Electrical Bioimpedance-Controlled Surgical Instrumentation

A bioimpedance-controlled concept for bone cement milling during revision total hip replacement is presented. Normally, the surgeon manually removes bone cement using a hammer and chisel. However, this procedure is relatively rough and unintended harm may occur to tissue at any time. The proposed bi...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on biomedical circuits and systems 2015-10, Vol.9 (5), p.743-750
Hauptverfasser: Brendle, Christian, Rein, Benjamin, Niesche, Annegret, Korff, Alexander, Radermacher, Klaus, Misgeld, Berno, Leonhardt, Steffen
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A bioimpedance-controlled concept for bone cement milling during revision total hip replacement is presented. Normally, the surgeon manually removes bone cement using a hammer and chisel. However, this procedure is relatively rough and unintended harm may occur to tissue at any time. The proposed bioimpedance-controlled surgical instrumentation improves this process because, for example, most risks associated with bone cement removal are avoided. The electrical bioimpedance measurements enable online process-control by using the milling head as both a cutting tool and measurement electrode at the same time. Furthermore, a novel integrated surgical milling tool is introduced, which allows acquisition of electrical bioimpedance data for online control; these data are used as a process variable. Process identification is based on finite element method simulation and on experimental studies with a rapid control prototyping system. The control loop design includes the identified process model, the characterization of noise as being normally distributed and the filtering, which is necessary for sufficient accuracy ( ±0.5 mm). Also, in a comparative study, noise suppression is investigated in silico with a moving average filter and a Kalman filter. Finally, performance analysis shows that the bioimpedance-controlled surgical instrumentation may also performs effectively at a higher feed rate (e.g., 5 mm/s).
ISSN:1932-4545
1940-9990
DOI:10.1109/TBCAS.2014.2363211