PRE2020 1 Group1

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Group members

Name Student ID Department
Eline 1338447 Biomedical Engineering
Davide 1255401 Electrical Engineering
Lieke Nijhuis 0943276 Innovation Sciences
Ikira Wortel 1334336
Wout Opdam 1241084 Mechanical Engineering

Task division plan 1st week (temporary)

Problem statement and objectives --> Lieke

Who are the users? --> Ikira

What do they require? --> Wout

Approach, milestones and deliverables --> Eline

Who’s doing what? --> Eline

SotA: literature study, at least 25 relevant scientific papers and/or patents studied, summary on the wiki! --> Everyone 5 articles. Combining everything --> Davide


Problem statement and objectives

Users

In this section the users and there needs are identified.

Who are the users

User

Society

Enterprise

What are the users needs

User

Society

Enterprise

The project

Approach

Milestones

Deliverables

Planning

State of the art

Can robots handle your healthcare? By Nicola Davies. Summarized by Wout.[1]

The demand for healthcare robots will rise due to an ageing population and a shortage of carers. Japan is a leading country in the field of healthcare robots. They develop their robots in close coordination with elderly and patients.

Safety is an important aspect for healthcare robots. They must be absolutely fool proof. In order to safely operate around humans, robots need to feature things like quick reflexes, communication capabilities and interaction capabilities via video and audio. This translates into a wide range of sensors, cameras and actuators the robot needs to have. Next to a robot’s features, their looks are also important. Robots that try to impersonate actual humans, but still show imperfections, can make users uneasy.

An area in which robots can do a better job than humans is being consistent in the quality of the care that is provided. After a long difficult shift, humans can be prone to errors while robots are not affected by exhaustion or other emotions.

For simple routine healthcare tasks, robots can be a good solution.


How medical robots will change healthcare By Peter B. Nichol. Summarized by Wout.[2]

A possible major field in future healthcare is medical nanotechnology, and more specific nanorobots. These robots will work inside the patient at cellular level. The most important stakeholders in robotic healthcare are not the people that develop the technology, but the people that will use it.

There are three main ways in which robotics can be deployed in healthcare: Direct patient care (e.g. robots used in surgeries), Indirect patient care (e.g. robots delivering medicine), Home healthcare (e.g. robots that keep the elderly company).


Acceptance of Healthcare Robots for the Older Population: Review and Future Directions by E. Broadbent, R. Stafford, B. MacDonald. Summarized by Wout.[3]

It is projected that the proportion of people older than the age of 60 will double between 2000 and 2050. This increases the need for healthcare. Alongside this there is also a shortage of people working in the healthcare industry. In western countries, most of the older people want to remain living independently in their own homes for as long as possible. To facilitate this, smart solutions need to be found, for example healthcare robots.

Of great importance is the acceptance of healthcare robots by the people in need of care. There are three requirements for acceptance of a robot to occur: motivation for using the robot, sufficient user-friendliness and a feeling of comfort with the robot.

Healthcare robots need to be able to adapt to individual differences since not all patients are equal.

Basic healthcare robots have been developed which can assist with simple tasks like: assist in walking, reminding of doctors appointments, carry objects, lift patients, providing companionship. Mitsubishi sold the first commercially available mobile robot in 2005. This robot is designed to help in the home.

The older the age, the less willing people are to use robots. Older people are more fearful of new technology. However, they are more willing to accept assistive devices if this helps them maintain their independence.

Studies have shown that people prefer robots that do not have a human-like appearance. For companionship robots an animal-like appearance is preferred. Other examples of desired characteristics of a robot for the elderly are slow moving, safe, reliable, small and easy to use. Older people also appreciate having some form of control over the robot because this reinforces their sense of independence.


Medical Robots: Current Systems and Research Directions by Ryan A. Beasley. Summarized by Wout.[4]

An example of a great success in medical robotics is the surgical robot da Vinci. The biggest impact of medical robots has been improving surgeries that require great precision.

Medical robots can be employed during brain surgeries. By using medical images (e.g. CT-scan) a robotic arm can orient the tools in the correct direction, or the surgeon can specify a target which the robot guides the instrument towards with submillimetre accuracy. Medical robots are also used to assist in spine surgery.

Another application field of medical robots is orthopaedics (e.g. hip or knee replacement). An example of such a robot is Robodoc, which is used for milling automatically according to a surgical plan. Other devices, like the RIO, are designed such that the robot and the surgeon hold the tool simultaneously. The RIO ensures that the surgeon makes the correct movements.

There also exist devices which are controlled by the surgeon (technically not robots). The surgeon uses joysticks to manipulate the tools with great precision. An example of such machines are the Zeus and the da Vinci. These systems filter out hand tremors and enable the surgeon and patient to not be at the same location.

