Development and Testing of a Durable and Novel Breast Phantom for Robotic Autonomous Ultrasound Systems

Author:

Rigby Oca Siobhan1ORCID,Strong Amy1,Havas Jiselle1,Buckland Daniel M.12,Bridgeman Leila J.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, Duke University, 305 Teer Engineering Building, Durham, North Carolina 27708, USA

2. Department of Emergency Medicine, Duke University, 2301 Erwin Road, Durham, North Carolina 27708, USA

Abstract

For the safe and effective development of evolving autonomous medical robotic systems that traverse the surface of the body, like in breast ultrasound scans, developing phantoms that are durable and mechanically mimic human tissue is critical. In this work, a long lasting, inexpensive, and geometrically customizable phantom is described with mechanical and ultrasound acoustic properties that simulate human breast tissue. In comparison to prior work, a priority was designing a highly elastic phantom outer layer modulus  20 kPa and inner semi-liquid layer to mimic the difficulties of traversing human breast tissue with autonomous medical robotic systems. In addition, ultrasound images of the novel phantom with enclosed tumor are similar to in vivo image of human breast tissue with invasive ductal carcinoma, representing 80% of breast cancer cases. The performance of a force feedback controller on an autonomous ultrasound scanning system was compared for the novel phantom and a commercial phantom. Overall, the controller performed worse on the novel phantom — highlighting the importance of testing autonomous systems on realistic phantoms.

Publisher

World Scientific Pub Co Pte Ltd

Subject

Applied Mathematics,Artificial Intelligence,Computer Science Applications,Human-Computer Interaction,Biomedical Engineering

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Brain-Mimicking Phantom for Photoablation and Visualization;2023 International Symposium on Medical Robotics (ISMR);2023-04-19

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