Mapping Surgeons Hand/Finger Movements to Surgical Tool Motion During Conventional Microsurgery Using Machine Learning

Purpose: Recent developments in robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) have led to significant advances in healthcare technologies enhancing robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery (RAMIS) in some surgical specialties. However, current human–robot interfaces lack intuitive teleoperation and cannot mimic surgeon’s hand/finger sensing required for fine motion micro-surgeries. These limitations make teleoperated robotic surgery not less suitable for, e.g. cardiac surgery and it can be difficult to learn for established surgeons. We report a pilot study showing an intuitive way of recording and mapping surgeon’s gross hand motion and the fine synergic motion during cardiac micro-surgery as a way to enhance future intuitive teleoperation. Methods: We set to develop a prototype system able to train a Deep Neural Network (DNN) by mapping wrist, hand and surgical tool real-time data acquisition (RTDA) inputs during mock-up heart micro-surgery procedures. The trained network was used to estimate the tools poses from refined hand joint angles. Outputs of the network were surgical tool orientation and jaw angle acquired by an optical motion capture system. Results: Based on surgeon’s feedback during mock micro-surgery, the developed wearable system with light-weight sensors for motion tracking did not interfere with the surgery and instrument handling. The wearable motion tracking system used 12 finger/thumb/wrist joint angle sensors to generate meaningful datasets representing inputs of the DNN network with new hand joint angles added as necessary based on comparing the estimated tool poses against measured tool pose. The DNN architecture was optimized for the highest estimation accuracy and the ability to determine the tool pose with the least mean squared error. This novel approach showed that the surgical instrument’s pose, an essential requirement for teleoperation, can be accurately estimated from recorded surgeon’s hand/finger movements with a mean squared error (MSE) less than 0.3%. Conclusion: We have developed a system to capture fine movements of the surgeon’s hand during micro-surgery that could enhance future remote teleoperation of similar surgical tools during micro-surgery. More work is needed to refine this approach and confirm its potential role in teleoperation.