## Abstract ## Background Conventional vascular interventional surgery (VIS) is manually performed under fluoroscopic guidance, requiring lead protection for the surgeons. A remoteβcontrol vascular interventional surgery robot (VISR) which can remotely, safely and precisely perform VIS would have
Vascular deformation for vascular interventional surgery simulation
β Scribed by Dapeng Zhang; Tianmiao Wang; Da Liu; Guo Lin
- Publisher
- Wiley (Robotic Publications)
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 253 KB
- Volume
- 6
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1478-5951
- DOI
- 10.1002/rcs.302
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Background
Obtaining the expertise to perform minimally vascular interventional surgery (VIS) requires thorough training. Previous VIS simulators have generally assumed that blood vessels are rigid. However, vascular deformation occurs unavoidably in VIS. In this study, the arterial walls were analysed as soft tissue.
Methods
A massβspring model (MSM) was applied for vascular deformation simulation. To improve simulation precision, the spring coefficient was derived from a reference model, simulated with a linear finite element method (FEM), which established a link between the spring coefficient and the properties of the vascular materials. In order to evaluate the simulation results, we applied identical external forces to FEM and MSM and calculated their deformations. Additionally, based on the proposed MSM, we designed a VIS simulator to achieve renal artery intervention. Quantitative validation was performed by comparing the simulated catheter position with a reference position, as assessed by 3D rotational angiography imaging.
Results
From the simulation results, we could clearly see that MSM deformation was realβtime and very close to the linear FEM reference, and MSM was successfully adopted in our renal artery intervention simulator.
Conclusion
MSM with a spring coefficient derived from linear FEM was able to produce a realistic deformation simulation of arterial walls. This method could also be extended to model other organ deformations. Copyright Β© 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract This paper reports the results of reconstructive renal arterial operations on 23 patients who underwent surgery because it was considered that renal artery disease was contributing to their chronic renal failure. The median pre-operative serum creatinine in this group of patients was 0Β·