Robotic Microtool Control in an Intelligent Automated In Vitro Fertilization and Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection Platform
US-2024426856-A1 · Dec 26, 2024 · US
US10398449B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10398449-B2 |
| Application number | US-201213725348-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Dec 21, 2012 |
| Priority date | Dec 21, 2012 |
| Publication date | Sep 3, 2019 |
| Grant date | Sep 3, 2019 |
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A surgical system includes a surgical tool associated with a virtual haptic interaction point such that movement of the virtual haptic interaction point corresponds to movement of the surgical tool. The surgical system further includes a processing circuit to establish a virtual entry boundary and activate a haptic object, which constrains the surgical tool after the haptic interaction point crosses the virtual entry boundary.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A surgical system, comprising: a surgical tool associated with a virtual haptic interaction point, wherein movement of the virtual haptic interaction point corresponds to movement of the surgical tool; a processing circuit comprising a computer-readable storage medium having instructions stored thereon, that when executed by the processing circuit cause the processing circuit to: establish a haptic object comprising a haptic boundary configured to constrain the surgical tool from moving outside of the haptic object; operate the surgical system in a free manipulation mode, wherein in the free manipulation mode, the haptic object is inactive and the surgical tool is able to be manipulated without being confined to the haptic object; establish a virtual entry boundary, wherein the virtual entry boundary is configured such that when the haptic interaction point crosses the virtual entry boundary, the surgical system switches from the free manipulation mode to a haptic control mode; and activate the haptic object when the haptic interaction point crosses the virtual entry boundary, to begin the haptic control mode, wherein the activated haptic object is configured to confine the surgical tool to the haptic object. 2. The surgical system of claim 1 , wherein the instructions, when executed by the processing circuit, further cause the processing circuit to: establish a virtual exit boundary; and deactivate the haptic object after the haptic interaction point crosses the virtual exit boundary. 3. The surgical system of claim 1 , wherein the instructions, when executed by the processing circuit, further cause the processing circuit to automatically modify the position of the surgical tool, wherein the automatic modification is triggered by the haptic interaction point crossing the virtual entry boundary. 4. The surgical system of claim 1 , wherein the instructions, when executed by the processing circuit, further cause the processing circuit to automatically modify the orientation of the surgical tool, wherein the automatic modification is triggered by the haptic interaction point crossing the virtual entry boundary. 5. The surgical system of claim 1 , wherein the virtual entry boundary encloses a three-dimensional volume and is pill-shaped. 6. The surgical system of claim 1 , wherein the virtual entry boundary encloses a three-dimensional volume and is shaped as a pill with a removed segment, such that a cross section of the virtual entry boundary is sector-shaped. 7. The surgical system of claim 1 , wherein the surgical tool is a spherical burr. 8. The surgical system of claim 1 , wherein the surgical tool is a sagittal saw. 9. The surgical system of claim 1 , wherein the haptic object is a line. 10. The surgical system of claim 1 , wherein the haptic object is a plane. 11. The surgical system of claim 1 , wherein the haptic object is a three-dimensional volume. 12. The surgical system of claim 1 , further comprising an offset haptic object configured to be adjusted prior to or during a surgical procedure. 13. The surgical system of claim 1 , wherein the processing circuit is configured to receive an input based on an act of a user and wherein a failure to receive the input causes the system to remain in the free manipulation mode. 14. The surgical system of claim 1 , wherein the instructions, when executed by the processing circuit, further cause the processing circuit to: deactivate the haptic object upon occurrence of an event; evaluate a plurality of conditions after the event has ended; reactivate the haptic object if the plurality of conditions are met.
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