In Natural Orifice Translumenal Endoscopic Surgery (NOTES), in vivo robots can be utilized to perform surgical procedures within the peritoneal cavity. A NOTES approach has no external incisions, which decreases overall recovery time and reduces the risk of infection. Fully inserting in vivo robots into the peritoneal cavity eliminates the triangulation and multitasking limitations associated with more traditional endoscope-based NOTES approaches. One major limitation is that once inserted, the in vivo robots are isolated within the abdomen and cannot send or receive materials to the outside world. A steerable material handling system is being developed to bridge this deficiency. This paper presents the design rationale, methodology, and parameters associated with the system.
Design Of Medical Devices Conference Abstracts
Material Handling System for Robotic Natural Orifice Surgery
Alan Goyzueta,
Alan Goyzueta
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Search for other works by this author on:
Carl A. Nelson,
Carl A. Nelson
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Search for other works by this author on:
Dmitry Oleynikov
Dmitry Oleynikov
University of Nebraska Medical Center
Search for other works by this author on:
Jeff Midday
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Alan Goyzueta
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Carl A. Nelson
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Dmitry Oleynikov
University of Nebraska Medical Center
J. Med. Devices. Jun 2011, 5(2): 027507 (1 pages)
Published Online: June 9, 2011
Article history
Online:
June 9, 2011
Published:
June 9, 2011
Citation
Midday, J., Goyzueta, A., Nelson, C. A., and Oleynikov, D. (June 9, 2011). "Material Handling System for Robotic Natural Orifice Surgery." ASME. J. Med. Devices. June 2011; 5(2): 027507. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.3589286
Download citation file: