Las Vegas Review-Journal

Device guides itself through heart

Autonomous robot works on pig in study

- By Seth Borenstein and Lauran Neergaard The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Borrowing from the way cockroache­s skitter along walls, scientists have created a robotic device that safely guides itself through the delicate chambers of a pig’s heart as it’s beating.

It is one of the first times researcher­s have shown that a truly autonomous surgical robot can navigate inside the heart, not controlled by a doctor with a joystick, according to a study in Wednesday’s journal Science Robotics.

Heart surgeons routinely push a thin tube called a catheter through twisting and turning blood vessels to make repairs in the heart without open surgery. But how does a robotic version find its own way through moving heart tissue and with blood swishing in the way?

Researcher­s at Boston Children’s Hospital turned the catheter’s camera tip into essentiall­y an “optical whisker,” said cardiac bioenginee­ring chief Pierre Dupont, the lead researcher.

Just as cockroache­s navigate along walls and rats reach out with their whiskers, the catheter maps its path through the heart, tapping periodical­ly against the heart’s valve and wall ever so lightly, Dupont said. The technology combines the camera’s images with machine learning to interpret what tissue it’s touching and how hard.

“This robot is trying to walk along the wall of the heart until it gets to the valve,” Dr. Uma Duvvuri of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, who heads a robotic innovation lab but wasn’t part of Wednesday’s study. “That’s a pretty exciting developmen­t, but this is still very, very preliminar­y.”

The demonstrat­ion technology is still years away from any operating room, and isn’t designed to replace a surgeon, Dupont said. Instead, he said it might free up a surgeon’s time to focus on harder tasks, comparing it to a plane’s autopilot — and also reduce the time patients and medical staff are exposed to X-rays that currently are needed for navigation.

“The easiest part of autonomy in surgery is the technology,” Dupont said. “The hardest parts are the politics, the regulatory” approval and legal efforts.

Dupont’s team tested the robotic catheter in 83 procedures in live pigs in a lab. The device found its target, on average taking seconds longer than a doctor threading a catheter into place. But Dupont said the robotic catheter will learn, just like humans, and get better and faster with more practice.

Russ Taylor, a medical robotics specialist at Johns Hopkins University, called the technology clever and the study “a significan­t achievemen­t, but I wouldn’t flag it as a breakthrou­gh.”

Robots with different levels of autonomy have been used in surgery for radiation therapy and orthopedic­s, said Taylor, who wasn’t part of the research.

 ?? Margherita Mencattell­i The Associated Press ?? The tip of this robotic catheter is equipped with a small camera and lighting encased in silicone. Described in a report released Wednesday, the device guided itself through the chambers of a pig’s heart as it was beating.
Margherita Mencattell­i The Associated Press The tip of this robotic catheter is equipped with a small camera and lighting encased in silicone. Described in a report released Wednesday, the device guided itself through the chambers of a pig’s heart as it was beating.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States