A Didactic Surgical Simulator for the Continuous Curvilinear Capsulorhexis Procedure During Cataract Surgery

Roger Webster, Ph.D.1, Joseph Sassani, M.D.2, Matt Harris 1, Markus Schill, Ph.D. 3, Clemens Wagner, Ph.D. 3,

1Department of Computer, Science School of Science and Mathematics, Caputo Hall, D&E Communications Wing, Millersville University, Millersville, PA. USA 17551

Roger.Webster@millersville.edu

2 Department of Ophthalmology, Penn State University College of Medicine, Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Hershey, PA USA 17033

3 VRmagic GmbH, B6, 23–29 C, Postfach 10 32 18, 68032, Mannheim, Germany

Abstract. Software for successfully simulating the capsulorhexis procedure during cataract surgery is described. The continuous curvilinear capsulorhexis technique, developed by Gimbel and Neuhann, has become the standard method of anterior capsulorectomy for phacoemulsification. Our didactic simulator software begins by having the user make a small incision in the center of the lens. The user then uses a virtual angled forceps tool to pull the virtual tissue towards the 12 o’clock position and curving the tear to the left. A virtual flap of tissue is thus created. The surgeon then grasps the folded over flap of tissue and begins to tear in a circular motion such that the tear force vector is tangential to the circumference of the tear circle. All too often beginning surgeons attempt to complete the capsulorhexis procedure without the proper re-grasping of the flap of torn tissue close to the tear point. This can cause the tear to run “downhill”. In this case the tear will resist any attempt to redirect the tear uphill possibly causing severe damage to the tissue. As the novice surgeon continues to pull, the tear gets worse, no matter what the direction of the pull vector. In addition, anterior bowing of the lens diaphragm as well as shallow anterior chambers can accentuate this “downhill” tear phenomenon. In younger patients the tear may also follow the radial course of the zonule rather than the desired circular pattern. Our didactic capsulorhexis simulator models these various tear problems and provides a learning environment with software helpers to guide the user to a successful procedure without the dangers of using live patients.

Our simulator software runs on the EYESI™ eye simulator hardware (VRMagic, GmBH Germany). The application software makes calls to OpenGL™ graphics routines. The training system has a data collection module that collects various metrics such as: time spent on the capsulorhexis procedure, tissue tears, damage to the cornea, and severe tear errors. Another software module records the motions of the user. Thus, the system can replay the technique, showing the medical student or mentor what the user did during the training session.

Figure 1 User at the EYESI™ Capsulorhexis Simulator. Figure 2 Tearing the capsule. Figure 3 In Level1 the user is guided through the procedure.

Acknowledgments.

This project is funded, in part, by the Lions Club International, National Science Foundation under grant number EIA-0116616, the Neimeyer-Hodgson Grants Program, the Havemeier-Gibson Endowment for Computer Science and by the Penn State University College of Medicine Department of Ophthalmology.

References/Literature.

[1] Michael Sinclair, J. Peifer, R. Haleblain, M. Luxenberg, K. Green, D. Hull, “Computer-simulated Eye Surgery - A Novel Teaching Method for Residents and Practitioners”, Ophthalmology, Vol. 102, Number 3, March 1995, pps. 517-521.

[2] Clemens Wagner, M. Schill, R. Manner, “Collision Detection and Tissue Modeling in a VR-Simulator for Eye Surgery”, Eighth Eurographics Workshop on Virtual Environments (2002), Barcelona, Spain, May 30-31, 2002, pps. 27-36.

[3] Norman Jaffe, M. Jaffe, G. Jaffe, Cataract Surgery and its Complications, Sixth Edition, Mosby Press, St. Louis, Baltimore, 1977, pps. 50-97.

[4] Ehud Assia, D. Apple, J. Tsai, E. Lim, “The Elastic Properties of the Lens Capsule in Capsulorhexis”, American Journal of Ophthalmology, Vol. 111, No. 5, May, 1991, pps. 628-632.

[5] James Morgan, R. Ellingham, R. Young, G. Trmal, “The Mechanical Properties of the Human Lens Capsule Following Capsulorhexis or Radio Frequency Diathermy Capsulotomy”, Archives of Ophthalmology, Vol. 114, September 1996, pps. 1110-1115.

[6] H.J. Burd, S.J. Judge, J.A. Cross, Numerical Modeling of the Accommodating Lens, Vision Research, Vol. 42, 2002, pps. 2235-2251.

[7] Sarah Frisken and B. Mirtich, A Survey of Deformable Modeling in Computer Graphics, MERL Technical Report TR-97-19, November 1997, http://www.merl.com/reports/TR-97-19/.

[8] Roger Webster, R. Haluck, B. Mohler, R. Ravenscroft, E. Crouthamel, T. Frack, S. Terlecki, J. Sheaffer, Elastically Deformable 3D Organs for Haptic Surgical Simulators, Proceedings of the Medicine Meets Virtual Reality Conference, MMVR 2002, Newport Beach, California, January 23-26, 2002, IOS Press, pps. 570-572.

[9] Mathieu Desbrun, G. Debunne, A. Barr, M, Cani, Interative Multi-Resolution Animation of Deformable Models, Proceedings of the Annual ACM SIGGRAPH Conference, ACM Press, Los Angeles, California, August 1999, pps. 82-89.

[10] Roger Webster, J. Sassani, R. Shenk, G. Zoppetti, "Simulating the Continuous Curvilinear Capsulorhexis Procedure During Cataract Surgery", Proceedings of the Annual IASTED International Conference on Modeling and Simulation (MS 2004), Marina Del Rey, California, March 1-3, 2004, pps. 262-265.

[11] Roger Webster, J. Sassani, R. Shenk, N. Good, "A Haptic Surgical Simulator for the Continuous Curvilinear Capsulorhexis Procedure During Cataract Surgery", Proceedings of the Annual Medicine Meets Virtual Reality Conference, (MMVR '2004), Newport Beach, California, Sponsored by Aligned Management Association and the University of California at Irvine, January 15-17, 2004, pps. 404-406.

[12] Roger Webster, J. Sassani, R. Haluck, R. Shenk, M. Harris, J. Blumenstock, J. Gerber, C. Billman, A. Benson, "Simulating the Curvilinear Capsulorhexis Cataract Procedure on the EYESI™ System", Poster Presentation and Proceedings of the Annual Medicine Meets Virtual Reality Conference, (MMVR '2005), Long Beach, California, Sponsored by Aligned Management Association and the University of California at Irvine, January 24-29, 2005, pps. 592-595.

 

Paper published in Proceedings of MMVR: Capsulorhexis.pdf file

Videos: Videos of Capsulorhexis simulation

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