This application claims the priority benefit of Korean Patent Application No. 10-2010-0120310, filed on Nov. 30, 2010 in the Korean Intellectual Property Office, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field
Embodiments relate to a method to control medical equipment that is large and heavy.
2. Description of the Related Art
Positioning modes of large and heavy medical equipment are mainly classified into an automatic motorized positioning mode in which motor drive power is used to position the medical equipment to a position input by an operator and a manual positioning mode in which the operator manually positions the medical equipment to a desired position using a handle without using motor drive power.
In the automatic motorized positioning mode, it takes a long time to complete positioning since drive speed is limited in order to secure stability or the like. Thus, most hospitals prefer manual positioning to automatic motorized positioning to improve profitability. However, although manual positioning has a short positioning time compared to automatic motorized positioning, repeated tasks for manual positioning impose heavy burden on the operator since the operator manually moves the heavy equipment.
Therefore, it is an aspect of one or more embodiments to provide a method to control medical equipment wherein, while the medical equipment is passively moved as operated by the operator, the operation intention of the operator is determined using a force sensor, a torque sensor, or the like and motor control is performed taking into consideration the determined operation intention to reduce load (or drive power) of the operator.
It is another aspect of one or more embodiments to provide a method to control medical equipment wherein virtual force similar to magnetic attractive force is applied with respect to frequently used positions of the medical equipment to allow the operator to easily position the equipment to a desired one of the frequently used positions.
It is a further aspect of one or more embodiments to provide a method to control medical equipment wherein virtual force similar to magnetic attractive force is used to allow the operator to easily align different structures or the like.
Additional aspects of one or more embodiments will be set forth in part in the description which follows and, in part, will be apparent from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention.
In accordance with one aspect of one or more embodiments, a method to control medical equipment that moves along at least one axis or performs joint movement includes determining a direction and magnitude of force that an operator applies to the medical equipment to move the medical equipment, and generating auxiliary force having a magnitude proportional to the force applied by the operator and having the same direction as the direction of the force applied by the operator such that the medical equipment is easily moved.
In the method, an impedance filter receives information of the force applied by the operator from a force sensor and generates information of a new position of the medical equipment, and a position controller receives the information of the new position of the medical equipment from the impedance filter and receives position information fed back from the motor and generates position control information of the medical equipment.
In the method, the force sensor is a strain gauge.
In the method, the position controller receives position information fed back from at least one of an encoder and a potentiometer of the motor.
In accordance with another aspect of one or more embodiments, a method to control medical equipment that moves along at least one axis or performs joint movement includes determining a direction and magnitude of force that an operator applies to the medical equipment to move the medical equipment, and generating first auxiliary force having a magnitude proportional to the force applied by the operator and having the same direction as the direction of the force applied by the operator such that the medical equipment is easily moved in the direction of the force applied by the operator and generating, when the medical equipment has approached a preset position, a second auxiliary force having a direction opposite to the direction of the force applied by the operator to stop the medical equipment at the preset position such that the medical equipment is correctly positioned to the preset position.
In the method, an impedance filter receives information of the force applied by the operator from a force sensor and generates information of a new position of the medical equipment, and a position controller receives the information of the new position of the medical equipment from the impedance filter and receives position information fed back from the motor and generates position control information of the medical equipment.
These and/or other aspects of the invention will become apparent and more readily appreciated from the following description of the embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings of which:
Reference will now be made in detail to the embodiments, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to like elements throughout.
As shown in
Control of the medical equipment 100 according to an embodiment is based on admittance control, and position control of the medical equipment 100 is performed in combination with indirect force control.
To accomplish this, first, the operator measures the direction and magnitude of force applied to the handle 106 of the medical equipment 100 using a force sensor of the sensor unit 212. A response of the control system of the medical equipment 100 to the force F applied by the operator is determined using an impedance filter represented by the following Equation 1.
