LapSurgie: Humanoid Robots Performing Surgery via Teleoperated Handheld Laparoscopy
By: Zekai Liang , Xiao Liang , Soofiyan Atar and more
Potential Business Impact:
Robot doctors can do surgery anywhere, even far away.
Robotic laparoscopic surgery has gained increasing attention in recent years for its potential to deliver more efficient and precise minimally invasive procedures. However, adoption of surgical robotic platforms remains largely confined to high-resource medical centers, exacerbating healthcare disparities in rural and low-resource regions. To close this gap, a range of solutions has been explored, from remote mentorship to fully remote telesurgery. Yet, the practical deployment of surgical robotic systems to underserved communities remains an unsolved challenge. Humanoid systems offer a promising path toward deployability, as they can directly operate in environments designed for humans without extensive infrastructure modifications -- including operating rooms. In this work, we introduce LapSurgie, the first humanoid-robot-based laparoscopic teleoperation framework. The system leverages an inverse-mapping strategy for manual-wristed laparoscopic instruments that abides to remote center-of-motion constraints, enabling precise hand-to-tool control of off-the-shelf surgical laparoscopic tools without additional setup requirements. A control console equipped with a stereo vision system provides real-time visual feedback. Finally, a comprehensive user study across platforms demonstrates the effectiveness of the proposed framework and provides initial evidence for the feasibility of deploying humanoid robots in laparoscopic procedures.
Similar Papers
Humanoids in Hospitals: A Technical Study of Humanoid Robot Surrogates for Dexterous Medical Interventions
Robotics
Robots can help doctors do medical tasks remotely.
Kinematic and Ergonomic Design of a Robotic Arm for Precision Laparoscopic Surgery
Robotics
Makes robot surgery more accurate and easier.
Open-Source Multi-Viewpoint Surgical Telerobotics
Robotics
Gives robot surgeons extra eyes for better control.