Autonomous Robotic Surgery: Science Fiction or Reality? - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University
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RI Seminar

November

15
Fri
Axel Krieger Associate Professor Department of Mechanical Engineering, Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering
Friday, November 15
2:30 pm to 3:30 pm
1403 Tepper School Building
Autonomous Robotic Surgery: Science Fiction or Reality?

Abstract: 

Robotic assisted surgery (RAS) systems incorporate highly dexterous tools, hand tremor filtering, and motion scaling to enable a minimally invasive surgical approach, reducing collateral damage and patient recovery times. However, current state-of-the-art telerobotic surgery requires a surgeon operating every motion of the robot, resulting in long procedure times and inconsistent results. The advantages of autonomous robotic functionality have been demonstrated in applications outside of medicine, such as manufacturing and aviation. A limited form of autonomous RAS with pre-planned functionality was introduced in orthopedic procedures, radiotherapy, and cochlear implants. Efforts in automating soft tissue surgeries have been limited so far to elemental tasks such as knot tying, needle insertion, and executing predefined motions. The fundamental problems in soft tissue surgery include unpredictable shape changes, tissue deformations, and perception challenges.

My research goal is to transform current manual and teleoperated robotic soft tissue surgery to autonomous robotic surgery, improving patient outcomes by reducing the reliance on the operating surgeon, eliminating human errors, and increasing precision and speed. This presentation will discuss our novel strategies to overcome the challenges encountered in soft tissue autonomous surgery. Presentation topics will include a robotic system for supervised autonomous laparoscopic anastomosis, ultra-minimally magnetic surgery, and end-to-end imitation learning of surgical tasks and procedures. 

 

Bio: 

Axel Krieger, PhD, joined the Johns Hopkins University in the Department of Mechanical Engineering in July 2020. He is leading a team of students, scientists, and engineers in the research and development of robotic systems for surgery and interventions. Projects include the development of a surgical robot called smart tissue autonomous robot (STAR) and the use of 3D printing for surgical planning and patient specific implants. Professor Krieger is a recipient of the NSF CAREER award and an inventor of over thirty patents and patent applications. Licensees of his patents include medical device start-ups Activ Surgical and PeriCor as well as industry leaders such as Siemens, Philips, and Intuitive Surgical. Before joining the Johns Hopkins University, Professor Axel Krieger was Assistant Professor in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Maryland and Assistant Research Professor and Program Lead for Smart Tools at the Sheikh Zayed Institute for Pediatric Surgical Innovation at Children’s National. He has several years of experience in private industry at Sentinelle Medical Inc and Hologic Inc. His role within these organizations was Product Leader developing devices and software systems from concept to FDA approval and market introduction. Dr. Krieger completed his undergraduate and master’s degrees at the University of Karlsruhe in Germany and his doctorate at Johns Hopkins, where he pioneered an MRI guided prostate biopsy robot used in over 50 patient procedures at three hospitals.