IEEE Access (Jan 2020)

Tactile Sensors for Minimally Invasive Surgery: A Review of the State-of-the-Art, Applications, and Perspectives

  • Naghmeh Bandari,
  • Javad Dargahi,
  • Muthukumaran Packirisamy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2019.2962636
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
pp. 7682 – 7708

Abstract

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Minimally invasive surgery has been one of the most significant evolutions in medicine. In this approach, the surgeon inserts specially-designed instruments through a small incision on the patient's skin into the body cavities, abdomen, veins or, arteries and performs the surgery on organs. As a major limitation, surgeons lose their natural tactile perception due to indirect touch on the organs. Since the loss of tactile perception compromises the ability of surgeons in tissue distinction and maneuvers, researchers have proposed different tactile sensors. This review is to provide researchers with a literature map for the state-of-the-art of tactile sensors in minimally invasive surgery, e.g. in robotic, laparoscopic, palpation, biopsy, heart ablation, and valvuloplasty. In this regard, the pertinent literature from the year 2000 on sensing principles, design requirements, and specifications were reviewed in this study. The survey showed that size, range, resolution, variation, electrical passivity, and magnetic-resonance-compatibility were the most critical specification to study for tactile sensors. Based on the results, some of the requirements, e.g., magnetic-resonance-compatibility and electrical passivity are of less generality and more application-dependent; however, size, resolution, and range specifications differ for various applications and are of utmost importance.

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