The Surgical Assistant Workstation (SAW) in Minimally-Invasive Surgery and Microsurgery

Peter Kazanzides1*,Simon DiMaio,Anton Deguet,Balazs Vagvolgyi,Marcin Balicki,Caitlin Schneider,Rajesh Kumar,Amod Jog,Brandon Itkowitz,Christopher Hasser,Russell Taylor
1.Johns Hopkins University
Abstract

Abstract

The Surgical Assistant Workstation (SAW) provides a modular, open-source software framework to support rapid prototyping of computer-assisted surgery systems, especially those that benefit from enhanced 3D visualization and user interaction. The framework includes a library of components that can be used to implement master-slave or collaborative robot control systems with support for complex video pipelines and a novel interactive surgical visualization environment. SAW includes standardized interface definitions (e.g., command names and payloads), with the goal of making the framework easily extensible so that developers can add support for their own robotic devices and associated hardware platforms. This paper presents an overview of the component-based architecture, followed by applications (use cases) in the areas of minimally-invasive surgery (MIS), microsurgery, and surgical skill assessment.

Keywords

open source softwarecomponent-based softwarecomputer assisted surgerycomputer assisted interventions
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Source Code and Data

Source Code and Data

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