RAVEN
Surgical Robot System
NASA NEEMO 12 Participation (*)
(*) Through collaboration with the Center For Surgical Innovation
UC, Dept. of Surgery, CSI
Abstract
The
University of Washington, BioRobotics Lab RAVEN Surgical
Robot was one of two surgical robot platforms used for telesurgery
experiments in NASA NEEMO 12. In collaboration with University
of Cincinnati, surgeons from the University of Washington
l teleoperated from Seattle, WA to the Aquarius Habitat off
Key Largo, FL. Surgeons using the RAVEN to perform a variety
of dry lab tasks that involve both gross manipulation as
well as dexterous manipulations such as suturing and pattern
cutting. The RAVEN was also used as part of an educational
outreach program whereby a selected group of elementary school
students teleoperated from Cincinnati. The system was in
the underwater habitat for six days in May 2007
Photo
Galleries
Photos
taken by Mitch Lum and Diana Friedman, in Key
Largo, FL supporting UW's NEEMO 12 participation
NEEMO
12 Splash-Up!: 18-May 2007
Photo
Gallery: 18may2007_splashup
RAVEN
Potting up, and packing out (with lots of action in between):
10-May through 17-May 2007
Photo
Gallery: 17may2007_neemo12
RAVEN
Pot up and beyond: 10-May through 13-May 2007
Photo
Gallery: 13may2007_neemo12
Underwater
Gallery: 5-May and 10-May in the water at Conch Reef
Photo
Gallery: 10may2007_underwater
Splash
Down! 7-May through 9-May
Photo
Gallery: 9may2007_neemo12
Pre-Splash
down week, 30-April through 6-May
Photo
Gallery: 6may2007_neemo12
UW
Press Release - Hannah Hickey - April 18, 2007
This
week Raven, the mobile surgical robot developed by the University
of Washington, leaves for the depths of the Atlantic
Ocean. The UW will participate in NASA's mission to submerge
a surgeon and robotic gear in a simulated spaceship. For 12
days the surgical robotic system will be put through its paces
in an underwater capsule that mimics conditions in a space
shuttle. Surgeons back in Seattle will guide its movements.
The 12th
NASA Extreme Environment Mission Operations test will take
place May 7 to 18 off the coast of Florida. The robot leaves
Seattle on Friday. During the mission, Raven will operate
in the Aquarius
Undersea Laboratory, a submarine-like research pod about
60 feet underwater that is owned by the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration and operated by the University
of North Carolina Wilmington. This mission will test current
technology for sending remote-controlled surgical robotic systems
into space.
During
the mission, four crew members will assemble the robot and perform
experiments. The two larger-than-life black robotic arms will
use surgical instruments to suture a piece of rubber and move
blocks from one spindle to another on what looks like a delicate
children's toy. The brains behind the robot's movements will
be three surgeons in front of a computer screen in Seattle: Drs.
Mika Sinanan and Andrew Wright of the University of Washington's
Medical Center, and Dr. Thomas Lendvay of Children's Hospital
and Regional Medical Center in Seattle.
Instructions will travel over a commercial Internet connection
from Seattle to Key Largo, Fla., then via a special wireless
connection from there to a buoy, and finally via cable
underwater. Images of the simulated patient will travel back
over the same network.
Raven was built over the past five years in the UW's BioRobotics
Lab, co-directed by professor Blake Hannaford and research
associate professor Jacob Rosen in the department of electrical
engineering, with partners in the UW's department of surgery.
The da Vinci surgical robot, which is used at the UW and elsewhere,
weighs nearly a half-ton. Raven weighs only 50 pounds.
Lightweight, mobile robots could travel to wounded soldiers on
the battlefield to treat combat injuries. Surgical robotic systems
also could be used in disaster areas so doctors worldwide could
perform emergency procedures. The robots could even travel to
remote areas in the developing world so local doctors could get
help on difficult procedures. NASA will test the robot's suitability
for a mission to space, where it could perform emergency surgery
without requiring a surgeon to be onboard.
Raven went on its first road trip last summer to California's
Simi Valley. Researchers installed an operating-room tent
in gusting winds and temperatures nearing 100 degrees F (40 C),
and hooked the equipment up to gasoline-powered generators. Surgeons
completed the first field test communicating with the operating
tent using an unmanned aircraft equipped with a wireless transmitter.
The NASA mission poses new challenges. Researchers shrank the
computers and power supplies that support the robot so they can
be carried in dive bags by technical scuba divers and fit into
the limited space. Most importantly, the engineers wrote an instructional
manual so crew members could reassemble the robot and troubleshoot
any problems they encounter.
"When you build a technology as a lab prototype, it takes someone
with a Ph.D. six weeks to put it together," Hannaford said. "If
you build something for the field, it's got to be repairable,
modular and robust."
Once everything is installed in the undersea lab the crew
will be alone with the robot. Crew members can communicate by
phone with the ground team but they will have to operate the
robot and fix any problems on their own. The four-person crew
includes research collaborator and surgeon Dr. Tim Broderick
of the University of Cincinnati, who will observe the robot's
movements and determine its suitability for space travel. Two
NASA astronauts and a NASA flight surgeon complete the crew.
Also traveling to the research pod is the M7, a surgical robot
developed by SRI International in Menlo Park, Calif. These two
robots are the only existing prototypes for a mobile surgical
robot, Hannaford said. Currently both robots are research projects
and are not yet approved by the Food and Drug Administration
for use on humans.
The UW's research is funded by grants from the U.S. Army's Telemedicine
and Advanced Technology Research Center, the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency and the Department of Defense's Peer
Reviewed Medical Research Program.
For more information, contact Hannaford at (206) 543-2197 or blake@u.washington.edu.
Links
NASA
NEEMO 12
NEEMO
12 Press Release - Crew Announcement
Publications
(*)
(*)
Note: Most of the BRL publications are
available on-line in a PDF format. You may used the publication's
reference number as a link to the individual manuscript.
|