InnoMotion is a robot arm which can accurately guide a needle using CT or MRI imaging.

Robots exist that can help a surgeon guide a tube through a patient’s blood vessel. The surgeon can steer the tube and force feedback sensors tell the surgeon how much pressure is being applied.

Robotic arms are also used in radiosurgery, in which a specific area inside the patient is targeted with beams of ionizing radiation from multiple angles.

Robots are also used to perform CPR. A band is placed around the patient’s chest which is pulled tight by an actuator to compress the chest. The tightness of the band is adjusted based on the patient’s chest size.

Microprocessor-controlled prosthetics are prosthetics in which the patient is assisted in the movement or are controlled by the patient to perform movements which have been lost (e.g. exoskeletons).

Another area of medical robots consists of assistive and rehabilitation systems. These include things like a controllable arm holding a spoon or a grasper which can be attached to a wheelchair.

In the future, medical robots will become smaller and cheaper. More functionality will be added. Also, robots will be used more for medical training. Medical robots need to provide solutions to real problems, otherwise there is a change that they are displaced by other medical advancements.


Medical robots go soft by Eliza Strickland. Summarized by Wout.[5]

New kinds of medical robots are being developed of which the parts that touch the patient are soft. This is to prevent damage to organs and blood vessels and makes sure the human body does not surround the object with scar tissue which can diminish its effectiveness.

An example of a soft medical robot is a sleeve that surrounds the hart. This sleeve contains rings which can be pneumatically inflated to detect and force a heartbeat in a certain tempo.

Another example is a device which can be implemented in the body to give of small dosages of a drug. This device is made of a soft gel with a mechanism inside which can be activated from outside the body.

A final example is a soft gripper-hand made of hydrogel. The hand can be actuated by forcing water into the hand. This hand can be placed on a robotic arm and used for grabbing organs inside the human body without damaging them.


Robots in Health and Social Care: A Complementary Technology to Home Care and Telehealthcare? By T. Dahl, M. Kamel Boulos. Summarized by Lieke.[6]

This article discusses several specific robotics applications.The robots that were considered were classified in 9 categories: Surgery robots, Robots supporting Human-Robot interaction tasks, Robots providing logistics in care home environments, Telepresence and companion robots, Humanoid robots for entertaining and educating children with special needs, Robots as motivational coaches, Home assistance robots for an ageing society, Human-Robot relationships in medical care and society, and Human- Robot relationships in medical and care situations. Between these categories, there are a few ingredients for success that can be found. The general ingredients for success include: Adequate level of personalization, Appropriate safety levels, Proper object manipulation and navigation in unstructured environments, Patient/user safety, Reliability and robustness and Sustainability. In addition, robots that serve motivational or social purposes also need to be personable, intelligent and highly interactive. However, there are also some concerns with using robots extensively. For example, humanoid robots need to have a set-up etiquette, like following the eyes of a talking person. What also needs to be kept in mind, especially using social robots with elderly people, is that the extensive use of robots could lead to a potential reduction of human contact, social isolation, an increasing feeling of objectification and a loss of privacy. Furthermore, cost effectiveness plays a great deal in the practical use of robots.


Autonomous Robots Are Helping Kill Coronavirus in Hospitals By E Ackerman. Summarized by Lieke.[7]

UVD Robots is making robots that are mobile arrays of powerful UVC lights that kill microorganisms. UV lights on carts are used to disinfect areas for some time, but they are dangerous for human skin and when they are operated by humans it is prone to human error and it might skip a few places. This newly developed product is able to autonomously disinfect a room between 10 and 15 minutes, with the robot spending 1 or 2 minutes in five or six different positions to maximize the surface it disinfects.


Multimedia Companion for Patients in Minimally Conscious State (MCS)

Main articles

First discovery using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) and PET.

===The Aware Mind in the Motionless Body (M. M. Monti, A. M. Owen, 2010)[8] & Detecting Awareness in the Vegetative State (A. Owen, 2006)[9]===

Case Study: Martha

Martha, a young woman of not even 30 years old is victim of a car accident. She survives the accident and slips into coma; her eyes are closed, her body is motionless and unable to breath autonomously. After a week her eyes open, her body is able to breathe again autonomously and even makes small movements. For example, she yawns, she stretches her arms and slightly moves her body in her bed. It seems she is even able to sleep and wake up.

