Proceedings on Automation in Medical Engineering
Vol. 3 No. 1 (2026): Proc AUTOMED
https://doi.org/10.18416/AUTOMED.2026.2509

18th Interdisciplinary AUTOMED Symposium in Collaboration with the TC Medical Robotics, 2509

Kinematic Analysis of Manual, Collaborative and Robotic Surgical Retractor Holding

Main Article Content

Mathies Zehny (Center for Digital Surgery Universitätsmedizin Göttingen), Jonas Meyer (Center for Digital Surgery, Department of General, Visceral and Paediatric Surgery, University Medical Center Göttingen), Nazila Esmaeili (Center for Digital Surgery, Department of General, Visceral and Paediatric Surgery, University Medical Center Göttingen), Jannis Hagenah (1) Center for Digital Surgery, Department of General, Visceral and Paediatric Surgery, University Medical Center Göttingen; 2) Fraunhofer Research Institution for Individualized and Cell-based Medical Engineering (IMTE), Germany)

Abstract

Surgical retractor stability is crucial for precision and safety. This study quantifies kinematic performance of manual, collaborative, and robotic retractor holding using 6-DOF tracking at 80 Hz during ex-vivo porcine liver retraction. Robotic assistance reduced position deviation from 133 mm (manual) to 0.74 mm (99.4%), tremor intensity by 99.6%, and path length from 9.3 m to 0.17 m (98%). Effect sizes ranged from d=1.03 to d=2.64. Collaborative mode achieved intermediate stability (50% deviation reduction, 93% path reduction) while preserving adjustment capability. Results establish objective metrics for retraction quality assessment and demonstrate that passive robotic assistance achieves submillimeter precision while addressing personnel shortages in open surgery.

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