Computer-Assisted and Robot-Assisted Technologies to Improve Bone-Cutting Accuracy When Integrated with a Freehand Process Using an Oscillating Saw - LIRMM - Laboratoire d’Informatique, de Robotique et de Microélectronique de Montpellier Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery Année : 2010

Computer-Assisted and Robot-Assisted Technologies to Improve Bone-Cutting Accuracy When Integrated with a Freehand Process Using an Oscillating Saw

Résumé

Background: In orthopaedic surgery, many interventions involve freehand bone cutting with an oscillating saw. Such freehand procedures can produce large cutting errors due to the complex hand-controlled positioning of the surgical tool. This study was performed to investigate the potential improvements in cutting accuracy when computer-assisted and robot-assisted technologies are applied to a freehand bone-cutting process when no jigs are available. Methods: We designed an experiment based on a geometrical model of the cutting process with use of a simulated bone of rectangular geometry. The target planes were defined by three variables: a cut height (t) and two orientation angles (β and γ). A series of 156 cuts were performed by six operators employing three technologically different procedures: freehand, navigated freehand, and robot-assisted cutting. After cutting, we measured the error in the height t, the absolute error in the angles β and γ, the flatness, and the location of the cut plane with respect to the target plane. Results: The location of the cut plane averaged 2.8 mm after use of the navigated freehand process compared with 5.2 mm after use of the freehand process (p < 0.0001). Further improvements were obtained with use of the robot-assisted process, which provided an average location of 1.7 mm (p < 0.0001). Conclusions: Significant improvements in cutting accuracy can be achieved when a navigation system or an industrial robot is integrated into a freehand bone-cutting process when no jigs are available. The procedure for navigated hand-controlled positioning of the oscillating saw appears to be easy to learn and use. Clinical Relevance: These findings support a recommendation for further study to determine if the improvements in cutting accuracy observed in vitro are possible in vivo.
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Dates et versions

lirmm-00519500 , version 1 (30-09-2022)

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Olivier Cartiaux, Laurent Paul, Pierre-Louis Docquier, Benoit Raucent, Etienne Dombre, et al.. Computer-Assisted and Robot-Assisted Technologies to Improve Bone-Cutting Accuracy When Integrated with a Freehand Process Using an Oscillating Saw. The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery, 2010, 92 (11), pp.2076-2082. ⟨10.2106/JBJS.I.00457⟩. ⟨lirmm-00519500⟩
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