General algorithms for laparoscopic surgical simulators

Recent advances in fields such as modeling of deformable objects, haptic technologies, immersive technologies, computation capacity and virtual environments have created the conditions to offer novel and suitable training tools and learning methods in the medical area. One of these training tools is...

Full description

Autores:
Díaz-León, C. A. (Christian Andrés)
Trefftz, H. (Helmuth)
Bernal, J. (Jorge)
Eliuk, S. (Steven)
Tipo de recurso:
Article of journal
Fecha de publicación:
2010
Institución:
Universidad EIA .
Repositorio:
Repositorio EIA .
Idioma:
eng
OAI Identifier:
oai:repository.eia.edu.co:11190/490
Acceso en línea:
https://repository.eia.edu.co/handle/11190/490
Palabra clave:
RBI00079
TECNOLOGÍAS PARA LA SALUD
TECHNOLOGY IN HEALTH
LAPAROSCOPY - EDUCATION
LAPAROSCOPÍA - EDUCACIÓN
MEDICAL TRAINING
MINIMALLY INVASIVE SURGERY
SURGICAL SIMULATION
ENTRENAMIENTO MÉDICO
VIRTUAL REALITY
CIRUGÍA MÍNIMAMENTE INVASIVA
SIMULACIÓN QUIRÚRGICA
REALIDAD VIRTUAL
Rights
openAccess
License
Derechos Reservados - Universidad EIA, 2020
Description
Summary:Recent advances in fields such as modeling of deformable objects, haptic technologies, immersive technologies, computation capacity and virtual environments have created the conditions to offer novel and suitable training tools and learning methods in the medical area. One of these training tools is the virtual surgical simulator, which has no limitations of time or risk, unlike conventional methods of training. Moreover, these simulators allow for the quantitative evaluation of the surgeon performance, giving the possibility to create performance standards in order to define if the surgeon is well prepared to execute a determined surgical procedure on a real patient. This paper describes the development of a virtual simulator for laparoscopic surgery. The simulator allows the multimodal interaction between the surgeon and the surgical virtual environment using visual and haptic feedback devices. To make the experience of the surgeon closer to the real surgical environment a specific user interface was developed. Additionally in this paper we describe some implementations carried out to face typical challenges presented in surgical simulators related to the tradeoff between real-time performance and high realism; for instance, the deformation of soft tissues are simulated using a GPU (Graphics Processor Unit) -based implementation of the mass-spring model. In this case, we explain the algorithms developed taking into account the particular case of a cholecystectomy procedure in laparoscopic surgery.