Optical Fiber-Based Needle Shape Sensing in Real Tissue: Single Core vs. Multicore Approaches.

J Med Robot Res

Mechanical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, 3400 North Charles St., Baltimore, Maryland 21218, United States.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Flexible needle insertion is critical in minimally-invasive prostate cancer surgeries, allowing for better navigation around sensitive structures and reduced patient discomfort.
  • Sensors embedded in bevel-tip needles provide real-time feedback on needle shape, enhancing the accuracy of needle placements during procedures without direct visualization.
  • The study compares single-core and multicore fiber-based shape-sensing in needles, finding both perform similarly in phantom tissue, but the single-core fiber significantly outperforms in real tissue, suggesting avenues for future research and optimization in sensorized needles.

Article Abstract

Flexible needle insertion procedures are common in minimally-invasive surgeries for diagnosing and treating prostate cancer. Bevel-tip needles provide physicians the capability to steer the needle during long insertions to avoid vital anatomical structures in the patient and reduce post-operative patient discomfort. To provide needle placement feedback to the physician, sensors are embedded into needles for determining the real-time 3D shape of the needle during operation without needing to visualize the needle intra-operatively. Through expansive research in fiber optics, a plethora of bio-compatible, MRI-compatible, optical shape-sensors have been developed to provide real-time shape feedback, such as single-core and multicore fiber Bragg gratings. In this paper, we directly compare single-core fiber-based and multicore fiber-based needle shape-sensing through similarly constructed, four-active area sensorized bevel-tip needles inserted into phantom and tissue on the same experimental platform. In this work, we found that for shape-sensing in phantom tissue, the two needles performed identically with a -value of 0.164 > 0.05, but in real tissue, the single-core fiber sensorized needle significantly outperformed the multicore fiber configuration with a -value of 0.0005 < 0.05. This paper also presents the experimental platform and method for directly comparing these optical shape sensors for the needle shape-sensing task, as well as provides direction, insight and required considerations for future work in constructively optimizing sensorized needles.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11212684PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s2424905x23500046DOI Listing

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