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Main Authors: Arikan, Demir, Zhang, Peiyao, Sommersperger, Michael, Dehghani, Shervin, Esfandiari, Mojtaba, Taylor, Russel H., Nasseri, M. Ali, Gehlbach, Peter, Navab, Nassir, Iordachita, Iulian
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.18521
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author Arikan, Demir
Zhang, Peiyao
Sommersperger, Michael
Dehghani, Shervin
Esfandiari, Mojtaba
Taylor, Russel H.
Nasseri, M. Ali
Gehlbach, Peter
Navab, Nassir
Iordachita, Iulian
author_facet Arikan, Demir
Zhang, Peiyao
Sommersperger, Michael
Dehghani, Shervin
Esfandiari, Mojtaba
Taylor, Russel H.
Nasseri, M. Ali
Gehlbach, Peter
Navab, Nassir
Iordachita, Iulian
contents Exudative (wet) age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a leading cause of vision loss in older adults, typically treated with intravitreal injections. Emerging therapies, such as subretinal injections of stem cells, gene therapy, small molecules and RPE cells require precise delivery to avoid damaging delicate retinal structures. Robotic systems can potentially offer the necessary precision for these procedures. This paper presents a novel approach for motion compensation in robotic subretinal injections, utilizing real time Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT). The proposed method leverages B$^5$-scans, a rapid acquisition of small-volume OCT data, for dynamic tracking of retinal motion along the Z-axis, compensating for physiological movements such as breathing and heartbeat. Validation experiments on ex vivo porcine eyes revealed challenges in maintaining a consistent tool-to-retina distance, with deviations of up to 200 $μm$ for 100 $μm$ amplitude motions and over 80 $μm$ for 25 $μm$ amplitude motions over one minute. Subretinal injections faced additional difficulties, with phase shifts causing the needle to move off-target and inject into the vitreous. These results highlight the need for improved motion prediction and horizontal stability to enhance the accuracy and safety of robotic subretinal procedures.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2411_18521
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Towards Motion Compensation in Autonomous Robotic Subretinal Injections
Arikan, Demir
Zhang, Peiyao
Sommersperger, Michael
Dehghani, Shervin
Esfandiari, Mojtaba
Taylor, Russel H.
Nasseri, M. Ali
Gehlbach, Peter
Navab, Nassir
Iordachita, Iulian
Robotics
Exudative (wet) age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a leading cause of vision loss in older adults, typically treated with intravitreal injections. Emerging therapies, such as subretinal injections of stem cells, gene therapy, small molecules and RPE cells require precise delivery to avoid damaging delicate retinal structures. Robotic systems can potentially offer the necessary precision for these procedures. This paper presents a novel approach for motion compensation in robotic subretinal injections, utilizing real time Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT). The proposed method leverages B$^5$-scans, a rapid acquisition of small-volume OCT data, for dynamic tracking of retinal motion along the Z-axis, compensating for physiological movements such as breathing and heartbeat. Validation experiments on ex vivo porcine eyes revealed challenges in maintaining a consistent tool-to-retina distance, with deviations of up to 200 $μm$ for 100 $μm$ amplitude motions and over 80 $μm$ for 25 $μm$ amplitude motions over one minute. Subretinal injections faced additional difficulties, with phase shifts causing the needle to move off-target and inject into the vitreous. These results highlight the need for improved motion prediction and horizontal stability to enhance the accuracy and safety of robotic subretinal procedures.
title Towards Motion Compensation in Autonomous Robotic Subretinal Injections
topic Robotics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.18521