Robot-based tele-echography: clinical evaluation of the TER system in abdominal aortic exploration
Thomas Martinelli (CHU-Grenoble radio), Jean-Luc Bosson (TIMC,, CHU-Grenoble CIC), Luc Bressollette, Franck Pelissier, Eric Boidard (TIMC),, Jocelyne Troccaz (TIMC), Philippe Cinquin (TIMC)

TL;DR
This study evaluates the TER robot-based tele-echography system's effectiveness in remotely diagnosing abdominal aortic aneurysms, demonstrating high accuracy and reliability in clinical settings.
Contribution
It provides clinical evidence supporting the feasibility and reliability of the TER system for remote abdominal ultrasound examinations.
Findings
All aneurysms were correctly detected remotely.
High correlation (0.982) in aortic diameter measurements.
84% concordance in assessing atheromatosis.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The TER system is a robot-based tele-echography system allowing remote ultrasound examination. The specialist moves a mock-up of the ultrasound probe at the master site, and the robot reproduces the movements of the real probe, which sends back ultrasound images and force feedback. This tool could be used to perform ultrasound examinations in small health care centers or from isolated sites. The objective of this study was to prove, under real conditions, the feasibility and reliability of the TER system in detecting abdominal aortic and iliac aneurysms. METHODS: Fifty-eight patients were included in 2 centers in Brest and Grenoble, France. The remote examination was compared with the reference standard, the bedside examination, for aorta and iliac artery diameter measurement, detection and description of aneurysms, detection of atheromatosis, the duration of the examination,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsSoft Robotics and Applications · Aortic aneurysm repair treatments · Surgical Simulation and Training
