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1.
Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg ; 19(1): 69-82, 2024 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37620748

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: For the modeling, execution, and control of complex, non-standardized intraoperative processes, a modeling language is needed that reflects the variability of interventions. As the established Business Process Model and Notation (BPMN) reaches its limits in terms of flexibility, the Case Management Model and Notation (CMMN) was considered as it addresses weakly structured processes. METHODS: To analyze the suitability of the modeling languages, BPMN and CMMN models of a Robot-Assisted Minimally Invasive Esophagectomy and Cochlea Implantation were derived and integrated into a situation recognition workflow. Test cases were used to contrast the differences and compare the advantages and disadvantages of the models concerning modeling, execution, and control. Furthermore, the impact on transferability was investigated. RESULTS: Compared to BPMN, CMMN allows flexibility for modeling intraoperative processes while remaining understandable. Although more effort and process knowledge are needed for execution and control within a situation recognition system, CMMN enables better transferability of the models and therefore the system. Concluding, CMMN should be chosen as a supplement to BPMN for flexible process parts that can only be covered insufficiently by BPMN, or otherwise as a replacement for the entire process. CONCLUSION: CMMN offers the flexibility for variable, weakly structured process parts, and is thus suitable for surgical interventions. A combination of both notations could allow optimal use of their advantages and support the transferability of the situation recognition system.


Subject(s)
Case Management , Humans , Workflow
2.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 302: 149-150, 2023 May 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37203635

ABSTRACT

This project aims to evaluate existing big data infrastructures for their applicability in the operating room to support medical staff with context-sensitive systems. Requirements for the system design were generated. The project compares different data mining technologies, interfaces, and software system infrastructures with a focus on their usefulness in the peri-operative setting. The lambda architecture was chosen for the proposed system design, which will provide data for both postoperative analysis and real-time support during surgery.


Subject(s)
Operating Rooms , Software , Humans , Big Data , Data Mining , Cognition
3.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 294: 809-810, 2022 May 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35612211

ABSTRACT

Physicians in interventional radiology are exposed to high physical stress. To avoid negative long-term effects resulting from unergonomic working conditions, we demonstrated the feasibility of a system that gives feedback about unergonomic situations arising during the intervention based on the Azure Kinect camera. The overall feasibility of the approach could be shown.


Subject(s)
Ergonomics , Radiologists , Humans , Posture , Radiology, Interventional
4.
Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg ; 17(11): 2161-2171, 2022 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35593986

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Context awareness in the operating room (OR) is important to realize targeted assistance to support actors during surgery. A situation recognition system (SRS) is used to interpret intraoperative events and derive an intraoperative situation from these. To achieve a modular system architecture, it is desirable to de-couple the SRS from other system components. This leads to the need of an interface between such an SRS and context-aware systems (CAS). This work aims to provide an open standardized interface to enable loose coupling of the SRS with varying CAS to allow vendor-independent device orchestrations. METHODS: A requirements analysis investigated limiting factors that currently prevent the integration of CAS in today's ORs. These elicited requirements enabled the selection of a suitable base architecture. We examined how to specify this architecture with the constraints of an interoperability standard. The resulting middleware was integrated into a prototypic SRS and our system for intraoperative support, the OR-Pad, as exemplary CAS for evaluating whether our solution can enable context-aware assistance during simulated orthopedical interventions. RESULTS: The emerging Service-oriented Device Connectivity (SDC) standard series was selected to specify and implement a middleware for providing the interpreted contextual information while the SRS and CAS are loosely coupled. The results were verified within a proof of concept study using the OR-Pad demonstration scenario. The fulfillment of the CAS' requirements to act context-aware, conformity to the SDC standard series, and the effort for integrating the middleware in individual systems were evaluated. The semantically unambiguous encoding of contextual information depends on the further standardization process of the SDC nomenclature. The discussion of the validity of these results proved the applicability and transferability of the middleware. CONCLUSION: The specified and implemented SDC-based middleware shows the feasibility of loose coupling an SRS with unknown CAS to realize context-aware assistance in the OR.


Subject(s)
Operating Rooms , Surgery, Computer-Assisted , Humans
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