthcare industries and the scientific community in medicine agree
indicating the disruptive potential of the application of Virtual Reality (VR) to
the training in the medical field. Therefore the next step is the development of
surgical simulators with an high level of realism in order to practice complex
procedures in a safe environment. Moreover it is decisive that this evolution is
done integrating advanced medical imaging and processing, allowing surgeons
to practice simulated interventions on patient specific dataset.
The increasing importance of MIS techniques will cause a drastic change in
pre-operation planning and basic surgical training. In fact, the features of this
kind of surgical approach (the workspace limitation, the 2D vision through a
laparoscopic camera and the indirect physical interaction with the patient body)
make it possible to use a surgical simulator to train, plan or simulate an
intervention, reproducing the visual and tactile feedback of the real surgical
procedure on a real patient.
This paper presents some research and applicative results on Computer
Assisted Surgery (CAS) achieved in the framework of EndoCAS, a newly
founded Center of Excellence in Pisa. The research has involved: the
development of segmentation algorithms for volumetric datasets, the simulation
of bone drilling procedures, the modeling of deformable object cuts and
deformations and the simulation of rope interactions during a suture procedure
in MIS. All these projects were been developed using a new open source library
to support the implementation of techniques for simulating deformable objects.
Our purpose is to enhance the surgical training with new improved
techniques applied both to the medical imaging and to the computer-based
simulation in order to carry the surgical training to a next level of realism.
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BibTex references
@Article\{TPMGPM11,
author = "Turini, Giuseppe and Pietroni, Nico and Megali, Giuseppe and Ganovelli, Fabio and Pietrabissa, Andrea and Mosca, Franco",
title = "New techniques for computer-based simulation in surgical training",
journal = "International Journal of Biomedical Engineering and Technology (IJBET)",
number = "4",
volume = "5",
pages = "303--316",
year = "2011",
key = "surgical training; simulation; computer-aided surgery; virtual reality; segmentation algorithms; volumetric datasets; bone drilling; virtual cutting; human tissue cutting; rope dynamics; suture procedures; healthcare technology; medical technology",
keywords = "surgical simulation; computer aided surgery",
url = "http://vcg-legacy.isti.cnr.it/Publications/2011/TPMGPM11"
}
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