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  4. A calibration approach for elasticity estimation with medical tools
 
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A calibration approach for elasticity estimation with medical tools

Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.13323
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2024-09-14
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Grube, Sarah  orcid-logo
Medizintechnische und Intelligente Systeme E-1  
Neidhardt, Maximilian  
Medizintechnische und Intelligente Systeme E-1  
Hermann, Anna-Katarina
Sprenger, Johanna  
Medizintechnische und Intelligente Systeme E-1  
Abdolazizi, Kian Philipp  
Kontinuums- und Werkstoffmechanik M-15  
Latus, Sarah  orcid-logo
Medizintechnische und Intelligente Systeme E-1  
Cyron, Christian J.  
Kontinuums- und Werkstoffmechanik M-15  
Schlaefer, Alexander  
Medizintechnische und Intelligente Systeme E-1  
TORE-DOI
10.15480/882.13323
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/49187
Journal
Current directions in biomedical engineering  
Volume
10
Issue
2
Start Page
99
End Page
102
Citation
Current Directions in Biomedical Engineering 10 (2): 99-102 (2024)
Publisher DOI
10.1515/cdbme-2024-1077
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85204078318
ArXiv ID
2406.09947
Publisher
De Gruyter
Soft tissue elasticity is directly related to different stages of diseases and can be used for tissue identification during minimally invasive procedures. By palpating a tissue with a robot in a minimally invasive fashion force-displacement curves can be acquired. However, force-displacement curves strongly depend on the tool geometry which is often complex in the case of medical tools. Hence, a tool calibration procedure is desired to directly map force-displacement curves to the corresponding tissue elasticity.We present an experimental setup for calibrating medical tools with a robot. First, we propose to estimate the elasticity of gelatin phantoms by spherical indentation with a state-of-The-Art contact model. We estimate force-displacement curves for different gelatin elasticities and temperatures. Our experiments demonstrate that gelatin elasticity is highly dependent on temperature, which can lead to an elasticity offset if not considered. Second, we propose to use a more complex material model, e.g., a neural network, that can be trained with the determined elasticities. Considering the temperature of the gelatin sample we can represent different elasticities per phantom and thereby increase our training data.We report elasticity values ranging from 10 to 40 kPa for a 10% gelatin phantom, depending on temperature.
Subjects
gelatin phantoms
palpation
soft tissue
tool calibration
Young's Modulus
MLE@TUHH
DDC Class
617: Surgery, Regional Medicine, Dentistry, Ophthalmology, Otology, Audiology
620: Engineering
006: Special computer methods
Funding(s)
I³-Project - Interdisciplinary Competence Center for Interface Research  
Lizenz
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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