Control Architecture and experimental validation of a Novel Surgical Robotic Instrument
Doina Pisla, Ionut Zima, Calin Vaida, Andrei Cailean, Marius Miclaus, Adrian Pisla, Andrei Caprariu, Vasile Bulbucan, Bogdan Gherman, Damien Chablat
- Year
- 2026
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Minimally invasive surgery (MIS) reduces patient trauma and shortens recovery time; however, conventional laparoscopic instruments remain constrained by limited range of movements. This work presents the control architecture of a 4-DOF flexible laparoscopic instrument integrating distal bending, independent distal head rotation, shaft rotation, and a gripper, while maintaining a 10 mm diameter compatible with standard trocars. The actuation unit and SpaceMouse teleoperation are implemented on Raspberry Pi 5 with Motoron controllers. An analytical scissor-linkage model is derived and parameterized. The predicted jaw opening corresponds to CAD measurements (MAE 0.13{\textdegree}) and OptiTrack motion capture (MAE 1.43{\textdegree}). Integration with the ATHENA parallel robot is validated through a simulated pancreatic surgery procedure.
Keywords
Related papers
Campbell-Walsh urology
Alan J. Wein editor-in-chief
2012
Principles of Robot Motion: Theory, Algorithms, and Implementations
Howie Choset, Jean‐Claude Latombe
2005
Minimally Invasive versus Abdominal Radical Hysterectomy for Cervical Cancer
Pedro T. Ramírez, Michael Frumovitz, René Pareja +16 more
2018
Guideline for Management of the Clinical T1 Renal Mass
Steven C. Campbell, Andrew C. Novick, Arie S. Belldegrun +9 more
2009