Impact of haptic feedback on applied intracorporeal forces using a novel surgical robotic system—a randomized cross-over study with novices in an experimental setup

Background Most currently used surgical robots have no force feedback; the next generation displays forces visually. A novel single-port robotic surgical system called FLEXMIN has been developed. Through an outer diameter of 38 mm, two instruments are teleoperated from a surgeon’s control console in...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSurgical endoscopy Vol. 35; no. 7; pp. 3554 - 3563
Main Authors Miller, Johanna, Braun, Manuel, Bilz, Johannes, Matich, Sebastian, Neupert, Carsten, Kunert, Wolfgang, Kirschniak, Andreas
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Springer US 01.07.2021
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:Background Most currently used surgical robots have no force feedback; the next generation displays forces visually. A novel single-port robotic surgical system called FLEXMIN has been developed. Through an outer diameter of 38 mm, two instruments are teleoperated from a surgeon’s control console including true haptic force feedback. One additional channel incorporates a telescope, another is free for special instrument functions. Methods This randomized cross-over study analyzed the effect of haptic feedback on the application of intracorporeal forces. In a standardized experiment setup, the subjects had to draw circles with the surgical robot as gently as possible. The applied forces, the required time spans, and predefined error rates were measured. Results Without haptic feedback, the maximum forces (median/IQR) were 6.43 N/2.96 N. With haptic feedback, the maximum forces were lower (3.57 N/1.94 N, p  < 0.001). Also, the arithmetic means of the force progression ( p  < 0.001) and their standard deviations ( p  < 0.001) were lower. Not significant were the shorter durations and lower error rates. No sequence effect of force or duration was detected. No characteristic learning or fatigue curve was observed. Conclusions In the experiment setup, the true haptic force feedback can reduce the applied intracorporeal robotic force to one-half when considering the aspects maximum, means, and standard deviation. Other test tasks are needed to validate the influence of force feedback on surgical efficiency and safety.
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ISSN:0930-2794
1432-2218
1432-2218
DOI:10.1007/s00464-020-07818-8