F=MdΔ{umlaut over (x)}+BdΔ{dot over (x)} Equation 1
In Equation 1, F denotes force applied by the operator, measured through the force sensor, and Md and Bd denote the weight and friction of the medical equipment 100 that are actually felt by the operator. The weight Md and the friction Bd may vary and may be adjusted and set within a predetermined stabilized range according to operator convenience. Although a spring force term is added to Equation 1 in the case of a general impedance filter, spring stiffness is set to 0 in the embodiment since the desired position of the medical equipment 100 is constantly changed due to the force F applied by the operator. “Δx” in Equation 1 is a change of the current position due to the force F applied by the operator. Accordingly, a new target position of each time is xc+Δx when an immediately previous target position is xc.
In addition, since the change of the current position (Δx), the second derivative of Δx (Δ{umlaut over (x)}), and the first derivative of Δx (Δ{dot over (x)}) are proportional to the force F applied by the operator, the positioning speed of the medical equipment 100 (i.e., the speed at which the medical equipment 100 reaches a target position) may increase in proportion to the force F. When the operator no longer applies force (i.e., F=0), the medical equipment 100 does not move any further since Δx converges to 0 in Equation 1. Here, the highest acceleration and highest speed of movement of the medical equipment 100 may be limited by setting the highest values of Δ{umlaut over (x)} and Δ{dot over (x)} taking into consideration safety of the medical equipment 100 and the imaging subject such as a patient, a sample, or the like.
The position controller 204 performs position control based on current position information 214 of the motor 210, which has been fed back to the position controller 204, using position information xc+Δx corrected by the impedance filter 202 as a control command.
Specifically, as shown in
As shown in
When a frequently used position, a target position that may need to be reported to the operator, or the like is represented by x*, virtual attractive force Fv generated with respect to the target position x* is represented by the following Equation 2.
In Equation 2, Xv represents a range in which virtual attractive force Fv is applied with respect to the target position x*. As shown in Equation 2, the virtual attractive force Fv is 0 when the current position is more distant from the target position x* than xv, otherwise the virtual attractive force Fv is determined to be a function of
In Equation 2,
and Fm is the maximum of the virtual attractive force Fv.
The guide function (i.e., snap to grid) to position the imaging unit 302 to a desired position is implemented by adding the virtual attractive force Fv calculated from Equation 2 to the force F of Equation 1 and performing control of embodiment of
As shown in
However, when the imaging unit 502 approaches another structure 550 while moving in a direction toward an arrow 512, the speed of the imaging unit 502 is reduced to zero such that the imaging unit 502 does not collide with the structure 550. Collision avoidance and joint limit avoidance during operation of the X-ray imaging apparatus 500 are implemented by calculating the distance between each joint of the X-ray imaging apparatus 500, the distance between each joint of the X-ray imaging apparatus 500 and each structure 550 located around the X-ray imaging apparatus 500, or the distance between each structure 550 located around the X-ray imaging apparatus 500 using position information of each joint (or part) of the X-ray imaging apparatus 500 and position information of each structure 550. In
In addition, not only collision of the X-ray imaging apparatus 500 with a structure 550 located around the X-ray imaging apparatus 500 may be avoided, but also collision with an external obstacle may be avoided by measuring the distance between the medical equipment 500 and the structure 550 and the distance between the medical equipment 500 and the external obstacle using an additional sensor such as a distance sensor which may be included in the sensor unit 212.
The magnitude of virtual repulsive force Fr may be defined based on distance information as shown in Equation 3 and the direction of the virtual repulsive force Fr may be defined to be a direction toward which the shortest distance between structures that may collide increases.
In
In Equation 4, Jc represents Jacobian corresponding to the collision point Pc.
As is apparent from the above description, according to embodiments, it may be possible for the operator to easily and intuitively position heavy equipment since the intention of the operator is determined and motors of the equipment are controlled taking into consideration the intention of the operator.
In addition, it may be possible to reduce operator load while increasing positioning speed compared to conventional automatic motorized positioning.
Further, through the (snap to grid) function to guide equipment to a frequently used position, it may be possible to improve user convenience while increasing positioning accuracy.
Furthermore, it may be possible to allow the operator to avoid collision, joint limit, or the like by haptically informing the operator of the risk of collision, joint limit, or the like.
Although the method to control medical equipment is described with an X-ray imaging apparatus shown in
Although a few embodiments have been shown and described, it would be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes may be made in embodiments without departing from the principles and spirit of the invention, the scope of which is defined in the claims and their equivalents.
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