Usefulness of three‐dimensional imaging in a flexible endoscopic surgery platform with multi‐degrees‐of‐freedom articulating devices

Author:

Yokoyama Kosuke1ORCID,Nakadate Ryu1,Takao Toshitatsu12,Motomura Douglas3,Muragaki Yoshihiro1,Yokokohji Yasuyoshi4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Device Engineering, Graduate School of Medicine Kobe University Kobe Japan

2. Department of Gastroenterology, Graduate School of Medicine Kobe University Kobe Japan

3. Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine University of British Columbia Vancouver Canada

4. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering Kobe University Kobe Japan

Abstract

AbstractBackground and AimsRecent studies on endoscopic submucosal dissection have aimed to reduce the difficulty of the procedure by using multi‐degrees‐of‐freedom articulating devices. In this study, we evaluated the usefulness of adding three‐dimensional (3D) video imaging into simulated endoscopic submucosal dissection tasks using multi‐degrees‐of‐freedom devices.MethodsWe designed an endoscopic platform with a 3D camera and two multi‐degrees‐of‐freedom devices. Four ex vivo bench tasks were created, and a crossover study comparing 2D and 3D conditions was conducted on 15 volunteers. In each task, performance such as procedure time and accuracy were objectively evaluated. Additionally, a comprehensive visual analogue scale questionnaire was conducted.ResultsIn the tasks simulating submucosal flap grasping, marking, and full‐area incision, the use of 3D imaging significantly improved the speed and accuracy of the multi‐degrees‐of‐freedom device manipulation (p < .01). No significant differences were observed in the task that simulated the dissection procedure. Furthermore, it appears that the accuracy of recognizing curved surfaces may be reduced in the 3D environment. Operators reported subjective increases in recognizability and operability with the 3D camera, along with an increase in asthenopia (p < .01).Conclusions3D vision improves the technical accuracy of certain simulated multi‐degrees‐of‐freedom endoscopic submucosal dissection tasks and subjectively improved operating conditions, at the cost of increased eye strain.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

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