Publication | Closed Access
Evaluation of Unmanned Airborne Vehicles and Mobile Robotic Telesurgery in an Extreme Environment
76
Citations
10
References
2008
Year
Robotic SystemsEngineeringRemote OperationTeleoperationField RoboticsSurgeryUnmanned VehicleRaven RobotUnmanned SystemUnmanned Ground VehicleSystems EngineeringKinematicsTelehealthUnmanned Aerial VehiclesUnmanned Airborne VehiclesWireless TelemedicineUnmanned Extraction VehiclesMedicineWireless NetworkingMedical RobotAerial RoboticsMobile Robotic TelesurgeryAerospace EngineeringRobotic SurgeryWireless NetworksRoboticsAir Vehicle System
As unmanned extraction vehicles become a reality in the military theater, opportunities to augment medical operations with telesurgical robotics become more plausible. This project demonstrated an experimental surgical robot using an unmanned airborne vehicle (UAV) as a network topology. Because battlefield operations are dynamic and geographically challenging, the installation of wireless networks is not a feasible option at this point. However, to utilize telesurgical robotics to assist in the urgent medical care of wounded soldiers, a robust, high bandwidth, low latency network is requisite. For the first time, a mobile surgical robotic system was deployed to an austere environment and surgeons were able to remotely operate the systems wirelessly using a UAV. Two University of Cincinnati surgeons were able to remotely drive the University of Washington's RAVEN robot's end effectors. The network topology demonstrated a highly portable, quickly deployable, bandwidth-sufficient and low latency wireless network required for battlefield use.
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