Vegetative State, Comatose state, and sleep

When a patient in a comatose state is able to sleep and wake up again, she/he is said to be in the Vegetative State (VS). A patient in a vegetative state might have his/her eyes open, can breathe autonomously, can move his/her body, can produce urine, and can vocalize sounds. The big question, are patients in vegetative state conscious? Consciousness is made of wakefulness and awareness. A healthy person is both awake and aware, when not asleep. A comatose patient is neither awake nor aware. While a patient in vegetative state is awake, but is not aware. Now around 40% of patients diagnosed in the vegetative state seem to be aware. Therefore, these misdiagnosed patients are said to be in a Minimally Conscious State (MCS). Often while diagnosing patients the “Lack of evidence of consciousness is, in this situation, equated to evidence of lack of consciousness” (Monti, Owen, 2008)(i.e. False Negative). To distinguish patients in MCS from VS one of three factors must be met:

• Awareness of the environment

• Sustained, reproducible, purposeful or voluntary response to visual or tactile stimuli

• Language comprehension and/or expression

Novel neuroimaging techniques are used to detect markers of consciousness, such as Positron Emission Tomography (PET) and functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI).

Experiment 1: brain response in VS patients to speech

Two patients in VS showed brain activities similar to healthy volunteers in response to speech and picture of faces. The two patients in VS listened to simple and complex (semantically ambiguous) sentences. The complex sentences activated, in the VS patients, the same brain area as in healthy volunteers. Furthermore, similar experiments were conducted with healthy volunteers heavily sedated. In the heavily sedated volunteers, no activation of the same area was recorded. This shows a higher level of awareness (some language comprehension) in the VS patients than the sedated volunteers. Nevertheless, simple brain responses cannot be taken as a factors of awareness nor consciousness. Much of sensory processing is automatic. Such as lines depicting a face or speech of a familiar language. Therefore, the type of stimuli and the type of brain activity recorded must be attentively chosen.

Experiment 2: voluntary modulation of brain activity in VS patient

A young woman victim of a car accident slips into coma, then wakes up again, but is diagnosed in the Vegetative State. The patient was given spoken instruction. The first instruction was to imagine playing tennis. The second, to imagine walking in her own apartment. When the patient was instructed to imagine playing tennis intense activity in the motor area of the brain was recorded. While when she was asked to imagine walking in her apartment activity in the parahippocampal gyrus (memory retrieval), posterior parietal cortex (spatial reasoning) and some motor areas. Healthy control volunteers, given the same instructions, reproduce the same brain activity of the VS patient. Unless the volunteers did not understand the instructions or decided to not comply with them. Therefore, in this experiment the idea of an automatic brain response is discredited.

Workload

An overview of who has done what.


Week 1

Name Student ID Hours this week Tasks
Eline 1338447 intro video's + first brainstorm (1.5 hours)
Davide 1255401
Lieke Nijhuis 0943276 Intro videos + first brainstorm (1.5 hours) + Studied and wrote summaries for papers: [6], [7] (2 hours)
Ikira Wortel 1334336 Intro videos + first brainstorm (1.5 hours)
Wout Opdam 1241084 Intro videos + first brainstorm (1.5 hours) + Start with wiki layout (1 hour) + Studied and wrote summaries for papers: [1], [2], [3],[4] and [5] (5 hours)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Can robots handle you heatlhcare?. Nicola Davies (2016, December 15). Engineering & Technology Volume 11, Issue 9, P 58-61. Retrieved August 31, 2020.
  2. 2.0 2.1 How medical robots will change healthcare. Peter B. Nichol (2016, March 23). CIO, Framingham. Retrieved August 31, 2020.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Acceptance of Healthcare Robots for the Older Population: Review and Future Directions. E. Broadbent, R. Stafford, B. MacDonald (2009, October 3). International Journal of Social Robotics (2009) 1: 319–330. Retrieved August 31, 2020.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Medical Robots: Current Systems and Research Directions. Ryan A. Beasley (2012, July 6). Journal of Robotics Volume 2012, Retrieved August 31, 2020.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Medical robots go soft. Eliza Strickland (2017, April). IEEE Spectrum, volume 54, issue 4 (2017) Retrieved August 31, 2020.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Robots in Health and Social Care: A Complementary Technology to Home Care and Telehealthcare?. Torbjorn S. Dahl and Maged N. Kamel Boulos (2013, November 1). Robotics (3.1), Retrieved September 1, 2020
  7. 7.0 7.1 Autonomous Robots Are Helping Kill Coronavirus in Hospitals. E Ackerman (2020). IEEE Spectrum, Retrieved September 1, 2020.
  8. [1]: Monti, M. M., & Owen, A. M. (2010). The aware mind in the motionless body. Psychologist, 23(6), 478–481.
  9. [2]: Owen, A. M., Coleman, M. R., Boly, M., Davis, M. H., Laureys, S., & Pickard, J. D. (2006). Detecting Awareness in the Vegetative State. Science, 313(5792), 1402 LP – 1402. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1130197