• Technol Health Care · Jan 2009

    3D visualized robot assisted reduction of femoral shaft fractures: evaluation in exposed cadaveric bones.

    • Markus Oszwald, Ralf Westphal, Jan Bredow, Ralph Gaulke, P F O'Loughlin, Tobias Huefner, Friedrich Wahl, Christian Krettek, and Thomas Goesling.
    • Department of Trauma Surgery, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany. m.oszwald@web.de
    • Technol Health Care. 2009 Jan 1;17(4):337-43.

    AbstractThe main problems in intra-medullary nailing of femoral shaft-fractures are leg-length discrepancies and rotational differences with an incidence of 2-18% and 20-40% respectively. These may lead to severe postoperative sequelae such as additional correctional operations and difficult rehabilitation. Insufficient visualization can be considered the main reason for these complications. Finally, retention of the fragments in the correct alignment before nail insertion is difficult. To overcome these problems we established a robotic telemanipulator system to support the reduction process. It was evaluated in 30 fractures of embalmed human femora. Specially programmed software used an image-dataset which was acquired by an isocentric 3D fluoroscope. For visualization, a surface projection was generated. Localization and tracking of the fragments and the robot-arm as well as accuracy measurement was performed by using an optical navigation system. Manipulation was controlled via a force-feedback joystick. This way, collisions of the fragments were transmitted back to the surgeon. At the end of the reduction the robot could rigidly retain the fragments' position.

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