Autonomously Navigating a Surgical Tool Inside the Eye by Learning from Demonstration
Ji Woong Kim, Changyan He, Muller Urias, Peter Gehlbach, Gregory D., Hager, Iulian Iordachita, Marin Kobilarov

TL;DR
This paper presents a deep learning approach to automate the navigation of a surgical tool inside the eye, trained on expert demonstrations, achieving high accuracy and robustness in simulation and physical experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a novel deep learning system that learns from expert demonstrations to autonomously navigate surgical tools in retinal surgery.
Findings
Achieves 137 microns accuracy in physical experiments.
Generalizes well to unseen conditions and auxiliary tools.
Performs reliably in both simulation and real-world tests.
Abstract
A fundamental challenge in retinal surgery is safely navigating a surgical tool to a desired goal position on the retinal surface while avoiding damage to surrounding tissues, a procedure that typically requires tens-of-microns accuracy. In practice, the surgeon relies on depth-estimation skills to localize the tool-tip with respect to the retina in order to perform the tool-navigation task, which can be prone to human error. To alleviate such uncertainty, prior work has introduced ways to assist the surgeon by estimating the tool-tip distance to the retina and providing haptic or auditory feedback. However, automating the tool-navigation task itself remains unsolved and largely unexplored. Such a capability, if reliably automated, could serve as a building block to streamline complex procedures and reduce the chance for tissue damage. Towards this end, we propose to automate the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRetinal and Macular Surgery · Optical Coherence Tomography Applications · Intraocular Surgery and Lenses
