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Hauptverfasser: Lawson, Jared, Veliky, Madison, Abah, Colette P., Dietrich, Mary S., Chitale, Rohan, Simaan, Nabil
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2024
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.10804
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author Lawson, Jared
Veliky, Madison
Abah, Colette P.
Dietrich, Mary S.
Chitale, Rohan
Simaan, Nabil
author_facet Lawson, Jared
Veliky, Madison
Abah, Colette P.
Dietrich, Mary S.
Chitale, Rohan
Simaan, Nabil
contents Objective: The objective of this work is to introduce and demonstrate the effectiveness of a novel sensing modality for contact detection between an off-the-shelf aspiration catheter and a thrombus. Methods: A custom robotic actuator with a pressure sensor was used to generate an oscillatory vacuum excitation and sense the pressure inside the extracorporeal portion of the catheter. Vacuum pressure profiles and robotic motion data were used to train a support vector machine (SVM) classification model to detect contact between the aspiration catheter tip and a mock thrombus. Validation consisted of benchtop accuracy verification, as well as user study comparison to the current standard of angiographic presentation. Results: Benchtop accuracy of the sensing modality was shown to be 99.67%. The user study demonstrated statistically significant improvement in identifying catheter-thrombus contact compared to the current standard. The odds ratio of successful detection of clot contact was 2.86 (p=0.03) when using the proposed sensory method compared to without it. Conclusion: The results of this work indicate that the proposed sensing modality can offer intraoperative feedback to interventionalists that can improve their ability to detect contact between the distal tip of a catheter and a thrombus. Significance: By offering a relatively low-cost technology that affords off-the-shelf aspiration catheters as clot-detecting sensors, interventionalists can improve the first-pass effect of the mechanical thrombectomy procedure while reducing procedural times and mental burden.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2401_10804
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Endovascular Detection of Catheter-Thrombus Contact by Vacuum Excitation
Lawson, Jared
Veliky, Madison
Abah, Colette P.
Dietrich, Mary S.
Chitale, Rohan
Simaan, Nabil
Robotics
Objective: The objective of this work is to introduce and demonstrate the effectiveness of a novel sensing modality for contact detection between an off-the-shelf aspiration catheter and a thrombus. Methods: A custom robotic actuator with a pressure sensor was used to generate an oscillatory vacuum excitation and sense the pressure inside the extracorporeal portion of the catheter. Vacuum pressure profiles and robotic motion data were used to train a support vector machine (SVM) classification model to detect contact between the aspiration catheter tip and a mock thrombus. Validation consisted of benchtop accuracy verification, as well as user study comparison to the current standard of angiographic presentation. Results: Benchtop accuracy of the sensing modality was shown to be 99.67%. The user study demonstrated statistically significant improvement in identifying catheter-thrombus contact compared to the current standard. The odds ratio of successful detection of clot contact was 2.86 (p=0.03) when using the proposed sensory method compared to without it. Conclusion: The results of this work indicate that the proposed sensing modality can offer intraoperative feedback to interventionalists that can improve their ability to detect contact between the distal tip of a catheter and a thrombus. Significance: By offering a relatively low-cost technology that affords off-the-shelf aspiration catheters as clot-detecting sensors, interventionalists can improve the first-pass effect of the mechanical thrombectomy procedure while reducing procedural times and mental burden.
title Endovascular Detection of Catheter-Thrombus Contact by Vacuum Excitation
topic Robotics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.10804