Brain tumor, be it primary or metastatic, is usually life threatening for a person of any age. Primary surgical resection which is one of the most effective ways of treating brain tumors can have tremendously increased success rate if the appropriate imaging modality is used for complete tumor resection. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the imaging modality of choice for brain tumor imaging because of its excellent soft-tissue contrast. MRI combined with continuum soft robotics has immense potential to be the next major technological breakthrough in the field of brain cancer diagnosis and therapy. In this work, we present the design, kinematic, and force analysis of a flexible spring-based minimally invasive neurosurgical intracranial robot (MINIR-II). It is comprised of an inter-connected inner spring and an outer spring and is connected to actively cooled shape memory alloy spring actuators via tendon driven mechanism. Our robot has three serially connected 2-DoF segments which can be independently controlled due to the central tendon routing configuration. The kinematic and force analysis of the robot and the independent segment control were verified by experiments. Robot motion under forced cooling of SMA springs was evaluated as well as the MRI compatibility of the robot and its motion capability in brainlike gelatin environment.
Keyphrases
- magnetic resonance imaging
- contrast enhanced
- high resolution
- diffusion weighted imaging
- minimally invasive
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance
- squamous cell carcinoma
- soft tissue
- small cell lung cancer
- papillary thyroid
- single molecule
- white matter
- stem cells
- young adults
- squamous cell
- anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction
- lymph node metastasis
- working memory
- robot assisted
- mass spectrometry
- solid state
- cell therapy