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Optical Fiber-Based Needle Shape Sensing in Real Tissue: Single Core vs. Multicore Approaches

Flexible needle insertion procedures are common for minimally-invasive surgeries for diagnosing and treating prostate cancer. Bevel-tip needles provide physicians the capability to steer the needle during long insertions to avoid vital anatomical structures in the patient and reduce post-operative p...

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Autores principales: Lezcano, Dimitri A., Zhetpissov, Yernar, Cheng, Alexandra, Kim, Jin Seob, Iordachita, Iulian I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cornell University 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10508835/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37731661
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author Lezcano, Dimitri A.
Zhetpissov, Yernar
Cheng, Alexandra
Kim, Jin Seob
Iordachita, Iulian I.
author_facet Lezcano, Dimitri A.
Zhetpissov, Yernar
Cheng, Alexandra
Kim, Jin Seob
Iordachita, Iulian I.
author_sort Lezcano, Dimitri A.
collection PubMed
description Flexible needle insertion procedures are common for minimally-invasive surgeries for diagnosing and treating prostate cancer. Bevel-tip needles provide physicians the capability to steer the needle during long insertions to avoid vital anatomical structures in the patient and reduce post-operative patient discomfort. To provide needle placement feedback to the physician, sensors are embedded into needles for determining the real-time 3D shape of the needle during operation without needing to visualize the needle intra-operatively. Through expansive research in fiber optics, a plethora of bio-compatible, MRI-compatible, optical shape-sensors have been developed to provide real-time shape feedback, such as single-core and multicore fiber Bragg gratings. In this paper, we directly compare single-core fiber-based and multicore fiber-based needle shape-sensing through identically constructed, four-active area sensorized bevel-tip needles inserted into phantom and ex-vivo tissue on the same experimental platform. In this work, we found that for shape-sensing in phantom tissue, the two needles performed identically with a [Formula: see text]-value of 0.164 > 0.05, but in ex-vivo real tissue, the single-core fiber sensorized needle significantly outperformed the multicore fiber configuration with a [Formula: see text]-value of 0.0005 < 0.05. This paper also presents the experimental platform and method for directly comparing these optical shape sensors for the needle shape-sensing task, as well as provides direction, insight and required considerations for future work in constructively optimizing sensorized needles.
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spelling pubmed-105088352023-09-20 Optical Fiber-Based Needle Shape Sensing in Real Tissue: Single Core vs. Multicore Approaches Lezcano, Dimitri A. Zhetpissov, Yernar Cheng, Alexandra Kim, Jin Seob Iordachita, Iulian I. ArXiv Article Flexible needle insertion procedures are common for minimally-invasive surgeries for diagnosing and treating prostate cancer. Bevel-tip needles provide physicians the capability to steer the needle during long insertions to avoid vital anatomical structures in the patient and reduce post-operative patient discomfort. To provide needle placement feedback to the physician, sensors are embedded into needles for determining the real-time 3D shape of the needle during operation without needing to visualize the needle intra-operatively. Through expansive research in fiber optics, a plethora of bio-compatible, MRI-compatible, optical shape-sensors have been developed to provide real-time shape feedback, such as single-core and multicore fiber Bragg gratings. In this paper, we directly compare single-core fiber-based and multicore fiber-based needle shape-sensing through identically constructed, four-active area sensorized bevel-tip needles inserted into phantom and ex-vivo tissue on the same experimental platform. In this work, we found that for shape-sensing in phantom tissue, the two needles performed identically with a [Formula: see text]-value of 0.164 > 0.05, but in ex-vivo real tissue, the single-core fiber sensorized needle significantly outperformed the multicore fiber configuration with a [Formula: see text]-value of 0.0005 < 0.05. This paper also presents the experimental platform and method for directly comparing these optical shape sensors for the needle shape-sensing task, as well as provides direction, insight and required considerations for future work in constructively optimizing sensorized needles. Cornell University 2023-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC10508835/ /pubmed/37731661 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) , which allows reusers to copy and distribute the material in any medium or format in unadapted form only, for noncommercial purposes only, and only so long as attribution is given to the creator.
spellingShingle Article
Lezcano, Dimitri A.
Zhetpissov, Yernar
Cheng, Alexandra
Kim, Jin Seob
Iordachita, Iulian I.
Optical Fiber-Based Needle Shape Sensing in Real Tissue: Single Core vs. Multicore Approaches
title Optical Fiber-Based Needle Shape Sensing in Real Tissue: Single Core vs. Multicore Approaches
title_full Optical Fiber-Based Needle Shape Sensing in Real Tissue: Single Core vs. Multicore Approaches
title_fullStr Optical Fiber-Based Needle Shape Sensing in Real Tissue: Single Core vs. Multicore Approaches
title_full_unstemmed Optical Fiber-Based Needle Shape Sensing in Real Tissue: Single Core vs. Multicore Approaches
title_short Optical Fiber-Based Needle Shape Sensing in Real Tissue: Single Core vs. Multicore Approaches
title_sort optical fiber-based needle shape sensing in real tissue: single core vs. multicore approaches
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10508835/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37731661
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