Feasibility of Robot-Assisted Ultrasound Imaging with Force Feedback for Assessment of Thyroid Diseases
UMass Chan Affiliations
Department of RadiologyDocument Type
Conference PaperPublication Date
2020-03-16Keywords
robotic ultrasound3D ultrasound
ultrasound image registration
force control
motion planning
3D imaging
Analytical, Diagnostic and Therapeutic Techniques and Equipment
Bioimaging and Biomedical Optics
Endocrine System Diseases
Radiology
Robotics
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Medical ultrasound is extensively used to define tissue textures and to characterize lesions, and it is the modality of choice for detection and follow-up assessment of thyroid diseases. Classical medical ultrasound procedures are performed manually by an occupational operator with a hand-held ultrasound probe. These procedures require high physical and cognitive burden and yield clinical results that are highly operator-dependent, therefore frequently diminishing trust in ultrasound imaging data accuracy in repetitive assessment. A robotic ultrasound procedure, on the other hand, is an emerging paradigm integrating a robotic arm with an ultrasound probe. It achieves an automated or semi-automated ultrasound scanning by controlling the scanning trajectory, region of interest, and the contact force. Therefore, the scanning becomes more informative and comparable in subsequent examinations over a long-time span. In this work, we present a technique for allowing operators to reproduce reliably comparable ultrasound images with the combination of predefined trajectory execution and real-time force feedback control. The platform utilized features a 7-axis robotic arm capable of 6-DoF force-torque sensing and a linear-array ultrasound probe. The measured forces and torques affecting the probe are used to adaptively modify the predefined trajectory during autonomously performed examinations and probe-phantom interaction force accuracy is evaluated. In parallel, by processing and combining ultrasound B-Mode images with probe spatial information, structural features can be extracted from the scanning volume through a 3D scan. The validation was performed on a tissue-mimicking phantom containing thyroid features, and we successfully demonstrated high image registration accuracy between multiple trials.Source
Kaminski JT, Rafatzand K, Zhang HK. Feasibility of Robot-Assisted Ultrasound Imaging with Force Feedback for Assessment of Thyroid Diseases. Proc SPIE Int Soc Opt Eng. 2020 Feb;11315:113151D. doi: 10.1117/12.2551118. Epub 2020 Mar 16. PMID: 32742057; PMCID: PMC7392820. Link to article on publisher's site
DOI
10.1117/12.2551118Permanent Link to this Item
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/48461PubMed ID
32742057Related Resources
ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1117/12.2551118