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Influence of network latency and bandwidth on robot-assisted laparoscopic telesurgery: A pre-clinical experiment. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Telesurgery has the potential to allow surgeons to operate at a distance, but the effects of network latency and bandwidth on surgical success were not fully understood prior to this study.
  • - A new telesurgery system was tested over a distance of 3000 km for 108 animal operations, focusing on how variations in latency (170-320 ms) and bandwidth (15-20 Mbps to <1 Mbps) influenced surgical outcomes, workload, and surgeons' perception.
  • - Results showed that despite low bandwidth and increased latency, all surgeries were successful. Latency was found to have a greater impact on performance than bandwidth, and adjusting image quality can help manage latency challenges in telesurgery.

Article Abstract

Background: Telesurgery has the potential to overcome spatial limitations for surgeons, which depends on surgical robot and the quality of network communication. However, the influence of network latency and bandwidth on telesurgery is not well understood.

Methods: A telesurgery system capable of dynamically adjusting image compression ratios in response to bandwidth changes was established between Beijing and Sanya (Hainan province), covering a distance of 3000 km. In total, 108 animal operations, including 12 surgical procedures, were performed. Total latency ranging from 170 ms to 320 ms and bandwidth from 15-20 Mbps to less than 1 Mbps were explored using designed surgical tasks and hemostasis models for renal vein and internal iliac artery rupture bleeding. Network latency, jitter, frame loss, and bit rate code were systemically measured during these operations. National Aeronautics and Space Administration Task Load Index (NASA-TLX) and a self-designed scale measured the workload and subjective perception of surgeons.

Results: All 108 animal telesurgeries, conducted from January 2023 to June 2023, were performed effectively over a total duration of 3866 min. The operations were completed with latency up to 320 ms and bandwidths as low as 1-5 Mbps. Hemostasis for vein and artery rupture bleeding models was effectively achieved under these low bandwidth conditions. The NASA-TLX results indicated that latency significantly impacted surgical performance more than bandwidth and image clarity reductions.

Conclusions: This telesurgery system demonstrated safety and reliability. A total of 320 ms latency is acceptable for telesurgery operations. Reducing image clarity can effectively mitigate the potential latency increase caused by decreased bandwidth, offering a new method to reduce the impact of latency on telesurgery.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/CM9.0000000000003257DOI Listing

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